The Tranquilo Traveler
The Tranquilo Traveler is a celebration of voluntourism, slow travel, and other interesting ways to see the world. Travel writer and award- winning Moon Handbooks author Joshua Berman created The Tranquilo Travel as a resource for world trippers and international volunteers, a window to the author’s travels in Nicaragua, Belize, and beyond, and an update of his books and articles.
Final Report: Malnutrition of Tea Workers

We have completed our report on the malnutrition of workers on six Indian tea gardens. This is the reason we came to West Bengal, answering the call of a local NGO which had been looking for volunteers with public health and writing expertise (my wife, Tay, is a nurse and has completed numerous health surveys in West Africa). Eventually, I‘ll make the full report available for download; in the meantime, I’ve posted the Abstract and a few excerpts below. If you would like to receive the complete report, let me know (jberman@gmail.com) and I’ll be happy to send it.
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NUTRITIONAL SURVEY OF TEA WORKERS ON CLOSED, RE-OPENED, AND OPEN TEA PLANTATIONS OF THE DOOARS REGION, WEST BENGAL, INDIA
OCTOBER, 2005
Birpara, Jalpaiguri District, West Bengal
By
Sarmishtha Biswas, Debasish Chokraborty, Sutay Berman, R.N., and Joshua Berman, for Paschim Banga Khet Majoor Samity (West Bengal Agricultural Workers’ Association), in association with the International Union of Foodworkers and the American Jewish World Service
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ABSTRACT
Objective: To determine the nutritional status of tea workers on closed, recently re-opened (“sick”), and normally functioning gardens. Setting: Six tea gardens in the Dooars Region, Jalpaiguri District, West Bengal, India. Methods: 120 families (609 individuals) were surveyed in their homes on the labor lines of six tea gardens. Results: Based on World Health Organization criteria for Body Mass Index, all four open gardens surveyed can be labeled as “starving communities” or “at critical risk for mortality from starvation.” Based on daily caloric intake, 42.5% of the closed garden populations classify as Below Poverty Line (BPL), followed by 40% BPL in sick gardens, both of which are significantly higher than the national average. Conclusion: Malnutrition exists on all six gardens surveyed. Even workers on sick and open gardens endure extreme lean periods due to decreased or delayed wage payments and food rations, as well as inconsistently provided benefits that are due by law. Legally mandated worker benefits (especially for pregnant and breastfeeding women) and government relief programs like Integrated Child Development Scheme (ICDS) and the Mid-Day Meal Scheme (MDMS) are irregular, inconsistent, and in some cases, inadequate or entirely absent. Garden managers and government aid suppliers need to (1) improve the quality and efficiency of their programs and (2) educate the workers as to the existence of these programs. This latter point is essential and urgent. Many workers have no idea as to the existence of relief or ration programs and, when they do, have no knowledge as to procedures. They are also uninformed as to their rights under existing labour laws.
I. INTRODUCTION
Like most tea producing areas of Northeastern India, the Dooars Region tea industry suffered a critical period from 2002 to 2004; during this time 22 of the 548 registered tea gardens in Dooars closed their doors, effectively abandoning resident workers and their families. Nearly 100,000 people (workers and their dependants) were directly affected by the closures, deprived of food rations, wages, health care, electricity, drinking water, and transportation to and from schools for the children. This period was also marked by a surge of starvation deaths on closed gardens which led, in January 2004, to the filing of an IA (Interim Assessment) in Writ Petition 196/2001 in the Supreme Court (Right to Food and Work). This, in turn, led to limited government measures to provide rations and temporary work to tea workers in closed gardens. In addition, special efforts were made to find new employers or persuade the old employers to reopen their gardens.
All but two of the 22 closed gardens were subsequently reopened by the beginning of the monsoon season, 2005. However, at the time of this report, most remain insolvent, or “sick,” with worker conditions as poor as ever, and may soon shut their doors again. Despite efforts to ease the workers’ suffering, reports of hunger, malnutrition, and starvation deaths persist on closed, sick, and open gardens. Such reports have been made in both the local and international media, in statements from trade union leaders, and in personal accounts from the workers themselves.
This survey of tea worker nutrition on open, sick, and closed gardens was undertaken in order to verify—or disprove—the aforementioned reports of hunger and starvation deaths, and to collect statistically relevant evidence of malnutrition. It should be noted that management’s permission to survey on open gardens was granted on condition that theses gardens’ names not be mentioned in the final report; for this reason, the authors will refer to the gardens simply by their status as “open,” “sick,” and “closed.”

