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2. Causes of decline of Village Industries |
We eat mill-ground flour, and even the poor villager walks with a head-load of
half a maund grain to have it ground in the nearest flour mill. Do you know
that in spite of the plenty of foodstuffs we produce we import wheat from
outside and we eat the 'superfine' flour from Australia? We will not use our
hand-ground flour, and the poor villager also foolishly copies us. We thus
turn wealth into waste, nectar into poison. For whole meal is the proper
meal. Mill-ground flour is vitaminless flour, mill-ground flour kept for
days is not only vitaminless, but poison. But we will not exert ourselves
to produce flour which we must eat fresh every day, and will pay for less
nutritious things and purchase ill-health in the bargain. This is not any
abstruse economic truth, it is a fact, which is daily happening before our
eyes. The same is the case with rice and gur and oil. We will eat
rice, polished of its substance, and eat less nutritious sugar and pay more
for it than more nutritious gur. We have suffered the village oilman
to be driven to extinction and we eat adulterated oils. We idolize the cow,
but kill her by slow degrees. We eat honey and kill the honey-bee, with the
result that honey is such a rare commodity today that it is only available
to a 'Mahatma' like me or to those who must have it from the physician as a
vehicle for the drugs he prescribes. If we took the trouble of learning
scientific and harmless bee-keeping, we should get it cheaper and our
children would get out of it all the carbohydrates they need. In all our
dietetics, we mistake the shadow for the substance, preferring bone-white
sugar to rich brown gur and pale white bread to rich brown
bran-bread. Harijan, 11-5-1935 Any country that exposes itself to unlimited foreign competition can be reduced to starvation and therefore, subjection if the foreigners desire it. This is known as peaceful penetration. One has to go only a step further to understand that the result would be the same as between hand-made goods and those made by power-driven machinery. We are seeing the process going on before our eyes. Little flour mills are ousting the chakki, oil mills the village ghani, rice mills the village dhenki, sugar mills the village gur-pans, etc. This displacement of village labour is impoverishing the villagers and enriching the moneyed men. If the process continues sufficiently long, the villagers will be destroyed without any further effort. No Chengis Khan could devise a more ingenious or more profitable method of destroying these villages. And the tragedy of it all is that the villagers are unconsciously but none the less surely contributing to their own destruction. To complete the tale of their woe, let the reader know that even cultivation has ceased to be profitable. For some crops, the villager does not cover even the cost of seed. Harijan, 20-6-1936 |