Wednesday, 8 March 2017

LEADING THE WAY...

Written by Adrija Roychowdhury, The Indian Express



On December 21, 2012, the streets surrounding Rashtrapati Bhawan in New Delhi was teeming with thousands of people out in anger against the brutal rape of a 23-year-old girl. The savagery involved in the incident had appalled the country. The protests in Delhi soon found an echo all over the country. Never before had an entire country anywhere in the world come out in vehement protest against the inability of the government to provide adequate security to women. The incident was soon followed with some significant changes in laws regarding rape cases in India. The Delhi gang rape case and the protests against it went on to become a landmark moment in the history of the feminist movement in India.
While the protests against the Delhi gang rape went on to acquire international stature, it was definitely not the first instance when women or women related issues became the face of a social movement in India. The feminist movement in India has come a long way since its inception in the nineteenth century when the mother figure was upheld as the epitome of strength, protection and endurance and used for the sake of achieving both gender equality and nationalist goals. By the twentieth century, the feminist discourse in the country evolved to widen the concept of equality, including within it issues related to a woman’s right over her body, her control over her life and the legality of crimes related to women. Overtime, on various instances women have risen in unison not just for gender related issues, but also spearheaded some significant socio-economic movements in the country.
On International Women’s Day, here is a tribute to few moments in contemporary Indian history when women have come out on the streets to hold mass protests demanding their rights.


The Chipko movement

international women's day 2017, international women's day, women's day, women's day in India, March 8, India women's day, Indian women, women's protests, women mass movements, Indian Express In the absence of men, it was the women of the village who took it upon themselves to step out of their homes and face the industrialists head on. (Source: Wikimedia Commons)
Concerned with the preservation of ecological balance, the Chipko movement in the state of Uttarakhand (then Uttar Pradesh) started in the early 1970s. The protests were against the government’s policy of handing out contracts to industrial giants to utilise forest produce for making profits. The movement had started off under the leadership of the Dashauli Gram Swarajya Sangh (DGSS). However, despite repeated protests the forest department went ahead and auctioned out about 2500 trees of the Reni forest. While the DGSS planned out a demonstration against the auction, the local government conspired to keep all male activists away from the region.
In the absence of men, it was the women of the village who took it upon themselves to step out of their homes and face the industrialists head on. Gaura Devi, a middled aged Bhotia woman was the one to spot the men of the company who came to fell the trees. She immediately mobilised about 30 women to lead the movement. Challenging the men to first shoot her down before touching the trees she forced them to retreat. Soon after the state government investigated the case and withdrew the company from the Reni forests. This incident sparked off similar movements in other parts of the sub-Himalayan region such as in Gopeshwar (1975), Bhynder valley (1978) and Dongri Paintoli (1980).
While the Chipko movement was primarily a protest demanding ecological protection, the involvement of women in the forefront gave it an added impetus of women asking for a stronger representation in decision making.

Jagmati Sangwan’s movement against khap panchayats

international women's day 2017, international women's day, women's day, women's day in India, March 8, India women's day, Indian women, women's protests, women mass movements, Indian Express Headed by reformer Jagmati Sangwan, close of 1000 women were part of the protest, many among them were married to the men who supported the panchayat ruling.
In 1995, a young boy in Jind district of Haryana had married a girl from his village against the orders of the khap panchayat. As a punishment, the panchayat members ruled the rape of the boy’s 12-year-old sister. What ensued was a bitter struggle between the men and women of the village, the men being supportive of the ruling of the panchayat and the women vehemently protesting against it. Headed by reformer Jagmati Sangwan, close of 1000 women were part of the protest, many among them were married to the men who supported the panchayat ruling.
This was one of the first mass movements organised by Sangwan. Over the years she went on to spearhead a strong women’s movement in Haryana, mobilising close to 50,000 women to join the Janwadi Mahila Samiti. She along with her supporters led passionate campaigns against female foeticide and honour killing in the state. Her biggest target were the Khap panchayats, who she believes operate along the notion of women being the honour of the family.

Naked protest of Manipur’s mothers

On July 11, 2004 a 32-year-old woman named Thangjam Manorama was picked up by members of the Assam Rifles (a paramilitary force unit in India) in Manipur on allegations of her being part of the banned People’s Liberation Army. Next morning, she was found raped and murdered with bullets pumped into her vagina.
Five days after the murder, 30 women came out on the streets of Imphal in protest against the army atrocity against Manorama. Stark naked, they walked down to the Kangla fort in Imphal where the Assam Rifles was stationed, carrying a board that read ‘Indian Army rape us.’ “We are all Manorama’s mothers,” screamed the women. The shocking protest eventually resulted in the Assam Rifles vacating the Kangla fort.

