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10,000 Toilets and Counting: Bihar’s Women Are Single-Handedly Taking on the Dirty Fight

Women self-help groups in the villages of Jehanabad have become the harbingers of social change by convincing people about the usefulness of building toilets at homes and ending open defecation. Mohd Imran Khan takes a closer look.

10,000 Toilets and Counting: Bihar’s Women Are Single-Handedly Taking on the Dirty Fight

Poonam, in her mid-40s, is the head of Ujwal Gram Sanghatan, a women’s self-help group (SHG) in Kalanaur village. She is one of the thousands of jeevika didis (livelihood sisters). Nageena, who heads the Tulsi Samuh SHG of Dharnai village in Makhdumpur block of Jehanabad district, is also a jeevika didi. They are thus called since their SHGs have been formed under Jeevika, the Bihar government’s rural livelihood program.

The jeevika didis have been motivating rural women to construct toilets and to use them for self-dignity and better hygiene.

Change begins at home

“When I decided to construct a toilet in my house by taking loan from my SHG, even my husband opposed it. He felt that there was no need for a toilet since we live in a mud house. I finally convinced him and constructed it,” Poonam told VillageSquare.in.

A village woman is standing in front of a newly constructed toilet at her home. (Photo by Mohd Imran Khan)
A village woman standing in front of a newly constructed toilet at her home. (Photo by Mohd Imran Khan)

Similarly, Nageena was also the first in her village to come forward to construct a toilet in her house by taking a loan from her SHG. “Who would think of constructing a toilet, especially with borrowed money? But I made it happen,” said Nageena.

Impressed by their conviction, the Barabar Saway Siddha Mahila Vikas Sawalambi Sahkari Samiti Limited Federation (BSSMVSS), a voluntary organisation in Makhdumpur, asked Poonam and Nageena to lead a team of jeevika didis in their campaign to build toilets. “After building a toilet in my house, I worked with a team of women and successfully motivated and helped others to construct toilets,” said Nageena.

“There are hundreds of jeevika didis like Poonam and Nageena who had constructed a toilet with a loan from their SHGs and then joined us to motivate other women to do the same,” Sunil Kumar, BSSMVSS’s field officer, told VillageSquare.in.

Overcoming challenges

“In several villages across Bihar, toilets constructed through government programs are used as a godown or a dumping site, since most of them are not operational,” said Indu Devi, president of BSSMVSS. The men were unconcerned.

Asha Devi, a jeevika didi of Kalanaur, said, “It was a difficult task to convince men to construct a toilet. The men claimed that one should relieve outside and there was no need to construct a toilet, especially on borrowed money.” Sometimes the men damaged the toilets under construction to vent their anger.

But the collective power of women finally convinced the men. “Jeevika didis have made a big difference by persistently persuading women to take ownership of the toilets they construct and to use them,” added Indu Devi.

A woman’s meeting in Jehanabad discussing the benefits of building toilets in homes. (Photo by Mohd Imran Khan)
A woman’s meeting in Jehanabad discussing the benefits of building toilets in homes. (Photo by Mohd Imran Khan)

Kanti Devi and Reena Devi of Dharnai agree that they built toilets after learning from the didis that open defecation can lead to ill health and diseases. Jehanabad’s jeevika district project manager Manish Kumar said that women and girls are no longer found heading to the fields to relieve themselves.

Facilitating change

Community meetings were held at night to discuss the ill effects of open defecation. Some tough measures have also been taken to bring about a change in the behavioural pattern of villagers. Nigrani samiti or vigilance committees, comprising women from SHGs, keep watch to identify violators.

Lota jalao is practiced where the plastic bottles in which water is carried to the field are snatched and burnt.

“Lack of money was a deterrent to persuading women to build toilets. So loans were arranged through their SHGs. Basically the money is their own savings that they had deposited with their SHG,” Indu Devi told VillageSquare.in.

A rural sanitary mart established in Kalanaur two years ago facilitates easy availability of good quality material required for the construction of toilets. BSSMVSS ensures that the construction is also of good quality.

More toilets

Nearly 1,000 SHGs with about 14,000 women members from different villages are operating in 22 panchayats in Makhdumpur block, a stronghold of Maoist insurgents till about a decade ago.

In Kalanaur, there were hardly 25 toilets and most of them were in the houses of landed upper caste people. Thanks to jeevika didis’ efforts, the Mahadalits — those considered untouchables by upper caste Hindus — have also built toilets.

Some 1,753 toilets have been built in Kalanaur gram panchayat. Similarly in Dharnai panchayat, 1231 toilets have been built in the last two years. With pride, the jeevika didis announce that both the panchayats have been declared ODF by the state government.

Successful model

The Jeevika program was launched by the state government with the assistance of the World Bank in 2006. Jeevika promotes rural livelihoods and enhances social and economic empowerment of the poor, particularly women.

Thanks to the innovative door-to-door campaign involving women, over 100,000 toilets have been built, covering hundreds of villages in 21 districts in the last two years.

As the role of jeevika didis has been successful in Kalanaur and Dharnai, the same strategy will be implemented in Sugaon and Sumera panchayats next and then across the entire state.

Bihar Rural Development Minister Shrawan Kumar said that 580,000 SHGs have been set up under the Jeevika scheme and the government plans to increase them to 1 million by 2018-19. Each SHG has at least a dozen women members who are creating awareness about the connection between sanitation, hygiene and health.

“To date 18 blocks, 717 gram panchayats and 4,000 villages have been declared ODF. Eighteen lakh toilets have been constructed in the state but there is a long to go as nearly 1.5 crore toilets need to be constructed in the state,” Shrawan Kumar said. But he hoped that the jeevika didis would help the state go ODF by 2019.

Jeevika didis have been playing an important role in creating awareness about the need for toilets and in motivating women to construct toilets,” Balamurugan Devaraj IAS, CEO-cum-State Mission Director of Jeevika program told VillageSquare.in. “Their role in social mobilization and behavioral change would help us achieve a ODF (open defecation free) Bihar.”

Mohd Imran Khan is a Patna-based journalist.

Adapted from an article originally published on VillageSquare.in. Subscribe to VillageSquare’s weekly update on the website for more stories from rural India.

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