Women resentful: NaMo smashed their piggy-banks!

Women resentful: NaMo smashed their piggy-banks!

The 500-1000 rupee demonetization drive has unearthed a lot of ‘hidden cash’ in ordinary homes, and some women are hopping mad about it. These ladies have been warming their little nest-eggs, saving up for a rainy day, and now many of them are truly exasperated that their ‘secret savings’ have to be revealed!

Indu Mehra lives in Delhi’s Karol Bagh area and has been quietly saving little amounts for more than 10 years. Her husband, who runs a business, didn’t know about her savings until Wednesday.

“I frequently got cash as gifts from my parents and my husband for more than 10 years. This amount was meant for rainy days and my husband and children didn’t know about it, but now they know.

“I support Mr Modi’s move, but I don’t like the way he did it. He should have given us some notice, then I may have been able to quietly change my savings without my husband getting to know about them.

“Also, I have seen daily-wage labourers struggle to buy basic things like food and milk in the last few days. Given the queues at banks today, their situation is unlikely to change for a few days.”

Aliya Khatoon from Patna couldn’t spend the whole day waiting in a long queue before the bank. So she had to ‘confess’ to her husband that she had a hoard of nearly twenty thousand rupees saved up in her box over a period of five years. She said her husband didn’t take very kindly to the news. She had to hand over the money to hubby dear, and he’s going to deposit it in his account!

Priya Rohtan didn’t want her husband to know about her savings, and said he was “shocked” after he found out.

“I never told my husband about my savings because I feared that he would spend it. I saved money from his earnings only, but didn’t want him to know. I saved for my two children’s future.

“When I told him on Wednesday that I had some extra cash savings, he was shocked. But he started laughing at the fact that I saved money from his earnings and he didn’t know about it. I don’t know about corruption and demonetisation, I am just angry that my savings system has now been disrupted.”

Kiran Rajpal was queuing up at a bank in Delhi along with her daughter to deposit her savings into her account. She says that she will tell her husband only after she manages to deposit them into her account.

“I don’t think my husband is going to be upset when I tell him about my savings. I think he will see the point that I saved, mostly from his salary, for our children’s future. I don’t think I have done anything unusual, every Indian woman has a secret savings box that she keeps for emergencies or occasions like birthdays and weddings.

“Ideally, I wouldn’t have liked my husband to know about my savings. But at the same time I agree that this [banning currency notes] had to happen because of so much corruption around us.”

Asha Chhabra says she has never faced any crash crunch in her life, but “still saved little amounts frequently”.

“I started saving more after getting married about 30 years ago. My husband runs a transport business and we have never faced any cash shortage, but I still preferred to save. I didn’t tell anybody in the family about my savings, but now they will all find out after they see my bank account details.

“I am not worried about going to the bank to deposit my savings because it’s all legal, and I have accumulated it over several years. Also, I am not sure about my husband’s reaction when he finds out. I think he will be fine with it.”

Sunita is a school teacher and supports the government’s decision. She says she doesn’t mind “little problems like queues” because it “will reduce corruption”.

“It’s okay that women like me now have to reveal our secrets. But we shouldn’t worry because we save for our families. I have given money to my children and husband so many times from my savings box, but I always ensure that I keep replenishing it.

“I will continue to do that, just that now my savings secret won’t be a secret any more.”

 

[prepared partially from interviews and from media reports by Newsnet Interns]

One Response to "Women resentful: NaMo smashed their piggy-banks!"

  1. Lokesh Kumar   November 12, 2016 at 10:32 am

    My mother took out her ” Black ” money yesterday which she had saved from the home expenses … and it was quite a lot …. I deposited it yesterday in the bank after standing in line for four hours !