IN the relentless march of headlines detailing heat wave fatalities-"100 People Die in Heatwave" or "Extreme Heat Kills Hundreds"-the profound human narratives often fade into statistical obscurity. Who are these individuals succumbing to the sweltering temperatures in the Global South, in our cities, and across our villages? What stories do they carry, and what societal injustices push them to the forefront of this climate crisis?
The unsettling truth emerges: the victims predominantly hail from marginalised communities, bearing the intersectional weight of caste, gender, and economic disparity. The impact of heat waves is far from equitable.
The Heat is not Equal to All of Us
Consider someone sitting in an air-conditioned room and compare their experience to that of a Dalit woman toiling in the sun, working someone's field for a daily wage. The difference is stark. In these fields, even access to water is unequal. In the realm of environmental discourse, water is often romanticised as the nectar of life, a symbol of purity, and a source of natural beauty. However, for Dalits in India, water carries a burden far heavier than its lifenurturing properties-it is a stark reminder of caste-based discrimination and exclusion.
Imagine fetching water not as a routine chore but as a journey fraught with the fear of facing discrimination and violence. For Dalits, accessing water sources reserved for upper castes can result in ostracisation, verbal abuse, or even physical assault. The simple act of quenching one's thirst becomes a daily struggle.
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