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Showing posts from March, 2018

Shaista's Next Step on the Way to Making the Kolkata Slums a Safer Place for Girls and Women

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Yesterday, the Kolkata branch of the Nivedita Shakti , a women's empowerment movement, presented an award to 19 year old Shaista Shamim.  The  literature states that she "successfully completed High School examination with 1st Division and is now taking up the onus of educating girls like her with great pain".  But there is so much more to Shaista's story than that.  I quote here from Shafkat Alam, who has been teacher and mentor to Shaista over the years "Shaista Shamim is the second child in her family. She has 4 sisters and 1 brother. Her father is a labourer in the Bantala Kolkata Leather Complex factory and mom does odd stitching work for additional income to run the family. Shaista lives in the Tiljala Darapara slum, one of the biggest slums in Kolkata Metropolitan area. She has been living here since her childhood. She is the brightest and the most ambitious child in her family. She became Gyan Azhar Library member in 2008 when she was a small

Save our Salon!

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Situated down an alley right beside Kolkata’s notorious Darapara slum and the Park Circus railway squatters encampment, is a tiny room about 2 metres square which has become a beacon of hope for destitute girls from the area.   It is Tiljala SHED’s Beauty Training Salon – a vocational training centre giving hope to girls who would otherwise have had little expectation of life beyond an early marriage and a life of poverty, childbearing and drudgery. Madhu is 19. She lives in a shelter beside the railway lines with her parents, 2 younger brothers and an older sister.  Her father is a street hawker selling sattu (a traditional drink made from chickpeas and spices). He earns around Rs200 a day – that is about £2.20. Madhu is ambitious but struggled with school and eventually dropped out in class 10.   She was an enthusiastic participant in the first batch of girls to enrol in Tiljala SHED’s beauty Training Programme and passed out first in her group in Novem

In Praise of India's Rag Pickers on International Women's Day 2018

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So, according to this week’s The Economist (March 3 rd 2018), India’s “armies of ragpickers” are responsible for the fact that India does not feature in the world’s top ten biggest plastic polluters.   Despite having the world’s second biggest population at 1.3 billion. India is poor enough, it goes on to say, for ragpickers to exist, unlike Asia’s biggest polluters, like Vietnam, which isn’t.    Well, good for India.   Good for those entrepreneurial souls who can literally make a living from rubbish.   Producing a meal from the proceeds of ragpicking I should also mention on this International Women’s Day that the vast majority of those rag pickers are women.   Illiterate, destitute, and living in illegal makeshift shelters beside railway tracks, canals (open sewers) or on the streets, they scour the streets for waste that they can sell on to dealers.   They are looking for plastics, paper, cardboard, metals – anything they can sell. My interest in India’s was