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Kalyani Vankar, 16, is outspoken, proactive and persistent. The Class X student of Mahatma Jyotiba Phule Vidyalaya in Maharashtra’s Chandrapur district, 200 kilometres from Nagpur, simply cannot be a silent bystander to violence, suffering and injustice, especially if women and children are involved.
The teens from Chandrapur have ideas, gumption, and a voice. They are sensitive, informed and empowered to look out for themselves
Kalyani Vankar, 16, is outspoken, proactive and persistent. The Class X student of Mahatma Jyotiba Phule Vidyalaya in Maharashtra’s Chandrapur district, 200 kilometres from Nagpur, simply cannot be a silent bystander to violence, suffering and injustice, especially if women and children are involved.
She animatedly recalls how she came across a disturbed young girl in her Chiroli village and took it upon herself to find out what problem she was facing. “She was in my school and I noticed that she was very quiet and depressed.
I had to really cajole her before she told me that she had been raped and was pregnant. She was so traumatised that she had become suicidal,” she says. Vankar took time out to counsel her and asked her to share her agony with her parents.
When she finally gathered the courage to speak to the elders Vankar was right by her side to give her much needed moral support. The girl’s parents were furious and immediately decided to confront the college boy who had raped their daughter. As was expected he flatly denied the crime.
So Vankar suggested they speak to the local Accredited Social Health Activist (ASHA) to figure out their future course of action. After patiently hearing about her situation, the ASHA worker took the matter to a women’s group that filed a formal police complaint.
Once the police was involved things came out into the open and the villagers told the underage survivor to terminate her pregnancy. “But she did not want to give in to any kind of outside pressure and my friends and I felt we should support her. Even our anganwadi worker told her not to care about what society thought.
Whereas initially she used to feel bad when others derided her for choosing to be an unwed mother, later on she started retorting to the insensitive taunts. She’s not depressed anymore,” reports Vankar with a bright smile. She is really glad that she was able to motivate someone stand up for herself instead of giving in to the pain, shame and suicidal thoughts.
Like Vankar there are several teens in the area – boys and girls – who are sensitive, informed and empowered to look out for themselves and their own. Ever since they have participated in the Adolescent Life Skills Education programme initiated by UNICEF, high on the agenda of these gutsy school-goes are a wide range of concerns – from sanitation and health to education, domestic violence and child marriage.
The programme, run in collaboration with Chandrapur Zilla Parishad and Yashvant Rao Chauhan Academy for Development Administration (YASHADA), Pune, has trained students as peer educators so that they, in turn, can impart knowledge about important issues to their classmates through creative methods.
Vankar’s class fellow, Vishal Sadamwar, 16, is committed to addressing health challenges. “I was in Class VIII when the Life Skills programme had started. I learnt many new things during our sessions, particularly about addictions and how they affect one’s health and family life. At the time, many of my friends’ parents were habituated to chewing gutka and kharra or consuming alcohol regularly. So we got together to tell them about the ill effects of these addictive substances,” he elaborates.
Assertive and articulate as he may be, these days, Sadamwar’s teachers have been witness to a gradual transformation in the youngster. Testifying to this, his teacher Padamraj Lokhande, says, “From 132 senior students, we picked four boys and four girls for this programme.
When we had just begun to engage with the children they were hesitant to speak up – and Vishal was no exception. He has gained tremendous confidence and participates freely in group discussions. He has also played an instrumental role in motivating others.”
According to Lokhande, one of the main reasons behind children being quiet and unmotivated in class is because the lessons are usually very boring. With time, for most of them coming to school becomes nothing but a mere chore and they can’t wait to get away. Fortunately, the Life Skills programme has brought back creativity and excitement to the learning process.
Theme-based group activities such as games, street plays, song and dance, painting exhibitions and poetry recitations on socially relevant topics have been routinely conducted to enhance their understanding of otherwise complex subjects.
The model has effectively sensitised students towards a host of problems that confront their community, including structural violence and gender issues such as discrimination. From proper sanitation practices during menstruation to the ills of substance abuse, children know how to tackle these “sensitive” subjects through games and role-playing.
“We made a ‘qawwali’ on HIV with the help of our teachers and presented it in front of people from other countries in Pune. We were not nervous. Our performance was well received,” says Sadamwar happily.
Indeed, Sadamwar is a true rights champion for female students. When he got to know that one of them was being beaten by her brother just because the boy had anger issues, he immediately intervened.
The girl had shared her woes during a session and Sadamwar and his friends lost no time in going to counsel her family. “Her brother admitted to beating her up often in a fit of rage. He was unable to control his anger and it was directed unfairly at his sister. Their parents had never tried to stop him. We told him about ways to control rage like counting to 10 before doing anything,” he narrates.
In nearby Saoli block’s Zilla Parishad High School in Patri village, Payal Mishra, 16, is doing her bit to do good. Her face beams as she recalls the effect of the Life Skills programme on her and her fellow students. “There was an autistic child in our class. He never spoke. No one had ever heard his voice,” she says.
However, as her group got closer to each other after successive meetings, one day the boy suddenly came up to Mishra to ask why she was always surrounded by her classmates. “He had never spoken to anyone before that day.
Later on, he became so comfortable that he got friendly with a boy from another school, too! Once when it was his turn to speak on the microphone, everyone was stunned when he did not hesitate. Even his mother was elated about this,” she says jubilantly.
She enthusiastically recalls the time she and a friend decided to approach boys to play cricket in school. “We told them we’d like to play and they were okay with it. They even taught us spin bowling!” she giggles.
By: Dilnaz Boga
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