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The Caravan
|January 2025
Why the Congress keeps losing elections
MANJUSHA KUMARI, a resident of Gaya district, began working for the Bihar government's Jeevika mission in 2013.
Chief Minister Nitish Kumar had introduced the scheme in 2007— with funding from the World Bank and, later, the National Rural Livelihood Mission—to empower rural women by organising them into self-help groups. These SHGs pool together their members' savings and disburse microfinance loans. They are federated into village- and cluster-level organisations. As of March 2024, there were over a million SHGs, seventy thousand village organisations and almost two thousand cluster-level federations in Bihar. These community organisations collectively have 15 million members, known colloquially as Jeevika Didis. The autonomous Bihar Rural Livelihood Promotion Society oversees the entire architecture, but the actual administration is carried out by around a hundred and fifty thousand Jeevika cadre, like Manjusha, who are hired on a contractual basis. As a community mobiliser charged with facilitating ten to fifteen SHGs, Manjusha was paid a monthly honorarium of ₹4,000, with the BRLPS only contributing ₹1,500 and the SHGs meant to cover the rest.
"They pay us part-time salaries but expect us to work fulltime," Manjusha said at a Mahila Samvad in Patna's Sadaqat Ashram, where the Congress general secretary Priyanka Gandhi Vadra wanted to hear about the struggles faced by the women of Bihar. The event was held on 26 September 2025, about six weeks before the state went to the polls. Manjusha was one of six speakers, each of whom represented a line of work dominated by women, such as staffing state-run childcare centres or cooking midday meals for schools. They had similar grievances about the meagre salaries they were paid, the terrible conditions under which they worked and the consequences they faced when they protested.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der January 2025-Ausgabe von The Caravan.
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