A Harvest of
Water
http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2009/11/india-rain/corbett-text
Long at the
mercy of the monsoons, some Indian farmers are sculpting hillsides to
capture runoff, enriching their land and lives.
By Sara
Corbett
Photograph by Lynsey Addario
Farmers in India
do a lot of talking about the weather-especially, it seems, when
there is no weather in sight. During the month of May, when the land
heats up like a furnace and most fields lie fallow, when wells have
run dry and the sun taunts from its broiling perch in a cloudless sky,
there is no topic more consuming-or less certain-than when and how
the summer monsoon will arrive. The monsoon season, which normally
starts in early June and delivers more than three-quarters of the
country's annual rainfall in less than four months, will begin gently,
like a deer, the farmers say, and later it will turn into a thundering
elephant. Or it will start as an elephant and then turn into a deer.
Or it will be erratic and annoying right through, like a chicken. In
other words, nobody really knows. But still, everybody
talks.
This was the case one day in 2008 when an
extended family of farmers from a village called Satichiwadi climbed
up to the hilltop temple of their village goddess, planning to ask her
for rain. It was mid-May and 106 degrees, and Satichiwadi, a village
of 83 families that sits in a parched rural valley in the state of
Maharashtra, about a hundred miles northeast of Mumbai, hadn't had any
significant rainfall for seven months. Most of India at this point was
caught in an inescapable annual wait. In New Delhi, the heat had
triggered power cuts. Dust storms raced, unmitigated by moisture,
across the northern states. Tanker trucks clogged the rural highways,
delivering government-sponsored loads of drinking water to villages
whose wells had run dry. Meanwhile, radio newscasters were just
beginning to track a promising swirl of rain clouds moving over the
Andaman Islands, off the southeast coast.
All day, villagers
had been speculating about those distant clouds. It was gambling time
for rain-dependent farmers across India. In the weeks leading up to
the monsoon, many would invest a significant amount of money, often
borrowed, to buy fertilizer and millet seeds, which needed to be
planted ahead of the rains. There were many ways to lose this wager. A
delayed monsoon likely would cause the seeds to bake and die in the
ground. Or if the rain fell too hard before the seedlings took root,
it might wash them all away.
"Our lives are wrapped up in the rain," explained a woman
named Anusayabai Pawar, using a countrywoman's version of Marathi, the
regional language. "When it comes, we have everything. When it
doesn't, we have nothing."
In the meantime, everyone kept scanning the empty sky. "Like
fools," said an older farmer named Yamaji Pawar, sweating beneath
his white Nehru cap, "we just sit here waiting."
If the people of Satichiwadi once believed the gods controlled the
rain, they were starting to move beyond that. Even as they carried
betel nuts and cones of incense up to the goddess's temple, even as
one by one the village women knelt down in front of the stone idol
that represented her, they seemed merely to be hedgingtheir bets.
Bhaskar Pawar, a sober-minded, mustachioed farmer in his 30s, sat on
one of the low walls of the temple, watching impassively as his female
relatives prayed. "Especially the younger people here understand
now that it's environmental," he said.
Satichiwadi lies
in India's rain shadow, an especially water-deprived swath of land
that includes much of central Maharashtra. Each year after the summer
monsoon pounds the west coast of India, it moves inward across the
plains and bumps against the 5,000-foot peaks of the Western Ghats,
where the clouds stall out, leaving the leeward side punishingly
dry.
In an effort to
lessen their dependence on the monsoon, the village's residents had
signed on to an ambitious, three-year watershed program designed to
make more efficient use of what little rain does fall. The program was
facilitated by a nonprofit group called the Watershed Organization
Trust (WOTR), but the work-a major relandscaping of much of the
valley-was being done by the villagers themselves. Teams of farmers
spent an average of five days a week digging, moving soil, and
planting seedlings along the ridgelines. WOTR, which has led similar
projects in more than 200 villages in central India, paid the
villagers for roughly 80 percent of the hours worked but also required
every family to contribute free labor to the project every month-a
deliberate move to get everyone invested.
