Bloomberg Hunger Stalks My Father’S India Long After Starvation Banished by Mehul Srivastava • Bloomberg News
NEWSBloomberg Hunger Stalks My Father’s India Long After Starvation Banished By Mehul Srivastava • Bloomberg News October 23, 2012 – It was 1958, my father was still a child, and India was running out of food. That year’s wheat crop had slumped by 15 percent, the rice harvest by 12 percent, and prices in the markets were soaring. Far from his village in eastern India, ships laden with wheat were steaming toward the country, part of U.S. President Dwight Eisenhower’s plan to sell surplus grains, tobacco and dairy products to friendly countries. All India Radio gave daily updates on the convoys, and the army barricaded ports in Mumbai and Kolkata against the hungry crowds. “It was this very coarse, red wheat,” said Narsingh A villager sweeps the streets in Auar Village. Deo Mishra, a childhood friend of my father’s and Photographer: Sanjit Das/Bloomberg now a local politician in their home village. “We were told it was meant for American pigs,” said Mishra, stomachs; not enough to stay healthy. who, like my father, grew up listening to stories about More than five decades after those U.S. deliveries, the food shipments. “Back then, we weren’t any better I returned to the dusty, hot village of my father’s than American pigs. So we ate it. We ate it all and we childhood, hoping to understand why. begged for more.” In the arc of modern India’s elemental struggle to That year, and the hungry ones that followed, took feed its teeming people, my father’s childhood years their toll.
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