II. METHODOLOGY
III. RESULTS
A. Body Mass Index (BMI)
B. Diet
1. Energy Consumption
2. How Often Families Eat and Hungry Periods
3. Drinking Water
C. Illness Past and Present

D. Deaths in the Last Three Years (since first closure events)
The total number of deaths were as follows: 38 families reported a total of 46 deaths in the last three years: 11 on open gardens, 19 on sick gardens, and 16 on closed gardens. Of these, 18 were children under 12 years old, and 28 were adults. Determining that death was caused by starvation or malnutrition, as opposed to natural causes, is a difficult task. What is “natural” becomes unclear as undernourishment works its downward spiral on the health of a human being; immunity levels plummet, leaving the body vulnerable to all kinds of otherwise survivable infections, such as measles or malaria. For each of the 46 deaths encountered during the survey, families were asked basic questions about the deceased’s symptoms, treatment, and events leading up the death. Rather than ascertain the exact number of “starvation deaths” (a task beyond the scope of this survey), the research team recorded possible cases of malnutrition-related deaths on each garden, a few of which are presented below as case studies.
Case Study No. 1
R. Baraik, 23, received no pre-natal care after becoming pregnant in 2003, not long after her tea garden, closed its doors. But, late in her pregnancy, she fell ill, and made the trip to the Government Hospital in Birpara. She returned home with a diagnosis of tuberculosis. Soon after, with the help of the three elderly midwives from her labor line, R. gave birth to a small, extremely weak baby boy who remained listless, barely able to feed. R. died a few weeks after giving birth, followed three months later by her son.
The Baraik family’s struggles continue, two years after R. and her baby’s deaths. Their garden remains closed. The household of six adults and three children usually manages to eat three times day (roti, rice, potato, and tea), but say they have gone completely without food more than three times during the last year.
Help from the government is dismal, at best. The two Baraik school-age children (Sidhanto, 7, and Sidhan, 4) receive midday meals two or three times per week. It is not enough food, they say, only a spoonful of hodge-podge, often with rancid oil. Meanwhile, the government-supplied water pump down the block is not potable, so, like the rest of their neighbors, the Baraiks travel to the neighboring tea garden for drinking water, a round-trip of 5 kilometers.
The mobile medical van, which arrives on Mondays, provides extremely limited treatment and medicine. The Baraiks learned this all too well when Budhain Baraik, 45, began to have irregular urination, a condition that quickly worsened until she could not relieve herself at all. The hospital in Birpara offered no diagnosis and no treatment, only a referral to the University Hospital in Siliguri. This was a trip they could not afford to make, so Baraik was brought back home, where she lays hidden in the house, paralyzed from the waist down and in extreme pain, and most likely, waiting to die.
Case Study No. 2
On one open garden, both Charoa B., 65, and Charotoa B., 85 (from different households) suffered from tuberculosis for one year before being admitted to Birpara Hospital; both were given medications and sent back to their homes where they died one month later. In the hospital of this same open garden, a 12-year-old girl named Chandni B. lay for eight days, suffering from “fever and anemia,” before she was finally referred by the doctor to Birpara Hospital, where she died soon after.
E. Mother-Baby and Pregnancy
F. Government Relief Programs (ICDS and MDMS)
IV. CONCLUSIONS
Malnutrition exists on all six gardens surveyed. Even workers on open gardens endure lean periods due to decreased or delayed wage payments and food rations, as well as inconsistently provided benefits that they are due by law. Based on World Health Organization criteria for Body Mass Index, all four open gardens surveyed can be labeled as “starving communities” or “at critical risk for mortality from starvation.” Based on daily caloric intake, 42.5% of the closed garden populations classified as Below Poverty Line (BPL), followed by 40% BPL in sick gardens and 30% BPL in open gardens. All six gardens together, averaged 37% BPL, which is higher than the national average.
It is encouraging that pregnant and breastfeeding mothers appear to have some knowledge of the importance of taking additional nutrition, but in general, more pre- and post-natal care and education is needed. Few of the garden hospitals had delivery facilities, making the prospect of complications during home delivery extremely dangerous. If local doctors or hospitals (or mobile medical vans) are to give meds and immunization to pregnant women, they should do so on a more consistent basis, and should educate their patients, at the very least, about what they are administering and why.
