The document discusses the growing problem of elder abuse and abandonment in India. As extended families break down and children migrate to cities, many elderly Indians are being neglected, abused, or thrown out of their homes by uncaring family members. Statistics show that 1 in 3 senior citizens in India report abuse, including verbal, physical, and financial mistreatment. With India's elderly population projected to triple in the coming decades, there is an urgent need to address how a rapidly changing society can better support and care for its aging members.
The document discusses the growing problem of elder abuse and abandonment in India. As extended families break down and children migrate to cities, many elderly Indians are being neglected, abused, or thrown out of their homes by uncaring family members. Statistics show that 1 in 3 senior citizens in India report abuse, including verbal, physical, and financial mistreatment. With India's elderly population projected to triple in the coming decades, there is an urgent need to address how a rapidly changing society can better support and care for its aging members.
The document discusses the growing problem of elder abuse and abandonment in India. As extended families break down and children migrate to cities, many elderly Indians are being neglected, abused, or thrown out of their homes by uncaring family members. Statistics show that 1 in 3 senior citizens in India report abuse, including verbal, physical, and financial mistreatment. With India's elderly population projected to triple in the coming decades, there is an urgent need to address how a rapidly changing society can better support and care for its aging members.
The document discusses the growing problem of elder abuse and abandonment in India. As extended families break down and children migrate to cities, many elderly Indians are being neglected, abused, or thrown out of their homes by uncaring family members. Statistics show that 1 in 3 senior citizens in India report abuse, including verbal, physical, and financial mistreatment. With India's elderly population projected to triple in the coming decades, there is an urgent need to address how a rapidly changing society can better support and care for its aging members.
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We ofte n assume that our greatest dangers are from
strangers on dark streets or from violent men who might
break into our houses. The sad truth is that the highest perils of brutal and persistent violence lurk within the intimate spaces of our homes, from those to whom we are closest.
Seventy-five-year-old Kusum Lata* remembers the heart-
wrenching afternoon that changed her life like it was yesterday. “I’d had my lunch of chappatis and dal and was resting in my room in Karol Bagh, central Delhi, when my son Amit* walked in and asked if I would like to visit our relative in Ghaziabad, in the neighbouring state of Uttar Pradesh, about an hour’s drive away.’’
She was excited at the prospect of going on a car ride
with her only son. “I was looking forward to spending some time with him,’’ she says. The frail septuagenarian agreed to the journey, not knowing that it would be the last time she’d ever see her son and his family. “Although I was trying to make conversation with him on the way, he appeared to be deep in thought and was silent,’’ she remembers.
After driving about 40 minutes, once they were on the
highway, Amit, who is 50 and a father himself, stopped the car near a roadside fruit stall and asked her to step out to buy some apples. “As I was choosing the fruit, I saw my son start the vehicle, and before I could call out to him, he sped off,’’ says Kusum, a tear rolling down her deeply creased face.
“Initially I thought he’d gone to fill petrol or buy
something, so I waited in the hot sun for several hours hoping he would return. But then, late in the evening, the truth dawned on me – I’d been abandoned by my own son; my only son and child.’’
Taking pity on the elderly woman sitting sobbing by the
side of the road, a few local residents helped her to an old-age home run by a charity in Ghaziabad. Emotionally distraught, she was initially reluctant to provide details about her; son to the volunteers, but after much prodding she finally revealed his address.
A month later, representatives of the charity tracked
down Amit to ask him to take his mother home, but he refused, saying he was disowning her as she was a burden to care for.
A volunteer at the home that took Kusum in two years
ago says, “A few months before getting rid of his mother, Amit reportedly made her transfer the ownership of her house to him.’’
‘They took all I had and dumped me’
The saving grace in Kusum’s case is that she was not
physically abused, unlike Uma*, a thin, frail woman who lies on the cot next to Kusum’s in the Ghaziabad home. The 80-year-old woman’s hands and legs bear marks of bruises and cuts, a result of the abuse she suffered at the hands of some relatives. They tortured her, forcing her to give them all her gold jewellery worth around Rs90,000 (Dh6,128), before they dumped her in front of the old- age home one evening in May last year. “They didn’t want me so they took all that I had and dumped me here,’’ she says, her voice flat.
Kusum and Uma are just two of the millions of elderly
people with uncaring family members who take their limited riches before throwing them out of their homes. A report by HelpAge India, a voluntary organisation working for abandoned and needy elderly people, reveals some shocking statistics. According to the report, one in three senior citizens is a victim of abuse in India.
According to an activist and charity worker, “All senior
citizens we spoke to in Delhi said they had been verbally abused, while 33 per cent confided they had been physically abused – often beaten and tied to chairs.”
Last year, in the southern city of Hyderabad, the well-off
family of a 75-year-old cancer patient decided to burn her alive at a crematorium because they did not want to pay for further treatment. She was saved when the crematorium staff noticed her stir and called police. Elderly parents being abused and abandoned is not just an urban phenomenon. In rural India, the family system is eroding, with the younger generation increasingly heading off to cities with their spouses and their children to start a new life – without their parents or grandparents.
According to a 2012 survey by HelpAge India, less than
40 per cent of Indians now live with extended family. While Delhi has the highest number of senior citizens who own property, over the years they become meek and dependent on their children. And that is generally when problems arise.
