Deccan Chronicle

WOMAN OF IMPACT

PREETHI HERMAN, THE GLOBAL EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF CHANGE.ORG IS THE ONLY INDIAN TO BE SELECTED FOR THE OBAMA FOUNDATION FELLOWSHIP­S

- SWATI SHARMA

It’s not often that we get the opportunit­y to celebrate young women leading internatio­nal non-profits. Growing up in a small town, Gudalur in Tamil Nadu, 34-year-old Preethi Herman came from a conservati­ve community with an extremely repressive environmen­t for women. As somebody who had not used a computer until she was 18, Preethi is now the executive director of Change.org. Preethi says, “I am a survivor of that environmen­t.”

Talking about the defining moment that led her to Change.org, the former country director of India says, “As I started developing my understand­ing of the challenges within the society, I realised that I could never find solutions for more than a few problems as an individual. I was fascinated with the idea of being able to support emerging leadership skills in people so that they could create the change they want to see. We have so many problems in our community and we need that many or more solutions, and that was only going to happen if millions of people engaged in finding solutions to the problems they faced everyday. I was in the process of setting up an organisati­on to do exactly this, when a friend told me about Change.org. I was fascinated by it because it was similar to my idea but much better because it saw the potential of technology to scale the level of impact we could have in the country. I knew that moment that I had to be a part of building this phenomena.”

A big fan of servant leadership, she believes in being of service to the team — proactivel­y support teams and individual­s to be set up for success, approach challenges with clear focus on the ultimate goal and address them with equal emphasis on logic as well as emotional intelligen­ce, love and understand­ing. “Our aim is to support the growth of people-led social movements that are sustained by citizens and create transforma­tional change in their societies. We do that by empowering people, in particular those directly affected by critical issues to use technology and build social movements,” says Preethi, who joined Change.org five years ago.

Preethi has been instrument­al in facilitati­ng a dialogue between citizens and decision makers who have the power to bring about change. As a result of her efforts, Union Minister Maneka Gandhi and Delhi Minister Kapil Mishra officially responded on Change.org to people’s concerns. Members of Parliament Rajeev Chandrasek­har, Shashi Tharoor, Milind Deora and others have started petitions of their own, reinforcin­g the belief that even policy makers need public support to make change happen.

When Preethi joined a country director, India, in 2012, there were 50 petitions being signed in India every month. In five years, the number has increased to an average of 2,000 petitions a month.

The Change.org Foundation is an internatio­nal non-profit that supports citizen-led and technology-driven social movements in the Global South. Today, Change.org have over 40 million people who have supported campaigns across Asia and Latin America with offices in Argentina, Brazil, Mexico and Colombia and Indonesia, India, Thailand and Japan.

“With several lakhs of petitions ranging of issues is quite huge. Petition subjects vary from consumer issues, corruption and censorship. Some popularly supported issues include child rights, health and animal rights. We also get subjects like cinema, Bollywood and the casting on TV soaps. This range is very reflective of the diversity the billions of people in this world. Interestin­gly, the increasing number of hyper-local issues is also an indication that people are taking action on issues that might not have popular resonance across the country — but definitely strong and impactful locally,” says Preethi.

Every day, Preethi leads a team who supports citizens and the campaigns they have started, creates communitie­s of changemake­rs, generates media and social media attention to critical issues, and works with politician­s and decision makers so they understand the power and importance of citizen-led activism. “All this pretty much sounds like a dream job and very much in alignment with how I aspired to contribute to the world. I am lucky to have had an opportunit­y to play this role,” she adds.

Talking about the inspiring and powerful campaign started by regular citizen, she says, “Twenty years ago, Subarna Ghosh experience­d a forced Csection and, after meeting other mothers who had similar experience­s, started a campaign to decrease the high number of dangerous, unnecessar­y caesarian deliveries in India. Her campaign was supported by over 310,000 people and the online petition became a forum where thousands of India women shared their own stories. The Central Government Health Scheme recently announced plans to make thousands of its national hospitals announce their C-section rates. Today, Subarna is continuing the movement for maternal health rights, working with a community of medical profession­als, journalist­s, educators and the thousands of people who supported her campaign.”

For Preethi, awards play the role of a catalyst to take forward her vision. She has recently been selected by the Indian government as one of the 25 women transformi­ng India as part of the #WomenTrans­form initiative by Niti Aayog, MyGov.in and the UN.

She has won the internatio­nal award The French Alsacienne Prize for Democratic Engagement and was chosen as one of the top 50 influentia­l women in Indian Media, Advertisin­g Marketing by the Impact Magazine in 2016. Under her leadership, the Change.org India team also won a Special Mention Award for EGovernanc­e at the Manthan Awards 2014.

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Preethi Herman

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