From the vantage
point of the temple, the effort was evident: Beyond the small grids of
tile-roofed mud homes and the sun-crisped patchwork of dry fields,
many of the russet brown hillsides had been terraced, and a number of
freshly dug trenches sat waiting to catch the rain. If only, of
course, the rain would come.
In Satichiwadi the anticipation was high. "Very soon,"
Bhaskar said, "we will know the value of this work."
Complex and capricious, the South Asian monsoon-widely considered
the most powerful seasonal climate system on Earth, affecting nearly
half the world's population-has never been easy to predict. And with
global warming skewing weather patterns, it's not just the scientists
who are confounded. Farmers whose families for generations have used
the Panchangam, a thick almanac detailing the movement of the Hindu
constellations, to determine when the monsoon rains are due and thus
when to plant their crops, lament that their system no longer works
reliably.
"It is a bit
of a puzzle," said B. N. Goswami, director of the Indian
Institute of Tropical Meteorology, based in Pune. After studying five
decades of rain gauge data for central India, Goswami and his
colleagues concluded that although the amount of rainfall has not
changed, it is coming in shorter, more intense bursts, with fewer
spells of light rain between, mirroring a larger pattern of extreme
weather worldwide.
Groundwater has
helped some farmers cope with erratic rains. But India's water tables
are dropping precipitously, as farmers who now have access to electric
pumps withdraw water faster than the monsoon can replenish it.
According to the International Water Management Institute, based in
Sri Lanka, half the wells once used in western India no longer
function. "Thirty years ago we could strike water by digging 30
feet," said the village chief in Khandarmal, a dusty settlement
of about 3,000 people perched on a ridge about 20 miles from
Satichiwadi. "Now we have to go to 400 feet." Even that is
chancy. Over the years the villagers have drilled a total of 500
wells. Ninety percent of them, he estimated, have gone
dry.
Water shortages
throw farmers into an unrelenting cycle of debt and distress, driving
many-by one estimate up to a hundred million each year-to seek
work in factories and distant, better irrigated fields. During the dry
months, between November and May, you see them on the roads: families
creaking along in bullock carts, truck taxis jammed with entire
neighborhoods of people on the move. The stakes can seem impossibly
high. According to government figures, the number of suicides among
male farmers in Maharashtra tripled between 1995 and 2004.
One afternoon
outside a sugarcane processing factory not far from Satichiwadi, I met
a boy named Valmik. He was 16, with a sweet smile and out-turned ears,
wearing a brown T-shirt and pants that were ripped across the seat.
Standing in front of his bullock cart loaded with two tons of freshly
cut sugarcane, he explained that he had driven his two-oxen cart 110
or so miles with his older brother and widowed mother to spend five
months working in the fields with a sickle. His arms and hands were
heavily scarred from the work.
Speaking softly,
Valmik detailed one of the crueler paradoxes of rain dependence. A
year earlier his family had borrowed 40,000 rupees (about $800) from a
moneylender to cover expenses such as seeds and fertilizer for their
fields at home and hadn't been able to pay it back. Why? Because there
hadn't been enough rain, and the seeds had broiled in the ground. What
would they do when the debt was paid off? The same thing they'd done
for the past three years after a season of cutting sugarcane: They
would borrow again, plant more seeds, and revive their hopes for a
decent monsoon.
Given the enormity
of India's water issues, encouraging single villages to revive and
protect their own watersheds can seem a feeble response to a national
crisis. But compared with controversial top-down, government-led
efforts to build big dams and regulate the wanton drilling of deep
wells, a careful grassroots effort to manage water locally can look
both sensible and sustainable. When I visited Khandarmal with Ashok
Sangle, one of the civil engineers who works for WOTR, the people
there described a failed $500,000 development project to pump water
several miles uphill from the nearest river. Sangle shook his head.
"What is the logic of pulling water up a slope," he asked,
"when you can more easily catch the rain as it flows
down?"
The idea behind
watershed development is simple: If people cut fewer trees, increase
plant cover on the land, and build a well-planned series of dams and
earthen terraces to divert and slow the downhill flow of rainwater,
the soil has more time to absorb moisture. The terracingand new
vegetation also control erosion, which keeps nutrient-rich topsoil
from washing or blowing away, and this in turn boosts the productivity
of agricultural land.
