HERE'S WHY I BELIEVE THAT GENDER EDUCATION CAN SMASH THE PATRIARCHY
I am often asked, “Which part of India are you from?” My nomadic, culturally complex upbringing makes it difficult to answer. My father served in the Army hence, we made a different state our home every three years. From snow capped Himalayan ranges to Thar Desert to tropical forests to beaches by the Arabian Sea – the language and culture varied yet the core issues remained the same. Poverty and Patriarchy seemed to be the common thread. As a sensitive child, I noticed disparities across realms: economic, ethnic, religious, caste-based and more personally, gender based. I asked elders for the perfect solution to these problems. While most of them laughed, many told me to join politics or the civil services or to become a doctor. None of the answers satisfied me. I refused to believe that young people with passion cannot make a difference in this world unless supported by a high official position.
I realized that education could be one of the tools to
bridge the gap through my very first foray into public service. The class
divide was blatantly evident: the rich studied in private schools while the
poor attended government schools. The learning outcomes, infrastructure, access
to opportunities including good teachers differed exponentially between the
two. Hence, when my friends from government school failed a class I decided to
help them. I didn’t have a teaching degree nor was I associated with any NGO. A
burning passion to make a difference in their lives and the tag of ‘bright
student’ from school was all I had. Consequently, their grades improved and
their academic engagement rose. The greatest achievement for me was the smile
on their faces and hope in their parents’ eyes who sought education as their
only way out of poverty. Moved by this experience I kept looking for more ways
to make positive social impact through education.
During college I started writing on social issues for online
and print media outlets. I also associated with an NGO where I taught
Cambridge-approved English language course to 20 girls in the age group of 11
to 17 at a shelter home in Delhi. Subsequently, I joined this NGO as its Public
Relations Head and also taught 30 girls in the age group of 10 to 15 in an
orphanage in Lucknow. As a core committee member for the NGO in Lucknow, I was
responsible for the holistic development of my students and frequently
conducted public speaking and personality development classes along with the regular
language course. I also helped them with their school academics. I then joined a
renowned teaching fellowship where I taught Science and Social Science to 38
girls in sixth standard in a government school in Delhi. The learning outcomes
for all my classes exceeded expectations as assessed by regular and year end
tests.
I volunteered regularly with NGOs in Delhi and Lucknow. As a
volunteer for ‘Kat-Katha’ I taught children of sex workers who were deprived of
school education while as a volunteer for ‘Project KHEL’ I taught sports based
education in slum settlements and as an intern psychologist at a rehabilitation
centre I counseled victims of drug abuse and helped improve their self esteem
and reduce addiction. Throughout my different work profiles the understanding
that education can truly bring a change in people’s lives was reinstated and
strengthened in my mind. Growing up in a patriarchal society, gender equality
remained the social issue I felt most deeply and passionately for. I strove to
work for it in everything I did. In my twenties I realized that I am vehemently
and whole-heartedly a feminist and if there is one thing I want my life to
stand for it is to bring gender equality to the world and end patriarchy.
The Young India Fellowship provided me with the opportunity
to learn from leading feminists such as Urvashi Butalia and Geetanjali Chanda.
The theories they discussed and the perspectives they shared in the classes
made me develop a nuanced lens and in-depth knowledge on the subject matter. I
wondered how many people had thought about gender from this perspective. I
realized that gender education in India is restricted to elite intellectual
groups while the nation suffers from dire consequences of toxic masculinity
born out of a deeply imbibed generational patriarchal mindset and further
encouraged by popular culture. The courses I attended during the fellowship
provided me with the framework I needed to build a gender education module
which I planned to teach to anyone and everyone. My plans were further fuelled
by the onset of the Me Too movement in India. Consequently, in August 2018 my
brainchild ‘Drishtikona – Changing Perspectives’ was born.
My research on gender based crimes in India lead to some
interesting discoveries. In June, 2018 a survey conducted by Thomas Reuters
Foundation ranked India as the world’s most unsafe country for women, ahead of
Syria, Afghanistan and Saudi Arabia. With an estimated overall population of
1.37 billion of which 48.4% are women, the statistics for crimes against women
in India seem to ascertain the adage, “It’s a man’s world”. As per the National
Crime Records Bureau, gender based crimes have more than doubled over the last
decade. Over 2.24 million or 26 per hour or 2 per minute crimes against women
were reported between 2005 and 2015. It is interesting to note that these are
just the reported crimes and the number of unreported crimes tends to be far
greater. Trial by social media and the recent Me Too movement stand as
testimony to the fortitude of victims. However, the chaotic environment leaves
much to be desired in terms of social initiatives.