Anti-liquor movement in Andhra Pradesh

In the early 1990s, women in rural Andhra Pradesh took it upon themselves to fight against liquor dependency among their men and the subsequent verbal, physical and emotional abuse that followed. They had just one simple demand: “no drinking or selling liquor”. Led by a woman called Sandhya, the movement began as a dharna at the collectorate followed by the demand to stop sale of liquor in the village.
When liquor packets reached the sale counters, women rushed there and destroyed them. They later marched to the chief minister with a letter written in blood stating “we do not need liquor that drains our blood”. When the CM refused to ban liquor, they decided to sleep across his door, preventing him from leaving the house. Once they realised the futility of pleading for official intervention, they decided to reform their men on the home front. Soon enough, they declared that any man found drinking would have his head shaven and anyone selling liquor would be marched through the village on a donkey.
The women led struggle ultimately led to a statewide ban on liquor in 1995. Remarking on the uniqueness of the movement, political scientist Kancha Ilaiah wrote that “the methods that they use are neither Gandhian nor Marxian but uniquely their own.”

Gulabi Gang

international women's day 2017, international women's day, women's day, women's day in India, March 8, India women's day, Indian women, women's protests, women mass movements, Indian Express Calling themselves the Gulabi Gang (pink gang), the group did not just limit their activities to a fight against gendered social evils, but rather battled against several other wrongdoings such as hoarding, bribery, caste discrimination and several others. EXPRESS PHOTO BY PURUSHOTTAM SHARMA.170909
In 2002, Suman Singh Chauhan of Badausa in Uttar Pradesh’s Banda was faced with an incident wherein her friend had been beaten up by her alcoholic husband. She gathered some of her friends and neighbours and rushed to her friend’s house and thrashed her husband publicly. This incident sparked off the origin of a group of women vigilantes in Badausa who took it upon themselves to correct social evils.
Calling themselves the Gulabi Gang (pink gang), the group did not just limit their activities to a fight against gendered social evils, but rather battled against several other wrongdoings such as hoarding, bribery, caste discrimination and several others. Wearing pink sarees and carrying bamboo sticks, they frequently resorted to violence in order to make their voices heard.
Badausa is listed among the 200 poorest districts in India and engulfed in problems of illiteracy, caste and gender violence. Most of the women in the gang belong to the Dalit community. Speaking to BBC, the current self proclaimed leader of the gang, Sampat Pal Devi is reported to have said: “Nobody comes to our help in these parts. The officials and the police are corrupt and anti-poor. So sometimes we have to take the law in our hands. At other times, we prefer to shame the wrongdoers.”

 http://indianexpress.com/article/research/international-womens-day-2017-five-mass-movements-spearheaded-by-women-in-india-4559761/


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The International Women’s Day is observed on March 8th every year. The event is believed to have begun in 1908 when about 15,000 US women organised a march in the New York City. The agenda behind this march was the demand for equal voting rights, shorter working hours and better way(Women were/are not paid as much as their male counterparts). However, the first International Women’s day was celebrated on 19th Match in 1911 and first women’s day was observed in Germany in 1914. In 1977, the UN General Assembly adopted a resolution and since then March 8th is celebrated as the International Women’s Day.
Now, that we have gotten around the history, let us have the understanding of the necessity to celebrate a particular day for half the population of the world. Considering we live in the part of a world, where movies can be banned due to being ‘lady oriented’ should be enough to answer the question. But every once in a while, somebody comes along, breaking the barriers of patriarchy, rising high enough for the world to look up and kneel before them. Such women need to be celebrated.
Following are the examples of 5 such Indian women who have inspired generations and continue to do so:

Kalpana Chawla

Kalpana Chawla easily makes to the top of the list. Born in Karnal, Punjab on March 17, 1962, Chawla’s first mission began on November 19, 1997, as part of the six-astronaut crew that flew the Space Shuttle Columbia flight STS-87. Chawla was the first Indian-born woman and the second Indian person to fly in space. In the year 2000, Chawla was named for her second flight as a part of the crew STS-107. On January 16, 2003, Chawla finally returned to space aboard Space Shuttle Columbia. The shuttle, unfortunately, disintegrated on his way back home in Texas, killing the entire crew. Unfortunate though it was, Kalpana Chawla became a stuff of legends, of tales and folklores. She became a beacon of hope and inspiration for those who chose to believe.

