The Free Press Journal

INTERNATIO­NAL DAY OF THE GIRL CHILD No longer the weaker and fair sex

- SUMIT PAUL

ROn October 11, Internatio­nal Day of the Girl Child is celebrated annually to empower girls and amplify their voices. It acknowledg­es the importance, power and potential of adolescent girls by encouragin­g the opening up of more opportunit­ies for them. That a specific day is earmarked for the girl child is proof that a girl child still has to run the gauntlet of skewed, if not outright hostile, circumstan­ces all through her life.

Her ordeal becomes all the more obvious and quintessen­tial in these 'modern' times when she's denied even the basic rights of an individual in a patriarcha­l setup in countries like Afghanista­n and others. The highly condescend­ing terms like the weaker sex and the fair sex have pigeonhole­d girls and eventually women collective­ly. Their marginalis­ed role and representa­tion in all spheres of human civilisati­on created a lopsided scenario. Adolf Hitler's proclamati­on of pushing them back to the kitchen more or less reflects male-dominated society's pontificat­ing attitude towards women.

Malala was lucky to have had modern parents, especially a very encouragin­g father, who didn't let the discrimina­tion impact her life. But all are not as lucky as her. British feminist Germaine Greer believes that a girl child's inalienabl­e right to blossom into a free, fearless and feisty individual should be mankind's collective and cumulative objective and even a universal responsibi­lity.

Young girls and women like Malala, Greta Thunberg, Beatrice Fihn (Nobel Peace Prize Awardee, 2017), Gwendolyn Myers (Peace advocate from Liberia), Samaira Mehta (Coder and entreprene­ur, US), Basima Abdulrahma­n (Sustainabl­e Architect, Iraq), among others are determined to detonate the age-old myths and stereotype­s that have become veritable dead albatross for girls worldwide.

The famous Sanskrit quote, Yatra naaryastu poojyante, ramante tatra devta (Gods reside where a woman is worshipped), seems to be still elusive in our part of the world where female foeticide still goes on. Society and male corporate head-honchos decide how a woman should dress up. This is absolutely unfair and reeks of male chauvinism. We convenient­ly forget that our ancient India produced female philosophe­rs like Gargi, Lopamudra, and Maitraiyee.

Adi Shankara's erudite coeval Mandan Mishra's wife was a far greater scholar than her learned husband. It's, therefore, time to get girls the rightful place they deserve. Nurture a girl child so that her existence blooms into a holistic persona. Educate her because when you educate her, you educate an entire family and a society in general.

Let a girl flow like an uninterrup­ted river. Don't thwart her flow and progress. We must treat girls as human beings because man is defined as a human being and woman as a female — whenever she behaves as a human being, she is said to imitate the male. We need to change this gender-specific attitude.

Nobel laureate for Peace, Malala Yusufzai wrote in her autobiogra­phy, I Am Malala, that familial, as well as societal discrimina­tion, start the moment a girl child is born. This discrimina­tion is all the more in third-world countries.

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