The challenges to gender based policy implementation in
India are numerous and they are a direct result of patriarchal conditioning and
heteronormativity. A few contributing factors are as follows:
- Strong preference for sons,
- Female feticide,
- Child marriage,
- Low access to education especially amidst rural population,
- Wage gap,
- Lack of awareness and access to opportunities,
- Financial non-inclusion,
- Poor healthcare and sanitation facilities,
- Glass ceiling,
- Patriarchal and patrilineal family structure,
- Caste-based discrimination and violence,
- Sexual division of labor,
- Dowry system,
- Expectations from the bride,
- Patrilineal virilocality,
- Mob justice,
- Dishonor killings,
- Khap Panchayats,
- Violent treatment for being a gender outlier,
- Low acceptance and tolerance for gender fluidity and expression of female sexuality,
- Deification of women and
- Pop culture reinforcement of gender norms.
Apart from central schemes and major policy changes by the
government, some short-term policies run on an experimental basis by local
governments have yielded interesting results. The mandate ensuring one-third
representation of women in village-level governance led to rise in education
levels and career aspirations in women led villages in spite of the initial
backlash by men. The policy change towards equalizing parental land inheritance
between sons and daughters led to an increase in the age of marriage for women while
also increasing domestic violence. Initiatives on increasing awareness and
educating women on their rights led to significant goal achievements where the
move wasn’t boycotted by the local men.
Provided the omnipresence of patriarchy any form of affirmative
action is a welcome step. However, the incidents of violence don’t stop in
absence or presence of public policies. Gender based crimes aren’t committed by
a set category of people. It does not depend on the education or economic level
of the population. The common thread in all gender based crimes is patriarchy
and heteronormativity and the best way to counter it is through gender
education. This can be done in two ways:
(a)
Include Gender Education and Sensitization
programs as mandatory courses in school and college education, and
(b)
For the rest of the population these programs
can be conducted in the form of workshops and training modules.
If successful, the same model can be implemented globally to
ensure maximization of quality gender education which starts from kindergarten
and lasts well into college which would ensure a positive symbiotic
relationship among countries for tackling patriarchy globally. With my social
enterprise ‘Drishtikona – Changing Perspectives’ I aim to attain precisely this
objective.
As the Founder of my social enterprise which is currently in
its nascent stage, I work on developing a Gender Education and Sensitivity
Module to be implemented through Workshops in educational institutes, NGOs,
Teachers’ Training and Public and Private Sector Offices with the larger
objective of eradicating gender inequity, patriarchy and heteronormativity in
our society which leads to gender-based crimes hence achieving one of United
Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals. I launched my social enterprise in
August, 2018. Since then we have conducted 5 workshops of ten days each with
three schools, one government office and one corporate organization. The
workshops have received raving reviews and 100% positive feedback. The idea is
to scale it up so that one day these gender education modules get incorporated
into core classroom curriculum where a gender sensitized teacher will conduct
regular classes on the same. The same model can be implemented at a global
scale upon success in India.
As I look at the challenges I face on a daily basis while
working on this in Lucknow and the possible challenges I might face in
implementing my idea at a broader level I realize that the biggest obstacle to
eradicating patriarchy is patriarchy itself. While implementing my idea at a
larger scale the obvious challenge would be the possible rejection, ridicule
and resistance it might face from patriarchs in power at myriad levels of
bureaucracy. When systemic oppression seeps in to the very core of human
existence it is tough to remove it at surface level. It requires critical
intervention and sustained effort. Measures must be taken to ensure that the
fate of gender education in India is not the same as that of compulsory
environmental education which was highlighted when MC Mehta moved the court on
the issue of lack of quality teachers for the subject. If successful, the same
model can be implemented globally to ensure maximization of quality gender
education which starts from kindergarten and lasts well into college which
would ensure a positive symbiotic relationship among countries for tackling
patriarchy globally.
The reason behind my optimism with this idea is the depth of
individual impact that I have already been able to achieve. At the end of one
of my workshops, a male participant in his 50s gave me a letter. I was very
surprised since he was highly skeptical of the workshop and remained
passive-aggressive throughout the course of the ten-day session. While handing
me the letter he made eye contact with me but said nothing. I noticed he had
tears in his eyes. In his letter he opened up to me about his encounters with
sexual harassment and bullying first as an adult when it was done to him and
later as an adult in his workplace where he saw it happening to others. He
realized how toxic masculinity and patriarchy hurts everyone. He wrote, “I
never expected to tell anyone about this. I had no idea that feminism is for
all genders. I feel light today like I never have. Thank you.”
This, for me, is the greatest achievement.
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