Women in Tehri take lead to empower themselves
Sunday, May 25 2003 16:30 Hrs (IST)
Tehri: In the remote hilly regions of Uttaranchal, where constant struggle for life is an everyday affair for
most women, a social forum has succeeded in changing their lives by connecting its activities with their
daily routine.
"We have connected our activities with 'jal, jameen, jungle aur zindagi' (water, land, forest and life),"
says Kusum Rawat, state co-ordinator, Mahila Samakhya, a five-year project of the Central government.
Born out of this Samakhya is 'Sahara Sangh', initially a replacement for the former, but has slowly
emerged as a powerful pressure group that protects women's rights.
"We wanted to maintain the tempo created by Mahila courts and other programmes of Mahila
Samakhya, even when the scheme did not remain in the picture," says Rawat, noting that the sangh has
managed to incorporate all the values of Samakhya and added some more features of its own, all at the
initiative of the local women.
The impact that Sahara Sangh has had on the daily lives of women in these hilly districts, can be felt
everywhere – ranging from stopping of child marriage to rallying around a fellow comrade, when her
family subjected her to harrassment.
The Sangh has monthly meetings on the eighth of every month, which are attended by representatives
from every village in and around. These meetings are crowded with everyone wanting to get a word in
on how they had contributed to the cause in the past one month since the last meeting.
Rajashree narrates how the sangh in her village helped to stop her daughter being abused by her
husband by sending him a letter and issuing an ultimatum that if he did not stop his behaviour he and
his family would have to face social ostracisation.
In fact, social boycott is a very effective tool that has helped in keeping the anti-social elements in
villages at bay, says Rawat, noting, "Even men who come drunk to a marriage party are not allowed
inside the ceremony."
In a sensational case that rocked Jakhwal Gaon a few years back, 19-year old Maya was allegedly
murdered by her mother and stepfather in order to get her share of the property, but when the
administration seemed unable to do anything to bring the killers to book, the sangh stepped in.
"We knew that the authorities were not keen on finding the real culprits, so we decided to take matters in
our own hands and boycotted both the mother and her husband. We warned the village elders that we
would not attend any marriage that they were a part of," says Parvati.
The Kishori Sangh, which is a group for teenage girls too is growing in the rural areas and as Unita
Damwal, a 15-year old says, it has stopped many an injustice by the simple technique of dialogue.
PTI
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