Legally mandated worker benefits (especially for pregnant and breastfeeding women) and government relief programs (ICDS and MDMS) are irregular, inconsistent, and in some cases, inadequate or entirely absent. Garden managers and government aid suppliers and need to (1) improve the quality and efficiency of their programs and (2) educate the workers as to the existence of said programs. This latter point is essential and urgent. Many workers have no idea as to the existence of relief or ration programs and, when they do, have no knowledge as to procedures. The same is often true regarding workers’ knowledge of their rights under existing labour laws.

15 Responses to “Final Report: Malnutrition of Tea Workers”
Tom-
Do you really beleive that coffee plantation workers have any better standards? Coffee and tea are both grown in underdeveloped countries- qualities of life are likely similar.
Hi Josh,
Great report. I am really interested in obtaining the full report. I sent you an email detailing what I hope to do with it. Please send it to me as soon as possible.
Thanks!
Dear Josh
I’d be very grateful if you could send me your report as I am currently pitching a documentary idea on this subject, and would be very interested in what you found out.
For the benefit of those like Tom, I may also have to include a section on the coffee market. Funnily enough, good old Starbucks doesn’t buy its coffee direct from family run indigenous homesteads in Guatemala.
Many thanks
Suzy
Hi,
enjoyed your report - a real eye-opener for me - thank you.
hi,
thanks for the study. Several times i have visited those areas and seen the sitaution. do you know any org or individual is working among them? please feel free to provide this necessary info.
thanks
sir iam working on jalpaiguri malaria affection, will u help me? i am remote sensing student of north bengal university.
sir, i am santanu dutta, i am working on malaria affection in jalpaiguri district, plz u help me.
Dear
i am very much interested about tea garden workers and specially their health care needs and health seeking behavior as i am doing my research work on this topics now,thanks for your epigramatic article on tea realted issue.
Masud alam,SUST,Sylhet,Bangladesh.masudeco@yahoo.com
I am highly concerned about the issues facing the tea workers in Assam in particular and around the world in general. I am planning a welfare program aimed at the tea wokers of Assam. I will solicit your assistance at the appropriate time. Your initiatvie is highly commendable.
Hi Joshua: I was very excited to come across your blog and hear about the work that you and your wife have done in Birpara. I have been involved with tea plantation women workers in that very area for over ten years. ( I started by doctoral research on plantation history and labor in 1991).
We have a small, fragile and very organic organization called Mahila Jagron Manch (part of a larger NGO that we/i co-founded, called Dooars Jagron, based in Banarhat). Dooars Jagron is primarily funded by CRY and CRY projects are coordinated by Rita Chetri and Victor Basu. I help run an autonomous women’s organization –and if the women wish it, we will be registering our own women-only NGO shortly.
I am a social anthropologist who lives in both the US and in Kolkata/North Bengal. I teach in WMST at the the University of California-Riverside. My book, A TIME FOR TEA was published in 2001. I am currently also working some other projects including our mobilizing against the SCANDALOUS deaths around starvation. I would be VERY VERY interested in the Birpara organizing–it might actually already be connected up with Dooars Jagron which would not surprise me at all. I work only with the women’s wing, the Mahila Jagron Manch–just to make that clear.
I can also send you detailed information about our organizing work as well.
How can I contact you to chat about your work there–esp around malnutrition? I am leaving for home on June 10 and will be up in the Birpara area end August. I meet with the plantation women mid June. It would be GREAT to get more details so we could work in solidarity.
Best regards,
Piya Chatterjee
(Associate Professor; Dept of WMST; University of California at Riverside).
I was very sorry to hear about so many deaths in West Darjeeling (the Sunday Times today) and have asked the editor to consider an appeal to help provide or those with no work
I also read in the Sunday times about the deaths in Darjeeling.In January we are going to Goa for a month the whole issue has moved me so much that I plan to fly to Calcutta whilst there and through the aid agencies hire an english speaking guide with a vehicle, fill up with supplies and distribute directly to the stricking area Can anyone give me advise Thank you
Hi Joshua
I work for a NGO called Child In Need Institute! We too have conducted a nutritional assessment and rehabilitation project in a closed tea garden in Jalpaiguri district, and seem to have similar experiences. Could you please forward a copy of your report to us. If you do have information about malnutrition status amongst children in tea gardens of Darjeeling distrcit, it would be very usefull. Thanks..
please send complete report ‘Malnutrition of tea workers I am much interested to read it because Iam a researcher on Problems of tea workers’
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Hi Josh
Thank you very much for the tea report. As a coffee drinker I have always found tea to be suspect, this confirms the worst-but seriously a very interesting survey.
keep up the good work.
Tom