"Where the rain runs, we make it walk; where it walks, we make it
crawl," explained Crispino Lobo, one of WOTR's founders, using an
analogy the organization often employs when introducing the concepts
behind watershed work to farmers. "Where it crawls, we make it
sink into the ground." Runoff is reduced. The water table for the
whole area rises, wells are less apt to go dry, and especially with
some simultaneous efforts to use water more efficiently, everybody
needs to worry less about when it will rain again.
The benefits-at
least hypothetically-spool outward from here. More productive
farmland means more food and better health for the villagers, and it
opens the possibility of growing cash crops. "The first thing
people do when their watershed regenerates and their income goes up,"
Lobo said, "is to take their kids out of the fields and put them
in school."
Lobo began working
on water issues in the early 1980s through a development program
funded by the German government. WOTR is now directed by Marcella
D'Souza, a medical doctor and Lobo's wife, whose efforts to involve
women in watershed redevelopment have earned international
recognition. They believe there is an important emotional dimension to
watershed work as well. "If people are able to improve the land
and restore the soil, you start seeing a change in how they see
themselves," Lobo said. "The land reflects some hope back at
them."
To be clear, this
is not always easy. Since the late 1990s, both the Indian government
and a variety of nongovernmental organizations have funneled some $500
million annually into redeveloping watersheds in drought-prone rural
areas. But experts say many such endeavors have fallen short of their
goals or proved unsustainable, in large part because they have focused
too much on the technical aspects of improving a watershed and too
little on navigating the complex social dynamics of farming villages.
In other words, no effort gets very far without a lot of hands-on
cooperation. And if you're wondering what could possibly be so complex
about a smallish group of marginal farmers living in the middle of
nowhere, you should go to Satichiwadi and spend some time with the
Kales and the Pawars.
Satichiwadi lies
several miles off a two-lane road that crosses a high, semiarid plain
dotted with meager-looking farms and drought-resistant neem trees. The
road to the village, completed last year, remains little more than an
axle-smashing series of dirt switchbacks descending some 600 vertical
feet from the high bluffs to the flat valley floor. Many of the
villagers still come and go the old-fashioned way, making a 45-minute,
sweaty hike up a vertiginous footpath.
Members of the
Pawar family like to say they got here first, about a hundred years
ago, when this was a mostly uninhabited, forested place, and
great-grandfather Soma Pawar, a nomadic shepherd belonging to the
Thakar tribe, made his way down from the high buttes and liked what he
saw. Sometime after that-precisely how long is in
dispute-great-grandfather Goma Genu Kale, also a Thakar, is said to
have ambled in and taken up residence as well.
For a time the
Kale and Pawar families got along just fine, living close together in
a small group of thatched-roof, mud-brick homes built near the temple.
Working together, they cleared trees and tilled the land to grow rice
and other grains. Then, about 40 or 50 years ago, the Kales abruptly
moved to the other side of the valley. The reason is also in dispute:
The Kales say they simply got tired of tromping the half mile or so
back and forth to their millet fields. The Pawars say, somewhat
huffily, that the Kales got sick of the Pawars.
Whatever the case,
the two families-despite being separated by no more than 500 yards
of fields-stopped talking. They held their own independent holy
weeks to celebrate the goddess Sati and pointedly stopped attending
one another's weddings. The Pawars stopped calling the Kales by name,
referring to them instead as the "Fed Up People." The hamlet
where the Kales now live is known simply as Vaitagwadi, Fed Up
Town.
Satichiwadi's harmony deteriorated, another kind
of diminishment began. Sheep and cows trampled the grassland; the last
of the trees disappeared. Crops too began to falter. Farmers gave up
growing rice, which required so much water. By March each year, most
of the wells across the valley had dried up.
With both food and
income scarce, villagers started migrating to work on sugarcane
plantations, on road crews, and in brick factories. "If you had
come even three years ago during the dry season," Sitaram Kale, a
farmer who also owns a small shop in Satichiwadi, told me, "you
would have found only very old people and very small children living
here."
