She's an Eagle When She Flies
(This was first published in Deccan Herald)
On International Women’s Day 2017, the spotlight is on women’s
progress. New initiatives are being launched to help forge a better world,
where men and women will be truly equal. This annual focus on women has indeed
triggered awareness and positive action. Organisations and individuals as well
as governments, have been making sustained efforts to help women achieve their
full potential.
Disparities and injustices entrenched since the dawn of
civilisation cannot vanish overnight. The World
Economic Forum’s Global Gender Gap Report tracks the intensity of gender
disparities and the progress made. The 2016 Report covering 144 countries in
the crucial sectors of health, education, economy and politics, predicts that
the gender gap will not be fully bridged
until 2186. We are unlikely to see complete equality for half of the
human race within our own lifetimes.
However, the progress is impressive. Complex intellectual
realms are welcoming more women, and they are shining with unparalleled
brilliance. Iranian mathematician Maryam Mirzakhani became in 2014 the first
woman and the first Iranian to be awarded a Fields Medal for “her outstanding
contributions to the dynamics and geometry of Riemann surfaces and their moduli
spaces.” The Fields Medal, awarded once in four years, is widely regarded as the
Nobel Prize for mathematics.
Women today are flying higher, and the sky is no longer the
limit. In November 1997, India born Kalpana Chawla shattered barriers to fly
into space aboard the US space shuttle Columbia. A decade later, Sunita
Williams became the second woman of Indian origin to conquer space when she
flew aboard the US shuttle Discovery. Today, Canada-born with Mumbai roots
Shawna Pandya is shortlisted after gruelling selections to fly with eight
other astronauts in space missions planned by 2018.
Closer home, ISRO’s women scientists have helped build India’s
spectacular Mars Orbiter or Mangalyaan project. Rocket science is part of the
day’s work for ISRO’s Minal Sampath, Anuradha T K, Ritu Karidhal, Moumita
Dutta, Nandini Harinath, Kriti Faujdar and N Valarmathi. These dedicated women teamed
up with their male colleagues to set ISRO’s world record by launching an
amazing 104 satellites in one shot. Breaking gender stereotypes, these wonder-women
earned the applause of every Indian.
India’s women are rising to the highest echelons of the
corporate world. State Bank of India is among the elite seven Indian corporates
to rank among the world’s leading Fortune 500 companies. This gigantic Indian
multinational is headed by a woman, Chairman Arundhati Bhattacharya. She is listed
as the 4th most powerful woman in Asia Pacific by 'Fortune' and as the 30th
most powerful woman in the world by 'Forbes'.
Indian women are taking centre stage in the world of sports. In
the 2016 Rio Olympics, Sakshi Malik fought heroically for a bronze medal in
wrestling. P V Sindhu earned a brilliant badminton silver. Dipa Karmakar won
the nation’s heart by finishing 4th, missing a medal by a whisker. She became
the first Indian female gymnast, and the first Indian in 52 years, to compete
in the Olympics. Wrestler Vinesh Phogat stormed valiantly into the quarterfinals,
but missed a medal because of an injury.
To appreciate the changes in our own neighbourhood, I
spoke to talented and motivated Bangalore women from diverse professions and
experience levels. Rashmi Misra is founder and chairperson of VIDYA, an NGO
providing quality education and uplifting boys and girls from the poorest
sections of society. Founded 32 years
ago, VIDYA has seen 3.5 lakh people pass through and benefit from its systems.
VIDYA currently has around 45,000 young beneficiaries enrolled in its 57
projects spread over five states.
Annabelle Manwaring, Pro Vice Chairman, Delhi Public
School Whitefield and Delhi Pubic School Mysore Road, has guided a stream of
promising young girls and boys emerging from her schools.
Prof. Sahana Das, Head, Dept. of Communication
Studies, Mount Carmel College, has mentored numerous brilliant young women to
follow their dreams.
Madhulika Dant, VP and Head – Corporate Search, Daedalus Consulting, deftly matches a
growing stream of highly qualified professionals with suitable jobs.
Megha More, Co-Founder and COO, Trueweight, balances the challenges of building a start-up while
mothering a lively toddler.
With a fresh
masters degree in International Relations from S. Rajaratnam School of
International Studies (RSIS), Singapore, Shibani Mehta is currently working at
the Military Affairs Centre of the Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses
(IDSA) in New Delhi. Like many of today’s girls, Shibani received full family
support to go abroad, and enter a career of her choice.
