Empowering Women Rebuilding the Society
“To awaken the people, it is the women who must be awakened. Once she is on the move, the family moves, the village moves, the nation moves”.-Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru.
In India, today, women appear to rule the roost. India as a
nation is revered in a feminine form i.e. ‘the Bharat Mata’, the first citizen
of our country presently is a woman, many important government posts are
occupied by women and educated women are pouring into the professional workforce
with profound implications for national and multinational corporations. However,
ironically, these are accompanied by news about dowry killings, female
infanticide, domestic violence against women, sexual harassment, rape, illegal
trafficking and prostitution and myriad others of the same ilk. Gender
discrimination prevails in almost all areas, be it social, cultural, economic or
educational. An effective remedy for these evils needs to be sought in order to
ensure the Right to Equality guaranteed by the Constitution of India, to the
fairer sex. Gender equality facilitates the empowerment of women. Since
education begins at home, the upliftment of women would be accompanied by the
development of the family, the society and in turn, would lead towards a
holistic development of the nation.
Among these problems the foremost that needs to be addressed is
the atrocity committed against females at birth and during childhood. Female
infanticide i.e. killing of the female child is still a common practice in many
of the rural areas. Further female foeticide is common in some parts of India,
despite the passage of ‘Prenatal Diagnostic techniques (Prohibition of Sex
Selection) Act in 1994. In case they survive, they are subjected to
discrimination throughout their lives. Traditionally, since sons are thought to
take care of their parents during old age and daughters are considered a burden
because of dowry and other expenses that have to be incurred during their
marriage, female children are neglected in the matters of nutrition, education
and other important aspects of well-being. The Sex ratio in our country is
abysmally low. It was only 933 females per 1000 males according to the 2001
census. The Sex ratio is an important indicator of development. Developed
countries usually have Sex ratios above 1000. For instance, the USA has a Sex
ratio of 1029, Japan 1041 and Russia 1140. In India, Kerala is the state with
the highest Sex ratio of 1058 and Haryana is one with the lowest value of 861.
During their youth, females face the problem of early marriage
and childbirth. They are not cared for properly during pregnancy leading to many
cases of maternal mortality. The MMR (Maternal Mortality Rate) i.e. the
number of females dying during delivery per one lakh persons, in India is 437(as
in 1995). In addition, they are subjected to harassment for dowry and other
forms of domestic violence. Further, at the work place, public places and
elsewhere, acts of violence, exploitation and discrimination are rampant.
Various steps have been taken by the government to prevent such
abuses and to empower women. Criminal laws against sati, dowry, female
infanticide and foeticide, ‘eve teasing’, rape, immoral trafficking and other
offences relating to women have been enacted in addition to civil laws like the
Dissolution of Muslim Marriages Act 1939, the Hindu Marriage Act 1955 and other
Matrimonial enactments. The Prevention of Domestic Violence Act has been passed
in 2005. A National Commission for Women (NCW) has been set up. Other measures
by the government include provision of reservation in representation and
education, allocation for the welfare of women in the five year plans, provision
of subsidized loan facilities and so on. The year 2001 has been declared as the
‘women empowerment year’ by the Government of India and 24th January
as the National Girl Child Day.
The 108th Constitutional Amendment Bill, popularly
known as the Women’s Reservation Bill which seeks to reserve one-third of seats
for women in the Lok Sabha and the State Legislative Assemblies has been a
highlight in the recent times. It was ‘passed’ in the Rajya Sabha on March
9th 2010. Though well intended, it can have little, if any, tangible
consequences for the real empowerment of women since it does not touch upon the
core issues which plague them. The solution must envisage a two-pronged attack,
on the one hand, on tradition which is responsible for assigning a low status
for women in the society and on the other hand, the outrages perpetrated against
them. The proposed ‘Prevention of Sexual Harassment of Women at Workplace’ Bill,
2010 is a good move in that direction. Mass campaigns need to be organized
especially in the villages in favour of survival of the female child and
provision of human rights for her, including education and health. It is
essential to dispel the ghosts of the past and place women on an equal footing
with men in order to pave the way for their empowerment, social, economic and
educational. Empowering women and thus rebuilding the society would take the
nation on a path of greater development, as Swami Vivekananda says,
“Countries and Nations which do not respect women have never become great nor
will ever be in future”.
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