Sangeeta
Anand visits Kathewadi village in Maharashtra's Nanded district to
see
an amazing transformation.
We
are finally in view of Kathewadi, a tiny village in the back of the
beyond in Nanded district in Maharashtra. It's been a six-hour
journey
from Hyderabad across two states to satisfy our curiosity about
this village and its people having turned
their
lives around. I wonder if things can change.
Is it possible in today's times to run a shop unmanned by
a
shop keeper? To believe that goods bought would be paid for, without
supervision ?
When we reach Kathewadi, I pass a woman sitting in the
tiny
portico of her gaily painted hut and as I make eye contact she
smiles
and motions me to come in. Smiling, she offers me water and shows me
around her home. With gestures I convey that we are here to visit
their
village and take pictures. She offers to accompany us and we head
off
through the main street. We walk through a
surprisingly clean village with clusters of homes neatly painted in
a
uniform shade of soft pink, soothing our eyes under the hot glare of
the
sun.
The Art of Living
Foundation
has adopted this village and converted it into a model of village
life.
It founder, Sri Sri Ravishankar's teachings are painted on the walls
of
every home in the village. Says writer Babu Patil Biradar, who has
now
joined us. "We live by Guruji's teachings."
Radha Bai my guide tells me in Marathi, "All our
homes
have a toilet. We have all collected money and built one outside
each
house." The pride is evident in her face.
We come to the main
temple of
the village alongside which is the famous shop. Men and women have
come
out of their homes to gather for the satsang that they all
participate
in every evening.
I am introduced to the village elders and after a series
of
greetings, I ask them about the inspiration
behind the shop, unmanned by a shopkeeper, where all the goods are
labelled and left for the people to pick up and pay for,
unsupervised. I
am invited to see for myself.
The linoleum lined floor
and
the neatly stacked shelves impress me with their quiet dignity. Each
product is labelled and marked with the prices. There is a large box
in
which the villagers put in the money for the items they pick up and
another little one marked Daan Peti (donation box) in which
they
collect money for development work in the village.
Sangeeta Suryavanshi is another surprise.
She
is the 25-year-old is the sarpanch of this village. She says, "One
member of every family in this village has done an Art of Living
course:
The Nav Chetna shivirs, youth leadership training programme and
the
basic course."
"It has brought such a change in our society that we
have
become totally addiction free. There is amity and harmony amongst
all of
us, which did not exist before. We have learnt about hygiene and
cleanliness and all the money that was spent on vices like alcohol
and
tobacco is now used constructively. This has happened due to
Guruji's
inspiration," she says proudly.
"Now we have self help
groups
of ten people each and these groups solve any issues and implement
solutions." An old man is being helped across the street to our side
and
I rise to wish him. Allauddin Sheikh heads the only Muslim family in
this village of 700 people.
"My family has lived here
for
generations. My son has done the Art of Living Course and he is very
happy with all that he has learnt. In all my 80 years I have never
seen
such a transformation in our village. We live in complete harmony
and
help each other in times of need."
The music has risen to a
crescendo
and men and women are dancing in devotion, each face alight with
joy, as
I take my leave, children reach out to wish me as I wave to them
from
the bus. Babu Patil's shared confidence echoes through my head all
through the journey back to Hyderabad.
I had dreamt of a village like
this,
after reading about it in a book. It has actually happened.
Cleanliness,
harmony, trust, human values, bonding, this village with a vision
surely
belongs to another
time.