Indra Nooyi








(Reuters)
Yes, interesting choice for the second spot. But in a world dominated by business’men’, Nooyi has emerged a corporate world leader as the Chairperson and Chief Executive Officer of PepsiCo, the second-largest food and beverage business in the world by net revenue. In 2014, she was ranked 13 on the list of Forbes World’s 100 most powerful women and 82nd most powerful woman on the Fortune list in 2016.

M C Mary Kom








(Reuters)
Not Priyanka Chopra from some village in the North East. If you didn’t know that, you should just stop reading this. Born on November 4, 1982, Mary Kom is an Olympics boxer hailing from the Kom-Kuki tribe in Manipur. She is a five-time World Amateur Boxing champion, and the only woman boxer to have won a medal in each one of the six world championships. Mary Kom, struggled through the rise in ranks. And hailing from the most ignored part of the country didn’t help. Kom did not let marriage and troubles that follow motherhood come in the path of her success and is reportedly training for thew 2020 Olympics.

Arundhati Roy








(Reuters)
Born on November 24, 1961, Arundhati Roy is an Indian author best known for the novel “The God of Small Things”, which won her the Man Booker Prize for Fiction in 1997. The novel became the biggest-selling book by a nonexpatriate Indian author. Roy is also a known political activist and has been involved in numerous humanitarian causes. She, in fact, has had a sedition case filed against her. Now, I am not saying that is the wisest thing to follow here but the woman has been standing up for her beliefs and her rights against much stronger forces.

Sushmita Sen








(Reuters)
Born into a Bengali family in Hyderabad, Sushmita Sen, rose to stardom with the title of the Miss Universe in 1994. Although her venture into Bollywood wasn’t as successful as the runner-up (Aishwarya Rai), Sen is still considered to be one fine actor. The actress has been working on the independent scene for over a decade now. In an industry and a country where taboos become the oxygen we breathe, Sen has adopted and successfully raised two girls with her relationship status being single. So, everyone out there who thinks motherhood is what a woman should want, here is a woman, successful in the own right, raising two girls without the requirement of a father.



 Nari Shakti Puraskaar

Calling them 'unsung heroes', the Union women and child development (WCD) ministry has shortlisted 33 women, who will be awarded Nari Shakti Puraskaar on the occasion of International Women's day by President Pranab Mukherjee.
Among the awardees is the state of Rajasthan for its 'Beti Bachao Beti Padhao' campaign that took its sex ratio from 929 in December 2016 to 942 through a statewide awareness campaign. The 'Annaprashan' and 'Goad Bharai' programmes organised regularly for pregnant women at anganwadi centres in all districts of Rajasthan also helped it make the cut.
The ministry will also award three women scientists - Subha Varier, B Codanayaguy and Anatta Sonney - who have contributed to the launch of 104 satellites by ISRO on February 15.
Varier contributed in finalising the configuration of Satish Dhawan Space Centre and SHAR, Shriharikota range, for real time display. Codanayaguy from Puducherry has been with ISRO for over 30 years now and was responsible for the control system of all the solid motors of the PSLV C37 launch vehicle. Annata has helped ISRO design and develop orbit determination systems.


THE AWARDEES

Asia's first woman to drive a diesel train at the age of 20 - Mumtaz Kazi - will also receive the award. "I draw my inspiration from my father and had an inclination to drive a train since I was young. I had applied for this job back in 1988 and joined Indian Railways in 1991," 46-year-old Kazi told Mail Today.
Motorcyclist Pallavi Fauzdar, who has mobilised her passion to raise awareness about malnutrition in children and female foeticide, will also be honoured. Fauzdar has conquered eight mountain passes above 5,000 metres altitude in a single trip, covering 3,500 kms of rough terrain in Himachal, Leh, Ladakh and Kashmir.
Anoyara Khatun of West Bengal, who has saved 50 minors from child marriage and 85 girls from getting trafficked, also caught the eye of the WCD ministry. Khatun will also be awarded for helping 200 girls pursue education.
India's first female graphic novelist, Amruta Patil, will also be awarded for her work in memento mori, sexuality, myth and sustainable living through graphics.

http://indiatoday.intoday.in/story/international-womens-day-unsung-sheroes-nari-shakti-puraskaar-women-and-child-development-ministry/1/899313.html

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