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Baanskhedi Community is a bamboo crafts community comprising of about 200 families in
Bhopal, Madhya Pradesh. Both the male and female members are associated with bamboo
works like basket weaving, bamboo stools, sofas and other products. The community is
particularly famous for their 10-20 feet tall ravana figures they make during Dussehra festival
(Dussehra is a major Hindu festival celebrated at the end of Navaratri every year). The
residence of these families used to mark Sanjay Nagar Slums near Shahpura Lake. The
demarcated area is called ‘Ravan Mandi’ (Translation- Market of Ravan Figures).
Under several urban renewal and slum eradication programs like BSUP and RAY, the
families were relocated to 12 number EWS (Economically weaker Sections) Housing. Having
lived together like a closely-knit community for five generations, the families face utter
discomfort and alienation with five or six other slum communities they are not acquainted to.
Their problems not only end with alienation. The12 number EWS Housing is no different
from a vertical slum, where slurry of faeces and garbage marks the boundary between
buildings. Apart from inhumane living conditions and no communal spaces to work on their
crafts together, the relocation has left them stranded. A community that was once holding
and uplifting everyone together is now competing against each other for hand-to-mouth
survival.
These issues combined with several other factors like forced formal living, loss of livelihood
and social network etc. give us residents who lack any kind of psychological connection with
their dwellings and neighbourhood. This in turn gives us unstable neighbourhoods,
unmaintained buildings, etc. which finally lead to failure of social housing.
The following thesis project proposes rehabilitation of Baanskhedi community in order to
strengthen their social network and enhance their skills |
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