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RIGHTS-INDIA:
For Rural Women Self-help Is Best
Aug 16, 2005 - (IPS) Tackling issues like female
illiteracy became easy once the women in this remote village on
the Tibetan border in picturesque Uttaranchal state, decided that
they were closely linked to the shiftlessness of the men folk coupled
with their ruinous drinking habits.
Organising themselves into a small but determined Self Help Group
(SHG), the women set about the twin-tasks of getting their girl
children to school in defiance of male opinion, while simultaneously
launching an aggressive anti-liquor campaign.
Walking fearlessly into homes and forcibly breaking pots and distilling
equipment used for brewing home-made liquor, the women compelled
their men to take seriously their twin programmes of improving literacy
and banning alcohol.
Now, five years down the line, the women are looking back with satisfaction
and ready to reap the benefits of keeping Naitri village alcohol-free,
with children of both sexes to be seen tripping cheerfully to school
and back.
But the women of Naitri swear that none of this would have happened
but for the formation of their SHG in 2000.
Indeed, the Naitri women’s SHG has become such a force that
today it has practically taken over the village panchayat (local
body) and its leader Rampyari plans to contest elections for Gram
Pradhan (village chief) -- unthinkable for a village woman just
a few years ago.
Wresting away this bastion of patriarchal power and control took
grit and perseverance in the face of male resistance, although national
law reserving 33 percent of elected seats in local bodies for women
helped. At the moment, the women are busy constructing a building
to house the panchayat. ''As we are looking after several development
works in the village, we approached the authorities with our request
for a panchayat bhawan (panchayat house),'' Rampyari,38, told IPS.
Males in the village objected to the construction of a building
which, to them, appeared to institutionalise the new power of women,
but they were easily ignored.
''We women have a lot of power. We needed a place where we could
meet and discuss important issues pertaining to our village, such
as crop protection and better roads,'' Rampyari said simply but
forcefully.
When actual acquisition of land for the panchayat house became a
battle between the sexes as men of the 100-odd families that form
the village resisted, the women took their demand to the district
magistrate at Uttarkashi - a powerful bureaucrat who represents
the central government.
''The district magistrate decided in our favour and ordered a police
inspector to visit our village and ensure that we could put up the
building without hindrance,'' said Rampyari. ''I personally oversaw
the construction which was completed in about 10 months,'' she added.
As for funds, the SHG members pooled money needed to buy the land
for the panchayat house and once that was achieved, the government
stepped in with the 3,500 US dollars needed to construct up a proper,
two-room building.
The Naitri story is an inspiring example of how women can break
free of cultural and traditional shackles if they unite as a pressure
group to demand their rights, But it is not an isolated one in these
parts.
At nearby Kimi village, a 10-member women’s SHG is working
alongside the panchayat to ensure that development work in the village
gets carried out speedily and efficiently.
''Our SHG is an effective forum to discuss issues, like cleaning
and clearing of paths, providing water, collecting fodder and other
community matters,'' said Lakshmi, 55, SHG chairperson and panchayat
member.
The SHG imposes and collects fines of about 40 cents on people who
allow their cattle to stray into cultivated land and, thereby, asserts
its authority. "The SHG has provided so much to us in terms
of knowledge and savings -- otherwise who bothers about us illiterate,
mountain women,'' said Lakshmi.
The Naugaon block (basic administrative unit) of Uttarkashi district,
in which Naitri and Kimi villages fall, has an overall literacy
rates of 41 percent among its 56,000 people, while the female literacy
rate is an abysmal 6.8 percent.
''In our time, girls were not allowed to go to school. We were told
it was not important because we would be married off anyway and
sent to another village. But today, all girls in the village go
to school,'' says Surjidevi, a former secretary of the Kimi SHG.
The SHG concept has also been instrumental in improving the economic
status of women in rural areas, says Chhaya Kunwar, coordinator
of the Himalayan Action Research Centre (HARC), a non-government
organisation (NGO) that is based in Dehradun town, capital of Uttaranchal
state.
HARC has for several years now been working for the social, political
and economic empowerment of women in the mountain region and initiated
the process of building and empowering women’s SHGs in the
Naugaon, Purola, Barkot, Bagasu and Rajgarhi blocks of Uttarkashi
district in 2000.
Over the last three years HARC facilitated a total of 182 SHGs in
Uttarkashi district and Chaya believes this has gone a long way
in reaching the United Nations' Millennium Development Goals (MDGs),
especially those on achieving universal primary education, promoting
gender equality and poverty alleviation.
It has not been easy work in these remote marches of the vast Indian
sub-continent . ''We believe that any success has been the result
of a slow and gradual process of institution building,'' Chaya said.
She explained that HARC has in place a phased strategy to build
and strengthen the SHGs followed by capacity building. ''Training
sessions, exposures, face-to-face interaction with experts, practitioners
and government officials are organised to build confidence in the
women, develop leadership qualities and enhance group management
skills,'' Chhaya said.
Motivators were trained to help the groups on issues which, if not
handled sensitively, could result in disintegration of the SHG especially
in the initial stages when clashes of ideas would erupt over issues.
The motivators played a key role in strengthening the SHGs, recalled
Ameeta Kala, an activist with HARC for over eight years.
Lack of understanding on the functioning process of the group, not
updating minutes of monthly meetings, not paying loan instalments
in time, poor discipline and disinterest were just some of the many
hurdles, she said.
Many groups emerged strong because they were encouraged to start
income- generation activities based on locally available resources.
The Naitri SHG maintains a small kitty of 100 dollars stashed away
in the local bank besides a revolving fund of 300 dollars that enables
members to avail of loans for emergencies such as illnesses, marriages
and buying seed crops.
At Kimi, the villagers are more ambitious and its SHG has begun
lobbying authorities to have a dispensary set up in the village
and also install more water pipes to enhance the well-being of residents
and raise productivity.
From: http://ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=29913
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