homeeconomy NewsTraditional knowledge to the rescue in water scarcity hit Assam

Traditional knowledge to the rescue in water scarcity-hit Assam

Sometimes, particularly during monsoons, the day starts around 4 a.m., earlier than usual, for Rati Ranjan Mondal in Assam’s Nagrijuli village on the Indo-Bhutan border.

By Anup Sharma  May 2, 2019 3:58:49 PM IST (Published)


Sometimes, particularly during monsoons, the day starts around 4 a.m., earlier than usual, for Rati Ranjan Mondal in Assam’s Nagrijuli village on the Indo-Bhutan border.
Mondal wakes up, after a night of heavy rain and hurries to his paddy field to inspect the earthen dong and mend the damage, if any. Thankfully, for him, it’s intact. The incessant rain could have damaged the dong – a small canal that channels water from rivers in neighbouring Bhutan to the paddy fields of these villages and is also used for storage backyard ponds in village homes.
The dong water system is a lifeline for hundreds of villages along the Indo-Bhutan border in Baksa district of Assam. Due to the lack of natural water bodies and inaccessibility of groundwater, villagers depend on this century-old traditional system of water management. Community-managed committees oversee the dong system and follow traditional principles of water management to ensure judicious distribution of the water and, more importantly, to ensure that there is no waste.