Usha
Bonepalli
bonepalliusha@gmail.com
Type
of ship : A small
mini-ship.
Location
: Highseas, in
the South Pacific Ocean.
Between
Lyttelton (New Zealand) and Falkland Islands (Argentina)
Climate
: Rough
weather, stormy winds, extremely cold climate.
Ocean
waves of 7 metres height.
Wind speed of 60 knots (i.e. 112 km/s – speed
of Rajdhani express)
Nearest
port : 5000 kms away,
on both sides, at least 20 days to reach.
Crew : Only
six members on the mini ship.
Comrades,
this is not a story of fiction. And I am not talking about a voyage of
Magellan, about whom we studied in history text books, as the first person who
sailed around the world. I am talking about 6 women, who sailed around the
world, in a small ship, from Sep 2017 to May 2018. Braving storms on high seas
in treacherous oceans. The total strength of crew is 6, and all 6 are women.
Vartika Joshi, Pratibha Jamwal, AishwaryaBoddapati, P Swathi, S Vijaya Devi,
Payal Gupta. These 6 women sailed on INSV Tarini and circumnavigated the world
in 9 months. Let me repeat, only 6 crew members on the ship, all 6 are women.
This
display of nerves of steel, steely resolve, resolute determination, determined
steadfastedness – these are attributes that each and every woman is born with.
Except that these qualities are not recognized. Even by herself.
As
the famous story goes, an eagle’s egg was placed with hen’s eggs and hatched.
Eagle baby grew up with hens, thinking that it is a hen. When it sees an eagle
flying high, it thinks –if God blesses, I will be born as an eagle in next
birth.
A
woman is conditioned to think that she does not have the bouquet of abilities
that she is born with. Stereotypes are created, projecting women as weak, meek,
fragile, dependent, and delicate. In households, peer groups, societies, films,
advertisements, mass media, and every facet of life that women encounter - as a
budding girl, a teenager, a young lady and a woman. It gives immense
satisfaction when women break these stereotypes, and emerge as courageous, path
breaking icons.
There
is no shortage of such path breaking icons. On Jan 4 2019, when Arunima Sinha
climbed Mount Vinson in dead-chilly Antarctica, she covered all the highest
peaks in all seven continents. She is an amputee, lost her leg when she was
pushed from running train while she fought robbers. She was also the 1st female
amputee in the world to scale Mount Everest.
Justice
Indu Malhotra became the 1st woman judge to be elevated as a
Judge to Supreme Court directly from the Bar. For the 1st time,
we have three women Judges in the Supreme Court. Flight Lieutenant Avani
Chaturvedi became the 1st Indian woman pilot to fly solo in a
MiG-21 Bison fighter jet. ManikaBatra led India to gold in Table Tennis in the
2018 Commonwealth games, defeating Singapore, which never lost in Commonwealth
games since table tennis was introduced in 2002. She was featured on cover of
July 2018 Femina.
Indra Nooyi became 1st independent female director of International Cricket Council (ICC). Debjani Ghosh became 1st woman President of NASSCOM, organisation which champions the $ 167 billion Indian IT services industry. Anny Divya from Vijayawada became world’s youngest woman commander to fly a Boeing 777. Himadas, daughter of a farmer from Assam, became 1st Indian sprinter to win a gold medal at an international track event. She is India’s 1st ever youth ambassador of UNICEF. Jayshree Ullal, CEO & President of Arista Networks, is one of just 72 self made women billionaires globally. For the 1st time, an all women contingent of Assam Rifles, oldest paramilitary force in the country, walked down Rajpath on Republic Day 2019, led by Major Khusboo Kanwar, daughter of a bus conductor in Rajasthan.
Indra Nooyi became 1st independent female director of International Cricket Council (ICC). Debjani Ghosh became 1st woman President of NASSCOM, organisation which champions the $ 167 billion Indian IT services industry. Anny Divya from Vijayawada became world’s youngest woman commander to fly a Boeing 777. Himadas, daughter of a farmer from Assam, became 1st Indian sprinter to win a gold medal at an international track event. She is India’s 1st ever youth ambassador of UNICEF. Jayshree Ullal, CEO & President of Arista Networks, is one of just 72 self made women billionaires globally. For the 1st time, an all women contingent of Assam Rifles, oldest paramilitary force in the country, walked down Rajpath on Republic Day 2019, led by Major Khusboo Kanwar, daughter of a bus conductor in Rajasthan.
We
need to recount, applaud and celebrate these icons, who broke the stereotypes,
and proved that women can excel in any given field. Many of them came from
middle class and poor livelihoods. But today, they are rich trailblazers to a
generation of young eager women trying to explore their potential, trying to
make a mark in the world, in their individual fields.
It
is this trail that is the theme for this year’s International Women’s Day, as
given by UN Women: THINK EQUAL, BUILD SMART, INNOVATE FOR CHANGE.
The
motto of THINK EQUAL is what churned the organised working women movements
around the world. Historically, women are not paid equal pay to equal work.
Even today, in the words of Chidi King, Director of the Equality Department of
the International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC), the main international
trade union organization representing the interests of working people
worldwide, and a member of UN Women and ILO’s Equal Pay Champions initiative,
women across the world still get paid 23 per cent less than men. From ages,
women kept waging struggles against such discrimination, but these struggles
were routinely ignored or crushed. The exploitation did not weigh them down, it
made them think, made them organised. One of the first sparks flew at
Massachusetts in 1834.
Women
workers at Lowell Cotton Mills in Massachusetts worked for 14 hrs per day. The
working conditions were filthy, there was no ventilation, they worked in
confinement, noise, and the air was filled with lint. The wages were 1/3rd as
compared to men. When these wages were also cut, they felt enough is enough,
they organized and went on strike. Women in several other mills joined them.
