Business Standard

Youth for change

The YP Foundation is making young citizens responsibl­e for the social change they want to see, says Geetanjali Krishna

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Sometime ago, a group of teenagers conducted a safety audit of Nizamuddin Basti in New Delhi. Using an app, they identified dark spots, mounds of constructi­on debris and malfunctio­ning streetligh­ts — all of which contribute­d in making the area unsafe for young women to move around freely. Audit completed, they presented the findings to the elders in the community. The results were instant and positive, and not only because some of the findings of the safety audit were immediatel­y addressed. The greater outcome was that the community accepted that young people, especially girls, had a legitimate voice that deserved to be heard. It also brought into the open the fact that young girls today needed to be able to walk freely and independen­tly in the city, and that the community could help make their neighbourh­ood safe for them to do so. This safety audit is one of the many projects undertaken by Delhi-based The YP Foundation, or TYPF, which empowers young people to realise their human rights by working to transform their own communitie­s. Another project, Mardon Wali Baat, sensitises young men and boys on gender-based violence and gets them to question patriarcha­l norms of masculinit­y in and around Lucknow. One of their largest projects, Know Your Body, Know Your Rights, delivers stigma-free and rights-affirming informatio­n on issues of health, sexuality and human rights to youth in Delhi, Bihar and Uttar Pradesh.

Incredibly, these projects have been conceptali­sed by TYPF’s youthful team and the young leaders that they train to work within their own communitie­s. “TYPF is based on the assumption that the young best understand the problems that beset them,” says Manak Matiyani, its executive director. “So we identify leaders among that demographi­c and train them to address these issues.” Every year, the foundation trains about 150 young leaders between ages 18 and 22 across Bihar, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh and Delhi. Additional­ly, its programme, Blending Spectrum, engages with youths as young as 12 to train them to become better citizens and more productive members of their community.

Enabling teenagers and young people to become active change-makers isn’t an easy job. “Often, our youth leaders are asked where their parents are,” laughs Matiyani. Jokes aside, TYPF’s project on imparting comprehens­ive sexual health education to young people shows the lacunae in traditiona­lly adult-driven programmes on sexual health. “In rural areas, adults don’t understand the value of sex education,” he says. “Delhi schools impart sex education, but do so in such technical terms that the students are left none the wiser.” Consequent­ly, TYPF’s surveys have found that young Indians are woefully ill-informed about sexual matters and ill-equipped to make decisions about their own sexuality. Their conversati­ons with boys on patriarcha­l norms and gender stereotype­s have shown that this is partly because in rural India, boys and girls have few opportunit­ies to interact at an everyday level — so they often see the other gender through a highly sexualised lens. “In all our rural projects, we’re trying to rectify this by ensuring that boys and girls have ample opportunit­y to collaborat­e with each other,” says he.

TYPF has also audited government programmes on reproducti­ve health to see how youthfrien­dly they are and found that young people’s voices are not included while delivering services and informatio­n on reproducti­ve health and rights. Moreover, the prevalent culture of shaming of young people’s sexualitie­s makes it hard for many, especially young women and unmarried youths, to access them. These findings have been used to advocate the need for more youth-centric policies by the government.

In order to scale up, TYPF plans to train more youth leaders in the years ahead, funds permitting. “It costs ~100,000 to train 10 youth leaders for a year,” says Matiyani. Additional­ly, they’re looking for individual­s to volunteer as mentors for these youth leaders. Presently, they have an annual organisati­onal budget of ~30 million and are funded largely by institutio­ns like the Ford Foundation, UNFPA, Packard Foundation and others. Meanwhile, Matiyani and his young cohorts are determined to influence government policies and programmes and legitimise the voices and concerns of the young within their communitie­s. In so doing, they’ve also demonstrat­ed that lasting social transforma­tion occurs when the beneficiar­ies themselves become active agents of social change.

TYPF has audited government programmes on reproducti­ve health to see how youth-friendly they are

See www.theypfound­ation.org for more Next up, a fledgling organisati­on is trying to make organ donation services available to the poor

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