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Society
What to do About the Beggars?
by Vasant G. Gandhi
A
saddening scene of our nation is that of beggars begging, mostly for
money. They are seen near places where a large number of people appear:
temples, train stations and their platforms, bus stations, bazaars,
sightseeing venues, major streets, sidewalks.
Some are begging
with their children who are either on their waist, in their lap, on their
shoulder, or at their hand. Some are old, weak, ill, naked, or
handicapped. Accompanied or alone, fit or unfit, paupers persistently beg
to escape hunger and thirst—these are our most ignored, least helped, and
least valued people.
How do they beg?
Beggars beg in a
variety of postures: sitting, standing, and lying down. Some sing or utter
a few words while pleading for alms, but almost all extend their palm or
bowl to catch a donation. Some surface near the car that is waiting in
traffic and gesture its occupants for money. Some crave abroad trains.
Young ones follow walkers until they get money or get tired of chasing
them. Women beg with toddlers or elderly or both to pierce our heart and
melt our soft side so we give them either money or food. And the bad ones
pick people’s pockets for money.
How to help
them?
Throw the beggars in jail, people argue; that would be
a deplorably cruel thing to do. By being poor, they are punished enough;
by jailing them, they would be further sentenced. The Delhi government is
meditating on the idea of incarcerating panhandlers in 2010 during the
Commonwealth Games to keep them out of foreigners’ sight. This is like
hiding a handicapped member of the family until the guests are gone!
Panhandlers deserve no less respect, love, care, and help than anyone
else.
Some say let city, district,
state, or the central government help the beggars. How could a government
help them? It involves a vast number of individuals—scattered all around
the country—who have no home, no permanent address, no health history, and
no personal data such as date and place of birth, age, names of kin etc.
It would be demanding for any government to feed, shelter, clothe, and
educate them—not to mention the challenging task of monitoring their
progress. Furthermore, our government is not known to do an adequate job.
While the central government cannot assist them directly, it could
help beggars indirectly. It could create an economic environment in which
the currency remains stable, prices and taxes remain low, industrial
production humming, productivity rising, and national income skyrocketing.
This in turn would make the nation prosperous and would propel most of
them from streets to the floors of factories, shops, and offices where
they would work and earn. And seeing beggars earning their bread would
elate everyone.
Having amassed large sums of money for their places
of worships, many think preachers of religions should help the beggars.
They should put the money where the soul is! Unfortunately, their help,
like the NGOs’, isn’t soulful.
The cry for aid far exceeds the aid
rendered. There aren’t enough hands to dry the many teary eyes. A
government, religion, jail, and NGO are of limited use in uplifting our
beggars; so, it is best if ordinary folks help them. It involves an
individual bringing a beggar or two under his or her umbrella and
extending a helping hand. A care given on a one-to-one basis is more
effective than on any other bases.
October 4, 2009
Image under license with Gettyimages.com
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