Management crushed the strike within a week, but it stood out as the first organised
women workers’ movement in history.
In
1836, when management of the same Lowell Textile Mills announced a rent hike to
be paid by textile workers living in company boarding houses, the female
textile workers formed Lowell Factory Girls Association and organised a strike.
This went on weeks, and eventually, Board of Directors withdrew the rate hike.
In
1945, the workers started Lowell Female Labour Reform association, which was
the first working women’s association. It was started with 12 operatives, but
membership grew to 500 in 6 months, and continued to expand rapidly. The
association was run completely by women, held their own meetings, set up
branches in other mill towns. They ran huge petition campaigns and political
action, asking the Massachussets state legislature to cap working hours in
mills at 10 hours. In 1847, New Hampshire became the 1st state to pass a 10
hour working day. This was the first success for organized working women in any
part of the world. This success fuelled organized women movements throughout
the world’s working class. Today, we remember that struggle with a sense of
pride and honour.
The
first National Women’s Day was held in NewYork in 1909 to commemorate the 1908
garments workers strike. On 8th March 1908, 15000 women garment workers marched
through Union Square to demand economic and political rights. The three month
strike against Triangle Shirtwaist and other mills became hugely successful.
This success was celebrated throughout Europe and Soviet. Clara Zeitkin, a
German socialist proposed designating a day as ‘International Women’s Day’ at
International Socialist Congress in Copenhagen in 1910. From 1911, we are
observing International Women’s Day. From 1975, UNO began celebrating
International Women’s Day on March 8th.
Comrades,
it is because of such glorious struggles in all parts of world that we could
secure statutory framework that protect from discrimination against women.
The Convention
concerning Equal Remuneration for Men and Women Workers for Work of Equal
Value, or Equal Remuneration Convention was framed by the ILO in 1951. The
Convention on Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW),
was adopted in 1979 by the UN General Assembly. It is often described as an
international bill of rights for women.India is a signatory to both.
Movements
of working women have also ensured that statutory safeguards were included in
Maternity Benefit Act 1961, Factories Act 1948, Equal Remuneration Act 1976,
Sexual Harassment of Women at Workplace (Prevention, Prohibition and Redressal)
Act 2013 etc. None of these acts were made by way of compassion, but were a
result of prolonged struggle of the working women.
After
struggling through restricted opportunities in education and employment, having
to work 24 x 365 as a mother, wife, sister, daughter, having to run to office
after attending to household chores and run back from office to attend house
chores again, balancing multiple roles, the least a woman expects is respect in
workplace. If she is subjected to sexual harassment, there is nothing more
cruel than that. But it is everybody’s knowledge that women are subject to
sexual harassment of varying degrees, in varying forms, and they are expected
to comply or be silent. It is only in 2013 that the latest Act against sexual
harassment at workplace was passed. It was not passed out of voluntary
compassion, but as a result of protracted legal struggle resulting in Supreme
Court issuing guidelines in the Visakha case. We should keep this in mind that
nothing could be achieved unless we organize and wage struggles. We should
realize that, though the working women’s movement has achieved significant
results, there is a significant lot more to be achieved.
As
working women, as much as we are concerned about our working conditions, we are
as much concerned about our girl children and fellow women in society, and
obstacles they face in their journey to emancipation. The obstacles to equal
emancipation are many. If we look at some trends, among students who stopped
studies after primary education, 70% are females. Most of the girls are not
facilitated to study till higher education. If family size increases, schooling
will be provided to boys, girls are compelled to drop out. These conditions
result in lack of education, which leads to lack of opportunities. If such
obstacles to education are removed, evidence shows thatwomen excel exceedingly.
In a report published by American Enterprise Institute (AEI), for a ninth time
in a row, women earned more doctoral degrees (Ph.Ds) awarded at US Universities
in 2017, than men. Though this is a matter of satisfaction to show that women
will excel given a chance, yet a detailed analysis shows the effect of
stereotypes: the ratio of Ph.Ds between men and women is 75 : 25 in Maths and
Computer Science, 76 : 24 in Engineering. The ratio is 39 : 61 in social and
behavioural sciences, 31 : 69 in education, 30 : 70 in health sciences. In the
technology areas of maths, engineering, computer science, women Ph.Ds are very
less. In health sciences too, we have more women in dental, physiotherapy,
gynaecology, obstetrics etc. In niche and high visible areas women are
conspicuous by their absence. Women are not into specialities like cardiology,
oncology, orthopaedic surgery. Remember when you have heard about a female
cardiologist who did an angioplasty or a bypass surgery?In areas regarded are
technologically superior, even today, women do not find encouragement to enter,
mainly because of stereotyping. Women have a long way to go, to unshackle these
stereotypes that women are suitable for such and such jobs only. Women need to
think that they are eagles, and fly high.
Women
not only have to THINK EQUAL, they need to BUILD SMART.This aspect of BUILD
SMART is more critical in these times of revolutionary changes in technology.
We need to see more and more women talking enthusiastically about Internet of
Things, Cryptocurrency, Blockchain, Data Mining, Cyber Security, Cloud
Computing, Machine Learning -the future of employment is in sectors like these.
These new technologies are called ‘disruptors’. They disrupt the way we work.
The skills, the technologies, the methods, that we are using in our workplace
are suddenly becoming defunct. We see boys flocking to computer institutes to
learn these skills. Unless girls focus on BUILD SMART i.e., building such
skills smartly, there will be a huge gender gap in employment.Men will be doing
all technologically suave jobs which pay more, and women will be relegated to
less paying non-tech jobs. In this context, the UN Women motto of THINK
EQUAL, BUILD SMART AND INNOVATE FOR CHANGE is compellingly relevant.
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