INTERNATIONAL
WOMENS DAY
ORGANISED BY JOINT ACTION FRONT FOR WOMEN
MONDAY,
08 MARCH 1999
CONGRESS
PRESIDENTS ADDRESS
Smt.
Suman Krishan Kant,
Shri
Murali Manohar Joshi, Minister for Human
Resource Development
Smt.
Shiela Dikshit, Chief Minister of Delhi,
Smt.
Geeta Mukherjee,
Smt.
Ranjana Kumari,
Friends,
The
single most significant achievement of the
twentieth century has been the liberation
of women. If we cast our mind back a hundred
years we will see that so much we take for
granted was then deemed inconceivable, impossible,
and outrageous.
There
has been more improvement in the condition
of women in the last few decades than in
the last several millennia. Gender empowerment
is no longer a distant dream but a palpable
reality. It is the progress we as women
have made that must encourage and spur us
to higher levels of achievement. Complete
gender equality, nothing less, must be our
over-riding goal. There must be neither
compromise nor complacency. The struggle
is joined. It must be brought to full fruition.
Women
in India have, through history, been the
victims of a cruel paradox. On the one hand,
woman power is celebrated as Shakti - the
source of all energy, the life force of
the cosmos. Yet, in actual social practice,
an oppressive dependence was encouraged
as the social norm. Independence of both
thought and action were frowned upon, indeed,
even prohibited on pain of punishment and
ostracisation. Of course, there were exceptional
women. They are celebrated in myth and legend,
in saga and history, in verse, in music
and dance. But the very exceptionality of
these women underlines the unfortunate condition
of the vast majority of womanhood.
That
is why Gandhiji saw the liberation of women
as the necessary precursor and desired consequence
of the liberation of our country. Freedom
for women was tied in by him to freedom
for India. It was the Mahatma who brought
women into the Freedom Movement, signaling
the commencement of a process of emancipation
through participation. And not only Gandhiji.
Let us not forget on this auspicious day
to salute the hundreds and thousands of
men and women reformers and patriots across
the country who pioneered womens education
and emancipation. It is thanks to them that
we see the women of our country take their
place in so many professions and vocations.
For
close to a quarter of a century, starting
from 1959 when she became President of the
Congress Party, Indiraji was the worlds
most visible symbol of what women could
achieve. She knew both triumph and tribulation,
both adversity and success. Golda Meir and
Sirimavo Bandarnaike had preceded her as
women leaders of their respective countries,
but in terms of her duration of office and
the drama of her life, few could parallel
the inspiration she gave to millions of
women in India and elsewhere of inner strength
and qualities of leadership.
Brought
up by such a mother, my husband never questioned
womens equality, their enormous talent
and capability. He felt that a great asset
of the nation was being neglected in keeping
women out of the task of nation-building.
Rajivji will forever be associated with
their political empowerment at the level
where it matters most - the grassroots.
The reservation of one-third of the seats
in the panchayats and nagarpalikas was his
constitutional innovation. He had intended
to complement Panchayati Raj with the Indira
Mahila Yojana, based on village Mahila Sabhas.
These would select from among themselves
their saathins or companions who
would speak on their behalf to the administration
and act as a pressure point on the panchayats
through women representatives. I would like
to share with you Rajivjis observations
on the role of women in our lives and as
part of it, in a speech he delivered to
a conference of chief ministers on Panchayat
Raj. He said - and I quote:
"It
is women who undertake much more than half
the economic activities in rural India.
It is women to whom are entrusted the welfare
and, often, the finances of the household.
It is the women of rural India who are the
main repository of Indias great cultural
traditions, of the moral values which are
fundamental to the survival and efflorescence
of our civilization... Should we not begin
the process of reservations for women at
the lower tier in the hope that it might
in due course expand upwards to the higher
tiers?"
We
hope this vision will be fulfilled in Parliament
during the current session. In the Congress
Party, we have not waited for the Parliamentary
process to wend its way to the inevitable
end. We have already amended our Party constitution
to reserve a third of all party posts for
women.
Important
as these developments are in themselves,
they will amount to nothing if we do not
embark with all deliberate speed on a programme
for the educational emancipation and economic
advancement of women. The education of the
girl child is of the essence.
Recent
research has shattered the myth of mothers
holding their children back from school.
In Himachal Pradesh, neither poverty nor
custom have stood in the way of girls in
very large numbers enrolling in school and
staying the course. In Tamil Nadu, the comprehensive
mid-day meal scheme appears to have played
a decisive role in spreading girls
education. In Goa too, elementary education
for girls has become virtually universal.
In Kerala, as is well known, girls of all
communities have been educated through all
of the twentieth century. The Education
Guarantee Scheme, evolved by the Congress
Government in Madhya Pradesh, has become
the exemplar for other states to follow.
If in so many diverse states the education
of the girl child is an undeniable reality,
there is no reason why this cannot be achieved
across the country.
As
for economic advancement, the Seva experiment
in Gujarat and Gramin Bank experiment in
Bangladesh has shown that access to micro-credit
for asset creation and mutual self-help
through cooperatives are the single most
effective way of economic empowerment for
women with limited means. The example of
Anand in Gujarat is a legend of our time.
Of course, when it comes to hard physical
labour - in the fields, on road construction,
on building activity - economic activity
is to a great extent women-driven. Curiously,
however as one moves up the economic scale,
the share of women drops off dramatically.
This must be rectified.
The
Joint Action Front for Women has emerged
as the arrow-head of our struggle for emancipation
and empowerment. You have raised several
issues about the Bill pending in Parliament
for reservations for women. It is because
of our principled insistence on the Bill
being introduced that the legislative process
has reached its present stage. Issues that
have been raised will have to be debated.
That is the democratic way. And politics
is the art of the possible. So we shall
have to be pragmatic. But, on the essence,
please rest assured we will be unflinching.
The Congress has every intention of seeing
the Bill passed in the Budget session of
Parliament. This, however, is Government
business, and it is our earnest hope that
the Government will not be found wanting.
This
is the last International Womens Day
of the century. We enter the new millennium
with confidence in ourselves and faith in
our future. I congratulate my sisters the
world over on this occasion and pledge not
to rest till we have redeemed the promise
we have made to ourselves.
Thank
you.
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