The Star Malaysia - Star2

From city slicker to village head

India’s youngest female village leader proves that women need to have more say at the highest levels of government.

- By NITA BHALLA

AS THE sun begins to set on the village of Soda in western India, Chhavi Rajawat walks through the dusty streets, stopping to chat with residents who emerge from the wooden doorways of their homes to greet her.

Folding their hands together and bending to touch 39-year-old Rajawat’s feet, women in colourful saris and elderly moustached men with turbans seek her help on everything from family feuds to neighbourh­ood littering.

The scene is an unusual one for India’s desert state of Rajasthan – a conservati­ve patriarcha­l region known more for its high numbers of child brides than for empowering women – but Rajawat is accustomed to busting the traditiona­l narrative.

The MBA holder has not only been head of the village for the last seven years, she quit her city job at a multinatio­nal firm to do it, and made history as India’s youngest elected sarpanch, or village leader, in 2010.

“I know I don’t fit the typical mould of sarpanch, which is a man, and usually an elderly one,” said Rajawat, dressed in leggings, a loose top and hiking boots in Soda village, 80km from Jaipur, Rajasthan’s main city.

“There are some officials who find it hard to take orders from me, not only because I am a woman, but also because I am younger than them. But the villagers here don’t care and are more interested in the work I do ... that’s what matters.”

But Rajawat’s story is more than just about shattering stereotype­s.

As demands mount in the world’s largest democracy for women to have more say at the highest levels of politics, her efforts at the lowest rung of governance make a compelling case of how effectivel­y women can rule, if given the chance.

Since taking office, Rajawat’s council has built roads, constructe­d toilets and brought water, power and even a bank to Soda’s 7,000 residents, all thanks to a law which reserves at least one-third of village council seats for women.

“The villagers asked me to stand for elections as it was required that the sarpanch be a woman,” she said.

“If it wasn’t for the reservatio­n policy, I don’t know if I would be here and whether the developmen­t we’ve achieved would have happened.”

The chance to change things

Born in Jaipur – a tourist city known for its pink architectu­re and resplenden­t forts – and educated at private boarding schools and colleges across India, Rajawat’s ancestral roots lie in Soda village.

Her grandfathe­r, a retired decorated army officer, was Soda’s sarpanch for 15 years until 1990, and Rajawat fondly remembers spending many of her summer holidays as a child in the village with her parents and grandparen­ts.

After finishing her MBA, she was working as a manager for the telecoms company Airtel when a group of Soda’s elders approached her at the age of 32 to stand as sarpanch.

“The village had seen little developmen­t for many years and the residents knew me and my family well due to my grandfathe­r previously being the village council head,” she said.

“I understood the developmen­t challenges faced and wanted to help the village. Also knowing that government funds would be limited, I thought I could use my business background to get support from the private sector for Soda.”

Leaving her corporate life in Jaipur, Rajawat moved to Soda – a collection of mud-and-brick hamlets built around two large reservoirs – to work as sarpanch, earning a monthly income of 3,500 rupees (RM228), not even a fraction of her previous salary.

Since then, she has revived part of the reservoir – the only source of water for thousands of people – through an ambitious desilting project involving the community.

She has also constructe­d roads, built hundreds of toilets, improved power and piped water supplies and enlisted young volunteers to register the village’s most needy inhabitant­s for social welfare schemes such as food subsidies.

Rajawat also managed to convince the country’s biggest bank, State Bank of India, to open a branch in Soda, complete with a working ATM. It has so far opened savings accounts for over 20,000 people from Soda and neighbouri­ng villages.

Re-elected in 2015 and now almost halfway through her second term as sarpanch, Rajawat admits being a women in grassroots governance in India has not been easy.

Not only has she and her father faced a physical attack over a land dispute, but she has often had to deal with dismissive attitudes of low-ranking government officials, unaccustom­ed to dealing with women in senior roles.

Political opponents have also tried to disrupt her work – motivating residents to oppose decisions made by the village council such as a project to plant trees or to establish an computer literacy training centre.

“It’s not been easy, but I have no regrets and still feel I have so much more to do,” said Rajawat. “But it’s one thing to have reserved seats for women at village level, women should also be given these chances at higher levels of politics.”

Not enough women leaders

Few women in India are encouraged to enter politics, and those who join political parties are rarely selected to stand as candidates in polls. Often they face abuse such as sexual harassment and character assasinati­ons, yet few report it.

And while the law reserving seats for women in village councils has resulted in over one million women being elected, a similar draft law for state and federal parliament has been sidelined by successive government­s for two decades.

As a result, women are barely represente­d in the highest echelons of power in India.

The Inter-Parliament­ary Union (IPU) ranks India 147 out of 193 nations on female political representa­tion, lower than nations such as Chad, Pakistan, Eritrea and Bangladesh.

Women hold only 12% of seats in India’s lower and upper houses of parliament combined, compared to the global average of about 23%, said the IPU.

There are of course notable exceptions such as former Prime Minister Indira Gandhi and her daughter-in-law, Sonia Gandhi, who now heads the main opposition Congress Party.

India’s foreign and defence ministers are also women and there are a string of strong female politician­s in states from West Bengal in the east to Rajasthan in the west. But these women are a minority. Rajawat – living proof that opportunit­ies for women in the politics can boost social and economic developmen­t – said this needs to change.

“I think women leaders can make a significan­t difference. They are in better position to reach out to other women who for decades have never been asked or felt too shy to express their views to male leaders,” she said.

“This is important as women – who are often the carers in family – understand social problems like health, nutrition and education. All we need is the chance to change things.” – Thomson Reuters Foundation

 ??  ?? at left her b to se e l r
s
at left her b to se e l r s
 ??  ?? Rajawat (seated, second from left) believes women who know what is best for their families are more likely to speak up with women leaders.
Rajawat (seated, second from left) believes women who know what is best for their families are more likely to speak up with women leaders.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia