Sukhi means happy. But there have been few happy moments in the life of 70-year-old Sukhi Begum. She has lost her home seven times in the last 50 years due to flooding and riverbank erosion by the Brahmaputra river.

The mother of five still lives on a riverine island – called a char – and fears her home will be washed away again. However, people are adapting in ways old and new. There are signs of hope.

“We came to Pakuar Char of Sariakandi [in Bogura district of northern Bangladesh] around 50 years ago,” she said. “I still remember the day when we were first displaced due to riverbank erosion. We built homes there to start a new life, but the river devoured our homes time and again.”

Advertisement

Still, Sukhi does not want to live anywhere else. She knows that floods destroy, but they also bring fresh silt from the Himalayas, making the chars the most fertile land in the Bengal delta. “I was born in a char and want to breathe my last in a char too.”

Sukhi Begum with her 50-year-old daughter Bani Begum in the background at her home on Pakuar Char, Jamalpur, Bangladesh in April 2022. Photo credit: Mohammad Abdus Salam/ The Third Pole

The Brahmaputra – called the Jamuna in Bangladesh – destroys chars and simultaneously adds to them by depositing silt. As it did so on one side of Pakuar Char, 34-year-old farmer Ziaur Rahman sowed jute, though he knew a flood could wash away his crop any time, especially during the June-September monsoon.

He has shifted his home to a relatively more permanent island – just another way of adapting to the floods that are becoming more frequent due to climate change.

Adaptation every monsoon

People living on the Brahmaputra chars know that large parts of the low-lying sand-and-silt islands will be inundated every monsoon. It does not take a big flood. Some raise the earthen foundations of their homes as high as they can afford to. Then they hang their bedsteads from rafters, hammock style. Planks are hammered together to make lofts at the same higher level. This is where they live when the floor is flooded.

Hanging a bed like a hammock to keep it above the floodwaters is a widespread practice – Char Shubhagacha, Jamalpur. Photo credit: Mohammad Abdus Salam/ The Third Pole

But the water may rise further. So, in just about every home, trunks of banana plants are lashed together to form rafts on which families will live, sometimes for months. The wealthiest shelter in their own boats. Huts, roads, markets – all are underwater.

Before building their homes, char residents raise the earthen foundations as high as they can afford to in an effort to keep their homes safe during floods – Char Shubhagacha, Jamalpur. Photo credit: Mohammad Abdus Salam/ The Third Pole

“When floods inundate our homesteads, we must live in lofts built inside houses or on boats or the rafts,” said Ziaur. “When the situation gets worse, people move to [government-run] shelters. But they do not want to go there leaving their all belongings behind.”

Advertisement

There is one thing to be seen in every char household, however poor – a waterproof box. Land title deeds and all legal papers are carefully folded inside polythene packets, which are kept inside the box.

There is one watertight box in every home to keep legal and other important documents safe from floodwaters – Char Damodarpur, Jamalpur. Photo credit: Mohammad Abdus Salam/ The Third Pole

The big adaptation is in agriculture. Mozam Mondal of nearby Char Shovagacha said farmers are now cultivating flood-tolerant varieties of maize. “I cultivated maize on one acre this year and there was bumper production,” Mondal said.

“We like to sow maize on chars as we get a fair price for the cash crop,” said Mozammel Haque, a farmer on Char Dawlatpur in Sharishabari sub-district. “It is higher than for other crops. I sold maize at 1,300 Bangladeshi taka [$15] per maund [37.32 kg] this year.”

Maize is widely cultivated on char lands along the Bangladesh section of the Brahmaputra – Char Shubhagacha, Jamalpur. Photo credit: Mohammad Abdus Salam/ The Third Pole

What happens to their livestock? Mozam said residents must keep the livestock on the same rafts. People carry dried rice in various forms as food. There is nothing for the livestock until they manage to pole their rafts to the nearest patch of grass.

