"(These women were) holy rollers. Spinster. Busybody. Eccentric. Divine Mother. Fanatics. Whores. Agitators. Anarchists. Communists. All with the potential to embarrass, shame and threaten the white man in his business of ruling (the other)."
-- Kumari Jayawardena, "The White Woman's Other Burden"

Saturday, October 10, 2009

The Problem (Part I): A Vignette of Charcoal Woman / (Girl) Child Activism


On the afternoon of December 31st, 2008, I found myself on the concrete steps of the emergency room outside of Jawaharlal Institute of Postgraduate Education and Research (JIPMER) in Pondicherry, Tamil Nadu, South India. I stood anxiously by the open ER door, surveying a grassy landscape of bodies, waiting for my “sister” and colleague, Amala Devii to return from her search for the social worker inside.


We are quite a pair, Amala and I. We met unexpectedly last August while I was leading my first “Child Leader Project Youth Leadership Programme” in Tiruchirapalli, a five hour bus ride southwest of the Pondicherry territory in South India. I had just returned from the successful completion of our first twenty-student program, and was sending my Californian teammates home through Chennai airport. Having been led to her recently-acquired beauty parlor by her college friend, Jaffar, it was not until I told Amala and her mother about my education programs that—surprise—the mother-daughter duo joyously divulged the details of their own NGO for women and children, an organization they ran on a shoe-string budget right from their beauty parlor. We found ourselves talking excitedly and furiously in broken English about the possibilities of us working together, a series of conversations over chai and night time walks that ultimately led to a partnership of organizations, women, and purpose.


Now, inside JIPMER, Amala searches desperately for “our” uncle Krishna to meet us. We are preparing our second leadership program that week, and want to take our youth on a field trip to an institute of higher education in hopes of inspiring some of them to strive for lives beyond the rural poverty all of them have grown accustomed to. Our program is one year old—to me, CLP is a child still learning how to walk and who only knows the word “yes” as it stumbles and runs giddily across Indian landscapes, seizing any and all door knobs of opportunity. It has left me challenged, dumbfounded, and active for the past year of my life, during my final year at the University of California, Riverside where I am finishing my Bachelor’s in Global Studies and Religion. I was fortunate enough to have started this nonprofit from seed money given to me by the Donald A. Strauss Public Service Scholarship foundation, who, taking a chance on a then-nineteen-year-old woman, decided to give me $10,000 for a “one-year” service project. Little did they know, one year later, that it would become a fully-functioning international nonprofit organization, expanding and growing to include as many people and communities as possible, run out of my room in Moreno Valley, California.


Although JIPMER is considered a state-of-the-art facility, it simply can not handle the volume of patients outside its doors. Families that have travelled from far away make camp outside its walls, laying on streets and cracked sidewalks, waiting for treatment. I had left the emergency room of bleeding and moaning human bodies for fresh air. Almost immediately upon my escape, a van sped down the road from the grandiose entrance of the hospital to the bottom of the steps before me. People rushed out of the van, sliding its main doors back to reveal a woman lain across a decaying backseat. Shielding my eyes from the afternoon sun, I was pushed aside by a stretcher marked “Burn Unit” and three young, Indian medical students rushing down to meet the open doors.


Amala came outside. “Look,” she pointed, “she has been burned.”

The woman was scorched. Her clothes had disappeared to reveal charcoal and ash. There was no hair on her head, no place to tie jasmine flowers to a plaited black braid, no salwar, no sari, nothing. A woman cried over her, reaching out to her as they placed her on the stretcher. My face revealed its horror, while, with eyes opened, they pushed the charcoal woman past me and into the emergency room. The van sped off down the road.


Amala continued, “She must have been cooking and her dress caught on fire.”

I knew that was a lie. “Cooking accident” was a euphemism for “domestic violence.” Dowry deaths and honor killings, commonly disguised as “cooking incidents,” were alive and well in India. One only needs to read the newspaper or ask a friend if any women in their “friendship circle” or family have been impacted by a “cooking accident” to see the damaging scope and spread of the practice.


“Amala, we both know that was not a cooking accident.” Amala became silent. She looked around the yard of the hospital nervously, “Yeah. I know.”


The guard who, till this moment, had been standing vigilantly and silently by the door, offered me his stool. I looked up at him, “How many of those do you see each day?” Staring towards the path the van had taken, he stumbled over his words, waiving his hands in the air in a way that suggested something was quite commonplace about women made of ash. “I don’t know... 8...9... sometimes 10.” Amala herself had become curious, “Even with treatment, she will not survive, will she?” The guard shook his head.


This is only one story I have been a part of—many women, mostly in beauty parlours and women’s-only spaces, have shared similar stories of womanhood. In beginning to confront these issues, it must be made clear that my starting a nonprofit was never explicitly about women’s advocacy—it was about youth, education, international dialogue, and social change. CLP is an international organization that coordinates with local and international partners to connect youth and young adults to their international peers through collaborative leadership programming. Our leadership program is a wide and inclusive combination of higher education planning, conflict resolution training, discussions of values-based leadership practices, social service activities, and international dialogue through creative mediums. We work in partnership with Indian-based organizations that strive to bring the human right to education to all margins of society—the rural, low caste poor, slum and street children, and former child laborers.


But this work is more than women’s advocacy work. I am convinced of a paradigmatic shift on this last day of 2008, and I perch quietly as we scooter away from JIPMER, my arms wrapped around Amala’s waist. I am reminded of a meeting had the previous day in the lush village community of Little Kanchipuram, home to a 25-year-old NGO working for women and children’s empowerment in relationship to the stone quarry and silk mill industry. As I was slipping on my sandals at the door, the director of the organization stopped me outside to leave me with one last comment: “Samantha, Child Leader Project is Child Activist Project. You must consider the great implications of making these children into activists.”