Project partner: Chinmaya Organisation for Rural Development Location: Dharmshala, Himachal Pradesh, northern India Working with: 700 girls
Childreach International is working closely with Chinmaya Organisation for Rural Development (CORD), to tackle the widespread issues affecting women’s rights in Dharmshala, in the northern Indian state, Himachal Pradesh.
Childreach International is supporting CORD’s Adolescent Girls project, which uses education to empower future generations and reverse the stigma which is ingrained in male-dominated communities.
The project works with around 700 girls across 46 villages. Each village has set up an Adolescent Girls Group to support the rights of women and the address the problems they face as a collective.
“The troubles of the women in the community are my troubles too”
Jyoti, Vice President of one of the Adolescent Girls Groups
The groups regularly meet to discuss and learn about their rights and raise awareness about issues affecting them such as intimidation from men, selective abortions and under-aged marriages.
Individuals from the communities, named Yuvati Samoohs, undergo training from CORD to teach the groups about legal actions they can take to improve their rights, how to effectively advocate for their rights in their communities as well as providing health education to reduce the risks of sex-selective abortions, raise awareness about HIV/AIDS, and promote hygiene and sanitation.
In focus
Sex-selective abortion, which considers the girl-child undesirable, places pressure on expectant mothers to undergo dangerous procedures to get rid of their un-born foetus, and is one particularly dangerous threat to women's rights.
As well as being a cruel practice which can have serious health implications for women, sex-selective abortion is contributing to the declining sex-ratio in India.
The country’s 2011 census reveals an increase in the gap between the number of boys and girls, standing at 914 girls to every 1,000 boys, while in Dharmshala, our project partner, CORD, has recorded a sex ratio as low as 680 girls to every 925 boys. This has had a direct impact on India’s position in the World Economic Forum’s Global gender Gap Index 2010, coming in at 112 out of 134 countries.
The implications of a declining female population are far reaching, having impacts on the country’s economic growth and the livelihoods and well being of families, particularly those living in developing communities.
CORD is working hard to stamp out this practice and reverse the stigma toward women and the girl child.
Check out the photos from CORD below. They show the Adolescent Girls Groups in action, performing plays and speaking with women in their community to spread the message promoting women's rights.
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