Those who have worked in government service or for a
reputed private company receive pensions, but a large majority of India’s population still work as farmers or day labourers. Once they are too old to work, they are forced to rely on their children or extended family for support
The traditional Indian society and the age-old joint family
system have been instrumental in safeguarding the social and economic security of the elderly people. However, with rapid changes in society and the emergence of nuclear families in India in recent years, the elderly are likely to be exposed to emotional, physical and financial insecurity in the years to come. India is home to 100 million elderly people today. Their numbers are likely to increase threefold in the next three decades. People are living much longer and couples raising fewer children; moreover three in four elders still report living with their children. The result is that smaller numbers of adults are responsible for many more years of old-age care than ever in the past, and as bodies and minds of ageing parents dwindle, somewhere along the way in crowded urban habitats, relationships within families have come under great strain. Ugly cracks are beginning to show.
In many villages, children from desperately poor
households are migrating for work in the cities, leaving their old parents behind, to beg or invisibly die of hunger. Our self-image in India is of a people who lay less in store by material pursuits and uphold the institution of the family. The Helpage India report is an unhappy reminder of how distant from this the realities of the changing India are. The melancholy stories the report bring to us of the changing landscape of human relations in urban India are not of desperate want but material greed, of economic dependence and disputes over property and income resulting in growing abuse and neglect of aged people within our homes
Shunned or abandoned by their families,
many senior citizens face the prospect of a lonely death at homes for the aged, with staff having to attend to funeral proceedings. Often, the elderly are reluctant to visit their families, in homes they built for their children. In family after family, the story is the same. Sons and daughters driving their elderly parents out of the house once the property has been bequeathed to them and possession granted. The irony is inescapable. People pray to be blessed with children, only to suffer callous neglect and abandonment in their twilight years. Even a glance at the statistics, leaves one not only perplexed but alarmed at the state of the elderly in India. It is pertinent to ask where are the Gandhian ideas in us?
In a rapidly materialistic society, parents seem to have
become liabilities and not assets. The modern urban population is so consumed with accumulation of their own personal needs; there is neither time nor space for them to share with their parents. In most cases, the intent seems to be there on the children but the priorities are skewed, giving preference to social stigmas and compulsions. Since society has set money as a benchmark for everything, that is the only thing that seems to be the barometer for a lot of young adults. These are cases that have lower priorities for parents in their day to day activities. However, the cases of abuse are to, put it simply, appalling. Gratitude seems to be thrown into the dustbin and by these numbers; there is a trend to suggest that their presence is a major liability to the children in today's world. There are large number of cases in which parents are abused for family wealth and ancestral property. Make no mistake, this is not only the younger generation, this includes the generation that is in their late 40's or 50's who are architects of this mess that you see. If the mid age generation sets such a benchmark, what about the younger ones? At the root of these issues is an inability to handle economic growth with equanimity and grace.
As much as we have liberalized economically, our
systems are not in place that can support the elderly. Neither the state is willing to provide them support nor are individuals willing to support. Unlike developed economies, which have structured old age recuperation mechanisms, we don't have anything of that sort. There is no major plan to deal with senior citizens and the families, based on the statistics, seem to be abdicating their responsibilities. While it is important that everyone works in the family, isn't it also equally important to ensure the elderly are taken care of in an appropriate manner? Shouldn't someone in the family assist either financially or physically to ensure they are taken care of properly? the facts seems to be startling with regards to how the elderly are neglected by society at large. It is high time the state brings about policies that assist the elderly in a more large scale manner and it is imperative that the children of the elderly don't discard them like perishable commodities. The older generation is the source of all the comfort that the younger generation has, it is their hard work and values that have propelled the citizens to what they are today.
Putting aside, the legal implications, we need to think on
moral grounds. Why do we tend to forget that the reason we are in this world is our parents, the reason we studied is our parents, the reason we were alive all this while is our parents, the reason we survived all the diseases is our mother’s care. The hands who made us walk is our parents’. When we were kids we never thought of it but we knew that no matter what, our parents will be by our side. But when our time came to show our respect, to reciprocate the love, to show our gratitude, we back out.
But the truth is that even when they are counting their last breath, they are still thinking of us!
Blessed are they who understand
My faltering step and shaking hand. Blessed are they who know my ears today Must strain to hear the things they say.
Blessed are they who seem to know
My eyes are dim and my answers slow.
Blessed are they who look away
When my tea was spilled at the table today.
Blessed are they who with a cheery smile
Will stop to chat for a little while.
Blessed are they who never say
“You’ve told that story twice today.”
Blessed are they who know my ways
And bring back memories of yesterdays.
Blessed are they who ease the days
And care for me in loving ways.
Blessed are they who make it known
I’m loved, respected and not alone All in all, today we are faced with a horrendous reality, the youth needs to understand and empathize with the elderly. We need to stand up against such injustice. We need to take care of our elders and uphold India’s golden traditions of strong family bonds and ethics.
“THERE IS NO HIGHER RELIGION THAN HUMAN
SERVICE. TO WORK FOR THE COMMON GOOD IS THE GREATEST CREED.”