The villagers did not easily come around to the idea that they could
work together and revive the valley. Getting them to set aside their
differences took months of meetings, several exploratory
"exposure visits" to other villages where WOTR's watershed
programs had been successful, and the diligent attention of a
high-energy young social worker named Rohini Raosaheb Hande, who hiked
the path into Sati-chiwadi every other day for six months. Hande was
the second social worker WOTR had sent to Satichiwadi; the first had
quit after a few weeks. "She told me it was a place without
hope," Hande recalled. "Nobody would even talk to
her."
Such resistance is
common. In the village of Darewadi, where the watershed work was
completed in 2001, one villager had chased WOTR employees away with an
ax. Because the organization encourages simultaneous social
reconfiguration and environmental change, its efforts often initially
rub farmers the wrong way. WOTR mandates, for example, that
village-level water decisions include women, landless people, and
members of lower castes, all of whom might ordinarily be excluded. To
give the local greenery a chance to recover, villagers must also agree
to a multiyear ban on free-grazing their animals and cutting trees for
firewood. Finally, they must trust the potential benefits of watershed
work enough to sign on to the sheer tedium it entails-three to five
years spent using pickaxes and shovels to move dirt from one spot to
another to redirect the flow of rainwater.
In Darewadi an
elderly farmer named Chimaji Avahad, who lives with his extended
family in a brightly painted two-room home hemmed in by sorghum
fields, recalled the early difficulties of adjusting to the new rules.
He was taken aback, he told me, by the talkative women who filled his
life. "Each one of them-my wife, daughters, daughters-in-law,
and even granddaughters-has an opinion," he said, amused. His
wife, Nakabai, a tiny woman with a face wizened by years working in
the fields, immediately chimed in, "It was a very good
change."
A walk around
Darewadi confirms this. By all accounts a grim and waterless place
before the project began more than a decade ago, it now boasts bushes
and trees and fields of wild grass. The village's wells now remain
full, even at the height of the dry season. With more water,
Darewadi's farmers are getting their first taste of prosperity, moving
from producing only enough millet to feed themselves to growing
onions, tomatoes, pomegranates, and lentils and selling the surplus in
nearby market towns. Avahad now puts about 5,000 rupees (about a
hundred dollars) a year in the bank. Darewadi's women have used their
new influence to ban the sale of alcohol and also have formed women's
savings groups-a common feature of WOTR projects-that collect a
small monthly fee and in turn loan money to members who need it to pay
for weddings or veterinary care or the solar lights that now dot the
village at night.
When I returned to
Satichiwadi in January, the villagers were finding some hope in their
own land. The young trees on the ridgetops were green and thriving.
The hills and fields had been contoured with small dams and trenches,
looking like tidy ripples arcing across a brownish pond. Bhaskar
Pawar-the farmer who had sat in the temple with me eight months
earlier, waiting to see whether the watershed work would pay
off-excitedly reported that the water level in the village wells was
about ten feet higher than normal. And this was a good thing, because
the monsoon had once again confounded the villagers. Not a drop had
fallen over the valley during the month of June or in the first three
weeks of July. Their millet seeds had withered and died. "It was
a miserable time," Bhaskar recalled.
And yet when the
rain did come-in torrents in late July-they were ready to catch
the water and put it to use. They'd spent the fall months harvesting
tomatoes. Now they were working on onions and sorghum. And they were
also harvesting something less tangible: a newfound, tenuous
harmony.
One morning I
watched as Sitaram Kale, the shopkeeper and one of nine members of the
Village Watershed Development Committee, rode his bike over to the
Pawars' settlement to spread the word about a watershed-related
meeting to be held later in the dusty schoolyard on his side of town.
He passed the news to a voluble, grandmotherly woman named
Chandrakhanta Pawar, who disseminated it by ducking her head into
several of her neighbors' homes, assuring that each would come and
participate. "There's a meeting later this morning over in Fed Up
Town," she announced. "One of the Fed Up People just came
over to say so."?