Over 400 stray dogs get a home, good food and care at a ragpicker’s shanty in South Delhi
13-July-2015
Vol 6 | Issue 28
Adjacent to the PVR Anupam miltiplex in south Delhi's Saket neighbourhood stands a tin shack on wooden slabs and decorated with a few torn rugs. In and around this shanty, stray dogs can be seen walking around like disciples of a holy saint.
The shanty belongs to Pratima Devi, who looks older than her 61 years. She has lived here for more than three decades and is a ragpicker. Better known as Amma in the neighbourhood, she earns only to look after hundreds of dogs in the locality.
Pratima nurses the injured dogs and feeds them with milk, stew and mutton (Photo: IANS)
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"I look after over 400 dogs - about 200 around my home. Others are scattered in the courtyard of the PVR complex up to J-block (a little over half a kilometre away). My dogs never bite. They have been sterilised and vaccinated by the MCD (civic body)," said Pratima.
She nurses the injured dogs and feeds them from a civic van in the evenings - the fare includes milk, stew and mutton. Pratima has earned quite a reputation in the locality today and many neighbours make a contribution toward feeding the dogs.
"I was married at the age of seven to a man who was more than 10 years older than me. My husband often came home drunk and used to beat me. My mother and I have suffered at the hands of our in-laws," recounted Pratima, who came to Delhi in the early 1980s from Nandigram in West Bengal.
Pratima had already parted ways with her husband and was working as a domestic help in Kolkata. She decided to move to Delhi to be with her older son. She has two more children.
Amma said she has worked as a domestic help in model-turned-actor Rahul Dev's home. "He was very fond of my paranthas," she said, adding the actor still comes to visit her. She later ran a tea-stall near PVR for more than 25 years. But popularity came at a price.
"A neighbour who owned a departmental store conspired with two policemen and burnt down my tea-stall along with my house. I was injured and many of my dogs were also burnt. They spared no one," she recalled, while showing burn marks on her feet.
Pratima has now bought a house in Sangam Vihar, some five km away, where her children live today, but she refuses to go as her adopted children - the dogs - are not welcome there.
"My children do not want me to stay with them because of the dogs. And I cannot leave them. Who will take care of the dogs if I leave them," she asked.
Mental health professionals, however, have a different take on the issue. They feel that dogs sometimes fill emotional gaps in people's lives, but add that when socialisation is exclusively limited to pets, there were possibly underlying issues.
" Most people feel comfortable with animals. Nothing wrong with it, but confining oneself to animals definitely is (not good)," said Suyesha Singh Rathore, a counselling psychologist.
"Some prefer talking to walls while others to birds, plants and sometime animals. The most common state is 'parler a chien' (talking to dogs) as social adaptations of dogs and humans are similar enough. The dogs can live perfectly happy lives surrounded by humans and vice versa," Rathore added.
"Fear of being closely watched, judged and criticised by others may lead to anxiety and self-consciousness," she pointed out.
However, there are several reports, including one cited by New York Times, that speaks of nor just the benefits of cuddling a pooch, but also explains the science behind the compelling draw of "puppy eyes" that your pet may subject you to. The feeling of wellness you get while playing with your pet may be rooted in your brain chemistry. And it works both ways.
"The look of love can also be in the dog's eyes. Dogs who trained a long gaze on their owners had elevated levels of oxytocin, a hormone produced in the brain that is associated with nurturing and attachment, similar to the feel-good feedback that bolsters bonding between parent and child." - IANS