Advertisement

Raising homes

Eamily Begum, 50, knew her family could not afford to raise the foundation of their char home. But she got support to do so in 2021 from the Palli Karma Sahayak Foundation, a government-run development organisation. She thinks the family will be relatively safe now.

“In the past, we had to sell our goats at lower prices before the monsoon as we had no way to keep our goats during floods,” Eamily said. But now the raised plinth of her family homestead has enough space to house the goats they rear. “Now we will not sell our goats [cheap] during a flood.”

A support scheme helps residents to build a raised goat pen to keep the animals safe during floods in Char Shubhagacha, Jamalpur. Photo credit: Mohammad Abdus Salam/ The Third Pole

Some raised plinths are large enough to grow fruits and vegetables around the homestead. “I have already earned about 1,400 Bangladeshi taka [$16] by selling bottle gourd,” said Seema Begum, another resident. “I will be able to earn more by selling papaya. The fruit has started ripening.”

Advertisement

Pogidur Rahman, coordinator of the PKSP Extended Community Climate Project – Flood, said the project has provided financial support to 87 families to build climate-resilient houses by raising plinths. But, Rahman said, this support is not enough as there are a huge number of poor families living on the chars.

Flooded tubewells

Floods submerge the tubewells from which char dwellers get their drinking water. Every monsoon, they face a water shortage. But sanitation has improved on many chars – government-built public toilets have been raised higher so they are not submerged as quickly as before.

“In the past, our tubewells and toilets were inundated during the floods,” said Afroza Begum of Nadaghari Char at Madarganj. “Now we have installed them on raised plinths. We hope we will not face any drinking water and sanitation crisis during floods in future.”

A public toilet built on a raised platform in Char Shubhagacha, Jamalpur, to keep it above floodwaters. Photo credit: Mohammad Abdus Salam/ The Third Pole

Toll on women

A flood does not change the traditional roles of women – cooking and fetching drinking water. It makes their jobs harder. Some have to travel up to a kilometre to get to a functioning tubewell. Some reach it on boats or rafts. Others must wade through, sometimes barely keeping their heads above the floodwaters.

Advertisement

“Collecting drinking water is a hard task indeed,” said Mahmuda Begum, resident of Char Damudurpur in Jamalpur district. “We have to go a long distance by boat or raft.”

And when women are forced to stay in shelters or atop embankments, they are vulnerable to sexual harassment, especially when they use public toilets at night, said Muhammed Forruq Rahman, research and advocacy manager of the local NGO Network on Climate Change, Bangladesh.

There are not enough education facilities for children in char areas. The few schools that exist are flooded every year, leaving children to miss classes for months.

Few of the children living on chars go to school, which remain flooded and closed for months every year – Char Shubhagacha, Jamalpur. Photo credit: Mohammad Abdus Salam/ The Third Pole

People on chars

The chars formed as the Brahmaputra, Ganga and other rivers brought silt down from the Himalayas. The river islands are so fertile that they have been fought over for centuries. Local landlords used to keep private armies (called paiks and lathials) to take over chars, and incentivised landless farmers to cultivate the char lands and live there despite the difficulties. Many of the farming families living on chars today are descendants.

Advertisement

They grow rice, maize, jute and vegetables – all of which grow better here than on other soils. “There is no shortage of crops in the chars anytime of the year,” said Mahmuda Begum.

Shortage of services

Alal Mondal, a resident of Char Shovagacha, said that if anyone falls ill, there is no doctor on the island. “So, the patient must be taken to Gabergram, three kilometres away, by boat or raft,” Alal said. “Then they may have to be shifted to a hospital in Jamalpur.” His neighbour Abdur Rahman said there is no community clinic on the char.

The river and the char – Kawamara, Sharishabari, Jamalpur. Photo credit: Mohammad Abdus Salam/ The Third Pole

Char residents have little access to government-run schemes such as the vulnerable group feeding scheme, vulnerable group development programme, old-age allowance, widow allowance or disability allowance. There are allegations that officials seek bribes before agreeing to include anyone in a scheme.

This article first appeared on The Third Pole.