
To one side of the village, Hosamanehalli, flowed the Sharavathi. On the other was Sita Parvatha. This was no mountain despite its name; it was a hillock. Its back was lush with forestlands but its head was bald. During the times of the Ramayana, Rama, Sita and Lakshmana had crossed the Sharavathi and rested in a cave on top of this hill. Now, sprawled at its foot were five families, three areca plantations and three rice fields. Of the five families, three were those of the landlords, the other two of bonded labourers, bonded since birth. Of the three landlords, Heramba Hegde and Parameshwarappa were wealthy; they owned the bonded labourers, Byra and Hala, who worked their land. Ganapayya was neither rich nor poor. He did not own labourers; he hired some and paid them wages. But that did not make a difference to his status. The respect the landlords commanded came from their place and role in the community, not from their wealth. This had been the system in the villages for generations. Everything changed with the Sharavathi Hydro-electric Project. Countless villages were submerged and with them went the lifestyle and values that had sustained communities in the Malnad area. The government arranged to compensate the displaced landlords with land. The labourers had no land anyway, so they were not covered by the compensation. A Submersion Office was set up to see to the process but only those landlords who could grease the palms of officials received fair treatment.
The construction of the Sharavathi Hydro-electric Project forces a traditional village community to confront the total destruction of their ancestral way of life. Na. D'Souza presents a narrative centered on the residents of Hosamanehalli, a village defined by rigid social hierarchies and deep-seated ties to the land. As the encroaching waters threaten to submerge their homes, the story examines the widening divide between wealthy landlords and the bonded laborers who are left without recourse or compensation. The narrative framework utilizes a third-person perspective to observe the shifting power dynamics and the erosion of communal values under the pressure of modernization and bureaucratic corruption.
Readers frequently highlight the author's ability to capture the specific cultural atmosphere of the Malnad region during a period of significant transition. Discussion often centers on the stark portrayal of social injustice and the systemic abandonment of the most vulnerable populations during the displacement process. Critics note that the pacing is deliberate, allowing for a thorough examination of the characters' internal reactions to their impending loss. The work is recognized for its focus on the human cost of progress, balancing the macro-level political changes with the micro-level struggles of individual families. The narrative effectively illustrates how environmental shifts can dismantle the social fabric of a community over several generations.
Page Count:
128
Publication Date:
2014-02-02
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0198097441
ISBN-13:
9780198097440
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