Youth Convention on Freedom for Girls
July 15-16, 2017, Hyderabad
We all know that girls are being discriminated against in the family. Her birth is seen as a bad luck and a curse. She continues to do all the household chores, cook, wash utensils, wash clothes, sweep the floor, fetch water, work in the house and in the farm like a machine with a deadly monotony. She does not have any respite and does the same work all through her life. And at each stage of her life her discrimination gets intensified, she is exposed to greater violence and abuse; faces untold harm to her bodily integrity and is left exhausted with nothing to look forward to or hope for. This is not a matter of shock or outrage in our society. Their loss of dignity is accepted as if it was normal and would remain like this for ever and ever.
Yet the community in the districts of Ranga Reddy, Vikarabad, Suryapet, Kurnool have shown that such a reality need not be inevitable. It can be changed. Members of Child Rights Protection Forums, gram panchayats, women’s groups, youth activists have questioned child marriages and stopped them. Boys who were teasing girls at bus stops and in public spaces have been reprimanded. Many of them have joined the movement in support of girls for gender equality. Truckloads of girls being trafficked for working on cotton and chilli farms are being rescued from child labour and being sent to schools. Local officials, school teachers and policemen have started to join the campaign to give girls respect and support their path to education and gender equality.
Girls have been waiting just for this change in the atmosphere. Once they have come to know that they are being discussed and their well-being is a matter of public debate they have begun to assert and fight for their space as equals. They have valiantly fought against their exploitation as child labour and insisted on going to schools. Girls have started to resist child marriage and have said no with firmness going against their parents, relatives, local opinion makers claiming their right to education. In fact their determination to free themselves from the clutches of patriarchy and gender discrimination and courage to withstand any pressure on them has given strength to all their defenders to do more. It is so inspiring to see our girls giving a stiff resistance to entrenched power structures anchoring on a ray of hope and nothing more.
It is time that the government understands that supporting girls requires deep commitment going beyond tokenism. Confronting gender discrimination and assertion for equality is to be seen as a process of resolving power relations. It is a political act bound by ‘niyat’ and moral imperatives.
It requires:
I. Wholehearted investments in creating institutions and structures that values girls and protects them when they seek support.
II. Investments in schools and hostels
III. Free text books, transportation and all other facilities until completion of graduation
IV. Setting clearly the goal of education of girls and not bind them with the goal of marriage through programs such as ‘Kalyana Lakshmi’
V. Nutritional support and midday meal program at all stages of education.
VI. Regular health checkups.
VII. Free sanitary pads.
VIII. Introduction of gender equality in the school curriculum from class one onwards
IX. Accountability of all concerned departments – women and child, labour; education, police, revenue and welfare towards girl children.
We join these 350 adolescent girls, in solidarity, from the districts of Ranga Reddy, Vikarabad, Suryapet, Jogulamba Gadwal, Nagarkurnool, Hyderabad in Telangana and Kurnool in Andhra Pradesh:
- To celebrate the millions of mutinies of these girls and their victories
- To respond to the call of the girls to put an end to sexual violence, physical violence; mental violence; insults and humiliation once and for all
- To establish a norm against all forms of violence
- To felicitate all those girls who fought for dignity and freedom
- To create a new society that respects all individuals as equals without any form of discrimination.
Background Note ‘Freedom for Girls’ Convention Hyderabad.
Proceedings of the Convention on ‘Freedom for Girls’.
News Paper Clipping – Deccan Chronicle, July 16
News Paper Clipping – City Bureau, Hyderabad.