These women see growing awareness and social support
for women to realise their potential. Madhulika Dant’s professional career
began three decades ago. “Having given up my career with the Tatas to bring up
my children, I can see that husbands today are more supportive at home, in the
kitchen and parenting. Equal importance is given to both careers.” Megha More
agrees. After marriage, she went to the US to join her husband, but a formal
job did not satisfy her. She wanted to give her best to an enterprise she could
call her own. She and her husband agreed that he would remain in the US, while
she went to a new city and founded her enterprise along with a friend. He
wanted her to be happy, and to follow her dreams. He joined her two years
later, when both were sure of their choice to return to India. By then, Trueweight was flourishing with around
eighty people on board. Having a child was also a joint decision, and they
share the duties and joys of parenting their lively three year old. “Today’s
men are becoming naturally more supportive, and are active partners at home,”
Megha says. “Improved support systems such as good daycare facilities, helps
women make better life choices.”
“While we used our education for financial
stability and social identity, my students aspire to be free,” says Sahana Das.
“While my generation balanced home and career, the girls today include their
individual passion into their profession.” Sahana is proud of her students like
Vaishali Dinakaran, who was passionate about racing as a sport. Today she is a
leading writer on Formula One racing. “Another very bright but restless girl
said she liked to walk. And she walked… Across the Himalayas! Today Shikha Tripathy
has written for Planet earth and Nat Geo and is a travel blogger who organises
treks and runs an eco-friendly resort in Uttarakhand.”
“The negative attitude towards marriage and family
is changing, and there is less gender rivalry among adolescents,” says
Annabelle Manwaring. “Girls today no longer feel that marriage and family will
curb them. Youngsters don’t feel that some careers are inferior or better than
others. Whether they opt to be homemakers, chefs, entrepreneurs or artists,
they want to choose their destinies and give their very best. They see
themselves less as boys or girls, and more as seekers of knowledge and
self-fulfilment.”
Shibani Mehta is inspired by a Minister sharing how
“her gender played little role in her rise to power. She never used her gender
as either a crutch or a privilege. That is something we need to consciously and
constantly remind ourselves,” Shibani says. “I find these reminders everywhere.
A young mother, my boss juggles vaccination appointments and review meetings
while fulfilling the commitments of a senior research scholar. I admire my
landlady, who at 78 plays golf and drives her own car. Women are each other’s
best inspiration.”
2016 saw steady advances in gender parity. The CRPF sent a path-breaking
team of 135 women commandos to tackle Naxalite insurgents in the forests of Jharkhand.
More Indian women are donning uniforms to fly military planes, and actively
serve in our armed forces. Policewomen are visible everywhere, and women Indian
Police Service officers are no longer rare. More women are making their mark in
the prestigious Civil Services.
The highly demanding field of medicine has a growing number
of Indian women doctors. Karnataka’s elite Bangalore Medical College (BMCRI) alone
has produced several young women Plastic Surgeons and Orthopaedic Surgeons in
recent years, proving that women can take on the most skill and knowledge
intensive challenges.
Indian girls next door are conquering new bastions. Surekha
Yadav steered a Mumbai local train in 1988 to become India’s first woman train
driver. In 2011, she became Asia's first woman to drive a major passenger
train, the celebrated Deccan Queen. Other women are following her footsteps. On
the streets of our major cities, it isn’t unheard of to encounter capable,
business-like women auto drivers, bus drivers and bus conductors.
“There’s gradual and positive sea-change,”
adds Annabelle Manwaring. This optimism is trickling to the most deprived
women, feels Rashmi Misra. In rural Haryana where girls rarely go to school,
Rashmi has helped ghungat smothered mothers
emerge confidently from VIDYA centres knowing English and driving. Her underprivileged
youngsters have excelled in Board exams and computers. In one of her schools in
Delhi, 100 kids scored IQ of over 120. “Given facilities and exposure, these
children are capable of anything, she says. Boys are learning to treat their
sisters equally. Not looking down at each other as rivals, they are becoming
friends. These girls as well as boys have the capacity for crystal clear
thinking, and are shining in the national robotics championships, Maths
Olympiads and Mock UN.
The dedicated efforts of countless women spanning several generations,
is building up this change. As a young girl in Delhi, I was fortunate to be
inspired by trailblazers in women’s education. Smt. Kamala Sengupta, retired
Principal of Delhi’s Lady Irwin School, and Prof. Bina Dasgupta retired
Principal of Indraprastha College, shared their experiences with me. In the
early Twentieth Century, a few such remarkable Bengali women ventured into
northern India leaving their homes in undivided Bengal. Armed with impressive
degrees from distant Dhaka University, they helped start schools and colleges
for girls in Delhi, where nothing existed. On International Women’s Day, let us
celebrate this spirit of women who led the way, those striving for excellence
today, and for future generations.