Social distancing is a privilege of the middle class. For India’s slum dwellers, it will be impossible
For two days, Jeetender Mahender, a 36-year-old Dalit sanitation worker, has not dared to leave his family’s shanty in the Valmiki slum of northern Mumbai, India, except to go to the toilet.
His situation is desperate. The tiny home has no running water or toilet, his family is low on food — and when he doesn’t go to work, he doesn’t get paid.
Mahender is trying to comply with Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s 21-day nationwide lockdown, intended to help stop coronavirus spreading further among the country’s 1.3 billion people. India has recorded 1,024 cases and 27 deaths.
“Social distancing is not just for the sick, but for each and every person, including you and even your family,” Modi said in a nationwide address last week.
That might work for India’s middle and upper classes, who can hunker down in their condos and houses, preen their terrace gardens, eat from their well-stocked pantries and even work from home, using modern technology.
But the chaos unfolding across India in recent days has spelled out that for the 74 million people — one sixth of the population — who live cheek by jowl in the country’s slums, social distancing is going to be physically and economically impossible. [Continue reading…]