This piece has nothing to do with “the objective of rustic kids” – but it has a lot to do with our up-bringing as rustic kids. I pride myself on being an “equalist” – not “feminist” as most people would believe. In spite of this, I am biased towards the girl child and feel very strongly towards women rights. But the reasons are not few.
Since last few weeks, realms of newsprint have been spent on female foeticide and girl children being abandoned in gutters and dustbins. Gutters?? How worse can it get?
I have an appeal to make to all the parents who have girl children and don’t want them – please give them up for adoption – contact your nearest police station, or adoption agency, or even the media – they can help you put up the girls for adoption. And there are hundreds of couples waiting their turn to adopt, because they have none of their own.
On one hand we have women excelling in all the fields in India, on other hand we have villages in remote Rajasthan/Haryana where polygamy for women is common because the number of women are now so few, that each male member of the family is not able to find a bride for himself. Women are known to have been “married” to the whole male clan of a family.
How is all this linked to our up-bringing, we may say? It does… there are boys who’ve been given more opportunities in their childhood, on the mere achievement of being born a male. Or even, better food, better schools, better gifts. I know of instances where the girls have been made to study in vernacular medium or municipal schools, but the boys attend the good English schools.
Let us, as mothers bridge this gap between our children, and educate others to do the same. Let us teach our young boys that they need to respect other women – just as they would their own mother.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
2 comments:
A noble outburst...but this is one of the problems we have like you said in the last line"Let us teach our young boys that they need to respect other women – just as they would their own mother. "
Women are either godesses or sex objects...i think what needs to be taught is respect for humans per se.
A few weeks back there was a conversation at our own lunch table - where people were commenting on sania's interest in fashion, rather than the sport. personally, i'm glad she's proven otherwise... but the problem is exactly there - whereas a dhoni can walk away with several endorsements, a sania has to keep proving herself again and again - and then, whats wrong in being a bit fashionable?
the respect also lies in treating our female icons as humans... just as we do our men in blue.
Post a Comment