Come pepper harvest season, children of migrant workers in Karnataka miss school
The Hindu
During pepper harvest season, children of migrant workers in Karnataka miss school as they need to take care of siblings while parents work.
“My teacher contacted me over the phone and scolded me for missing class. But what can I do? I cannot stay alone in my village when my parents are here,” said a class 8 student from Ballari district of Karnataka. At present, the boy lives in a makeshift tent along the road connecting Chikkamagaluru and Adlur.
He is among the hundreds of children from central and north Karnataka districts who miss school for a couple of months as they accompany their parents, who move to the Malnad districts to work in coffee estates during the pepper harvest season.
Many families from Davangere, Haveri, and Ballari districts have been living in tents on either side of the road between Chikkamagaluru and Aldur. While the parents go to the estates to harvest black pepper during the day, their children stay in their temporary camp. These camps are filled with children aged two to 13 years. They spend the whole day taking care of their younger siblings. The majority of them have been enrolled in schools in their native villages. However, they miss classes when they accompany their parents to the Malnad districts.
“My mother prepared rice and sambar in the morning before leaving for work. We had the same for lunch. Our parents will come back by evening,” said a class 6 student who currently lives in a tent in Chikkamagaluru.
A majority of these migrant workers are from Lambani tandas. With meager land in their native villages, they move out looking for jobs that pay well. Some of them leave their children under the care of their aged parents in their native places.
Harvesting black pepper is a skill. They use ladders to climb up and harvest the pepper without damaging the plants. “The employers pay ₹12 per kilo of pepper harvested. A couple can harvest about 150 kilos a day, earning about ₹900 each,” said Vishnu, a native of Davangere. They hardly earn ₹400 a day in their native places.













