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November 10, 2007 Saturday Shawwal 28, 1428





Dreams turn into dust for India’s gold scavengers



By Bappa Majumdar


KOLKATA: As 70-year-old Mohammed Omar sifts through grime in the back lanes housing Kolkata’s ornament makers to pick out gold dust, his deeply lined face furrows with worry as again he finds nothing.

For centuries, the city’s band of more than 200 gold scavengers, have eked out a living by panning out gold dust.

But demand for jewellery has fallen alongside bullion’s climb to a near three-decade high.

World gold prices at above $830 an ounce, have risen 12 per cent in the past month alone and are up more than 30 per cent this year.

“Business is at its worst. People like us are on our way out as silver and pearl jewellery are now more in demand,” said Omar, his voice choked with emotion.

“There is less work at factories and less gold dust available.”

Even as Indian customers thronged jewellery shops during the festive Diwali season undaunted by the sky-high prices, many also walked away empty-handed, promising to return when prices eased.

Indians consider it auspicious to buy gold during Diwali, the Hindu festival of lights, when the goddess of wealth, Lakshmi, is worshipped. The period from October to February also coincides with the marriage season, when parents give their daughters gold jewellery as a dowry.

For Omar, his plight couldn’t be worse during this time of plenty. With his daily earnings dwindling to just a dollar from five previously, he struggles to feed his nine-member family.

“Earlier, we never used to go to bed hungry,” Omar said.

“Now, we are lucky to get a full chapati during our meals,” he said referring to a type of Indian bread.Each day, Omar and his band of “Kadaiwallahs” – men who wield large pans – rise at the crack of dawn to catch goldsmiths sweeping their shopfloors and set about scouring the debris for gold speckles.

They separate gold by burning out the impurities with acid and bringing them together with mercury drops in vessels, a traditional brand of alchemy that dates back to the rule of the Mughal kings in the 16th century.

But their world is falling apart, thanks to shifting gold market dynamics.

“All that does not glitter can be gold,” said 35-year-old Mohammed Aqeel, his gold tooth catching a gleam from the early morning sunshine.

“I remember selling gold worth 5,000 rupees an ounce, but those are rare moments now. Perhaps they will never return again,” he added, wistfully.

In fact, business was so good seven years ago he could replace a broken tooth with a gold one easily, he said.

This week, he had only a 700 milligram gold piece to show for three days of back-breaking work.

By contrast, “Kadaiwallahs” used to be able to accumulate about one gram of gold after a few hours of work, earning up to 6,000 Indian rupees, or $153, a month.—Reuters






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