
Begging
Few people if that, in the third world
are unfamiliar with the arts and bane of begging.
It is rampant everywhere in our society from traffic
signals to governmental offices where in India it
is referred to as baksheesh and here in Pakistan as
sweet little kancha. Although westerners when they
arrive at our shores and travel our roads are bewildered
and feel the pain of humanities suffering watching
young and old alike begging for all sorts of things,
little do they realize that they are not dealing with
people who are actually poor, but people who are inherently
lazy and not interested in working for their income
at all.
I too was once among the sufferers, amongst those
who chose to avert their gaze away from a bandaged
face asking for money tapping at your window while
seemingly in great pain due to the wounds tied up
in gauze. The light of how naive and foolish my thought
was dawned on me with an early morning drive to an
arranged cricket match one day, when I saw scores
of these beggars arriving in a proper van, wearing
normal clothes which they hurriedly discarded to my
fury for rags and speedily painted burn victim and
other kinds of makeup on each other to rush to their
assigned spots.
Even then, I chose to ignore this spectacle I had
witnessed until one day outside perhaps one of the
largest mosques in the city, I requested an old woman
who had stood at the gate for years to step a few
steps to the side so she would not be pushed by the
out coming throng. She responded by screaming to me
that I was a filthy SOB for saying this, as she had
paid over 400,000 rupees for this spot she had purchased
at the gate. It was at this point that I walked away
mouth open and brain pounding at what had just been
said to me. Later on, I sat down with one of these
beggars on the roadside and learnt things which were
almost hilarious.
He assured me that begging was not a way of charity
or asking for money, but since this is the 21st century,
it had turned into an art of conning. Not the poor,
the kidnapped, the taken away from home and then had
their legs cut off kind of scenario we are made to
believe in movies like Slumdog; but the actual craft
of appealing to a persons charitable side by donning
various forms and disguises handed down by generations
of teachers. As I sat their listening, he explained
to me the various techniques and methods in rage among
beggars today and how they are employed in different
parts of Karachi. Since then, I have noticed what
he said being true in plain sight as I travel around
the city on various occasions. So without further
delay, let me introduce you to these devices of entrepreneurship.
) Rose children
Mostly employed in the posh areas and outside major
bridges, leading them are children with roses, who
are selected for their cuteness from the begging clans
(that's what they call themselves) and given 2 Rs.
roses in single plastic wrap to sell to us folk for
20 or 30 Rs, saying things like, "Aap pe kitna
acha laga ge, bhabi ko aaj kush kar den" etc,
etc.
b) Spilt Wares
A new and creative way of fleecing is a man sitting
bear the start of an underpass or close to the end
of an overpass with a pail of edibles such as chickpeas
or sugarcane cubes in the summer months, half spilt
by his side picking them up with dejected eyes so
as to declare that he is a hard worker and that he
has just spilt his wares, quick to ask for the months
ration as soon as you stop that shiny vehicle.
c) Burn victims and Joint-less Individuals
Get a little burn, rub a little dirt on your face,
then smear it with the yellow liquid put it in place
over an eye with a filthy looking bandage, you get
the picture? The missing hands illusion is a cracker
though, with careful practice the hand is actually
folded inside the sleeve so what we hurriedly avert
our eyes from is not the stump but the elbow, with
some makeup on. They are employed randomly across
the city, wherever the major intersections are found.
d) Sadhu or Malangs
Since Sufism is experiencing a revival in our arts
and culture as well as in drawing room discussion
of those with the cash, this technique is well employed
by beggars as well usually with a weird looking man
in a green or brown chogha roaming clutchign a bowl
full of beads and other paraphernalia, a mystic of
the roads to separate your wallet from your spirit.
Excessively apparent near shopping centers.
e) The Strongman Approach
Yes, these days beggars often come with bhailog like
stances and demands, another genre adapted speedily
from Hindi flicks by our street conmen with major
success. As soon as a person or car stops they approach
bang the window and shout "De" in your face
when you roll your screen down with trembling hands;
as if to implore you to part with some money or part
with your watch.
Let me at this juncture, point out the fact that I
am doing this only to educate and open the eyes of
my fellow men and women who are exemplary in giving
their charity but fail to realize that even if their
spirit is right they are actually giving food to a
monster which does not actually need it. Thus, beggary
is growing rampantly and why should it not? Some of
the beggars have made so much money that they have
their own fleet of mini buses or rickshaws roaming
this city but will still not stop begging. Why should
they? When there are fools like us out there who give
them money to rid, our brains for the time being of
the guilt that comes with success in our country.
Are we as successful as them though, is the question
that troubles me now because if one thinks about it
a business which multiplies with the worsening times
and requires almost zero capital investment, seems
a hell of an idea to me. I know, I know, I'm being
cruel right? They have to give up their respect right?
Well, think about what respect means next time you
hand out that hundred rupee note to a man that is
probably, if not certainly richer than you right now.
Perhaps then you can understand the smile that lights
up his face.