They are the traditional masseurs, the "delivery" women of Maharashtra, the 
dais, whose corpus of traditional health knowledge has been totally ignored by 
health policy makers.These midwives, who could have been incorporated into the 
health system by serving in maternity wards of government hospital and health 
centres, still do "deliveries" at the rate of Rs 300 or Rs 400 (US$1=Rs 50) per 
childbirth in and around the slum areas of Nagpur. They massage the post-partum 
mother and the newborn for a wage of about Rs 700 to 1,000 per month, and 
charge about Rs 30 or 40 for an ordinary massage. Due to their association with 
work that involves a menstruating woman, they have traditionally been regarded 
as low caste and untouchable. Hindu society had regarded the process of 
childbirth, associated with bleeding, as unclean and traditional midwives were 
seen at par with sanitation workers.There was strictly no physical contact 
between members of the household and
 the woman who had given birth as well as the one who tended to her during this 
period. In the midst of the rejoicing, the new mother was segregated and could 
not enter the kitchen or prayer room for around five weeks. The dai, who tended 
to the mother, also had to observe rituals of purification.Girijabai, an 
elderly midwife belonging to the Matang caste, narrates how she still waits 
outside her own home until someone comes to give her a fresh sari and pour out 
some water for her bath. Dr Sita Gupta, a Nagpur-based college lecturer, 
describes how, at her mother's home in the village, water had to be sprinkled 
over the dais' footprints as ablutions before others could enter that part of 
the house.For years, dais have had to clean up after the birthing process in 
the most unhygienic and primitive way. Girijabai narrates how the afterbirth 
was buried in a pit dug within the premises of the house. In the villages and 
slums in small towns, where there were
 stables for the cattle, this pit was often located inside the stable. A fire 
is lit over area where the placenta and other waste were buried for about 12 
days as a purification process.Sheela Chahande, who is well into her fifties, 
was brought into the world by a midwife - also called Girijabai - in her 
ancestral home which had mud-walls. According to Chahande, the midwife used to 
do the post-birth sanitation work for all the tenants of her paternal family. 
After delivery, a pit was dug into the mud floor, and the waste matter of the 
child and the new mother swept or poured into it. Each day, bath water, excreta 
and washing waste was thrown into this pit. No one was to have anything to do 
with the pit apart from the dai and the new mother. Also, according to 
traditional practice, the mother was not allowed to see sunlight for those 12 
days and her only source of support and comfort during this period of isolation 
was the dai who attended on her.The
 people of the Matang Samaj, or Mangs as they are called, practiced a few other 
traditional occupations, such as making brooms from palm leaves and playing 
music on simple instruments when the body of a dead person was taken to the 
pyre or "ghat". They are classified as Scheduled Castes (SC) but since many of 
them embraced Buddhism and followed the path of the great Indian reformer, Dr 
B.R. Ambedkar, they have managed to shed the caste tag. But they continue to 
remain socially and economically marginalised, caught between the old and the 
new.Chandrakala Wankhede, a dai from the Matang Samaj, observes that because of 
the growing trend of women choosing to give birth in hospitals, dais have been 
deprived of their traditional occupation. Now they do just the post-delivery 
massages. She and her mother describe how they learnt their work from their own 
mothers. "I used to accompany my mother to houses for deliveries since I was 
15," she recalls. "We learnt
 how to feel the pregnant woman's abdomen and estimate how many months the 
foetus she was carrying was, and work out when the birth would occur."Her 
mother, Sakhubai Dhoke, explains how they dealt with emergencies. "If a hand 
emerges instead of the head, we gently squeeze it back in and turn the baby 
till the head is in the right position," she says, adding, "If a leg comes out 
first, we gently manoeuvre till the other leg emerges and we get the baby to 
come out legs first. We never use forceps, but try the massage and easing-out 
technique. If the placenta and umbilical cord remain inside, we wrap a piece of 
cloth on the upper part of the abdomen and push it all out."In some states like 
Madhya Pradesh, the government has worked out a way by which dais are 
associated with hospitals as contract workers. Their expertise is thus used and 
they are paid per childbirth. But since the burgeoning of hospitals and 
maternity homes in Maharashtra, the Matang women,
 especially in rural areas, have been without a regular source of income. Some 
have almost been forced into begging. It has become a customary practice for 
people to give the 'Mangin', as she is called, old clothes, shoes, and 
leftovers. Kharebai, who now works as a peon in a school at Saoner, a tehsil 
town of Nagpur, describes how pauperised Matang women have to sometimes dry the 
stale rotis or puran polis they are given under the sun, and eat them over a 
few days.Some within the community have been able to figure out ways to embrace 
change. Kalabai of Indora Jhopda argues that Dr Ambedkar's teachings and the 
possibility of conversion to Buddhism or Christianity, can be a way out for the 
destitute. While many of them have not experienced untouchability personally 
because of urbanisation and rising literacy, Kalabai still believes that her 
community members should educate themselves and seek jobs in other professions. 
Nanda, another dai in her thirties,
 points to the bane of early marriage which has ruined many like her. "In our 
community, girls are married off when they are very young," says Nanda. "I was 
married when I was about 13 or 14, but my husband deserted me and I had to 
resort to our traditional work to earn a living. Through great effort, I have 
managed to bring up my children. My daughter-in-law, however, is not interested 
in the profession," she says.While the desire for change is great, it does not 
often translate into reality. According to Janardhan Borge, a lab assistant in 
a Nagpur school, about 25 per cent of children of the community drop out of 
school at the primary level and 50 per cent at the higher levels. As a child, 
Borge lived near Amravati and his mother used to work as a dai. But Borge 
ensured that his own sons received a good education, and they are presently in 
college with one of them training to be an engineer.Borge's story is relatively 
rare in the Matang community.
 Most, especially the women, still live poverty-stricken lives. Which is a 
great pity given the fact that the skills these women possess are of great 
value in a public health scenario where the ratio of nurses and medical 
attendants to patients is extremely low and where infant and maternal mortality 
is a huge concern.Shakuni Wankhade, who works in a local hospital, speaks for 
many when she observes, "Women in the Matang community are hardworking and 
loving. They provide a valuable service and need to be recognised for doing so."

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