Saturday, January 5, 2013

Fwd: On the 2nd Death Anniversary of Bharati RoyChowdhury - Prog 18th January in Saharanpur and 22nd Jan in New Delhi



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From: Roma <romasnb@gmail.com>
Date: Wed, Jan 2, 2013 at 2:04 PM
Subject: On the 2nd Death Anniversary of Bharati RoyChowdhury - Prog 18th January in Saharanpur and 22nd Jan in New Delhi
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On the 2nd Death Anniversary of Bharati Roy Chowdhury

 

Setting up of Woman Empowerment Center

                Date: 18th January, 2013

Place: Bharati Sadan,Village NagalMafi, Shakumbhari Devi

                  District: Saharanpur,Uttar Pradesh

                            

AND

1st Bharati Roy Chowdhury Memorial Lecture

 

On Women and Land Rights Movement

22nd January 2013, 2.00 – 6.00 PM

Venue - India Islamic Centre, Lodi Road, New Delhi

 

Key speakers: Kalyani Menon Sen (Land rights)

                   Smita Gupta (Forest Rights)

Chair: Prof. Manoranjan  Mohanty (Council For Social Development)

 

Dear Friends,

As you are all aware that Bharati Roy Chowdhury, a very respected and revolutionary woman leader left us on 18 January 2011 after a long struggle. She dedicated her life to the struggle against violence on women in urban spheres but soon this very issue inspired her to move on to  the rural areas where she focused on the issue of forest and land rights of women. This issue given its complexity was neither raised nor debated three decades ago. Bharatidi was one of the first who raised these issues in the Shivalik forest region in District Saharanpur, Uttar Pradesh and played an important role in the formation of Ghad Kshetra Mazdoor Morcha and Ghad Kshetra Mahila Morcha. This new area of work opened new vistas for her – and she began to concentrate on the issues of women and land/forest rights across the state of Uttar Pradesh.  Today a vibrant movement has made its presence felt very significantly in   districts of UP and Uttarakhand where land and forest rights movement is now being spearheaded by Dalit, Adivasi and other poor women. The enactment of the new Act in forest areas such as " Forest Rights Act, 2006"  has been an important contribution of the struggle of the National Forum of Forest People and Forest Workers (NFFPFW), through which Bharatidi strongly advocated the issue of women's rights over resources as envisaged in the Act. In this context, the National Forum of Forest People and Forest Workers is organizing a memorial lecture to pay tribute to her outstanding work on Women's rights over Natural Resources, land and forest especially. A 50 minute film on the vibrant movement on collective action and collective possession of land and forest in different areas of UP and Uttarakhand - "Tu Zinda Hai, PartII...."- will also be screened before the memorial lecture.

 In recent years women are in the fore front of all resistance movements that have been going on against corporate attack on land, forest, water and other natural resources. The core issue on which the struggling women are getting mobilized is people's sovereign right over natural resources and more specifically on women's right over resources. Since women's involvement in primary production process in land, forest and water is much higher than men, such demand is very realistic and logical. Traditionally, all such movements were led by men and women remained as a shadow to the male leadership. Women always played a critical role of both leading and sustaining every struggle, but with time their role would go unrecognized and they would be pushed backed behind the four walls of their homes and families. But the situation has changed radically in last few decades when women started taking initiatives in protesting against displacement, landlessness and violence. In the last 65 yrs of independent India, the development process as initiated by the Indian State, has displaced more than 100 million people physically and  also from their livelihood resources. With the neo-liberal regime, this process has accelerated and has been responsible for creating more landlessness. Today, there is a direct conflict between the Indian State and the marginalized communities and especially with the women folk who are facing the three pronged attack from the patriarchy, feudalism, and imperialist globalization. This ongoing determined struggle of women has also seen a growth of collective consciousness among the landless, Adivasi, Dalit women to protect the resources and also to protect the livelihood for the security of future generations. With this new consciousness the struggling women are taking new initiatives for developing new alternatives to build resistance against the present exploitative economic and political system which is destroying the natural resources and traditional livelihoods. These experiments  with forming community collectives for agriculture and forestry with women in control are significantly advanced  than many government schemes and projects initiated by the civil society in terms of protecting the traditional livelihood practices and also in creating common assets and new opportunities for future generations. In the present scenario in the rural sector women's land right movement has gone through  an evolution over the last 4-5 decades. The Bodh Gaya movement was one milestone  in which women won independent right on land.

The neo-liberal policies have accelerated the attack on women further, but they are not afraid of this attack as they are struggling to determine their own future. The various schemes launched for the upliftment of women such as NREGA, schemes of women welfare are all half hearted schemes. Since these schemes do not ensure rights over resources and so actually help very little. These schemes are not what women want. The rural women are talking of a new political economy and not just economic packages. In this matter neither government nor intelligentsia is sensitive, neither are they aware of the language to interact with the women from the poorest sections. All such schemes view women within four walls only and not from the perspective of their independent right to resources. On the other hand the collective political consciousness and assertion of rural poor women is growing into a new political level.

 There is a need to look into these phenomena with a new approach, where the question of collective is very important as rural poor women's rights and security is embedded in collectiveness and collective action.  In this context the discussion on women's rights to natural resources is important. Bharatiji had worked on this issue till her death and in her memory a "Women Empowerment Center" has also been established in Saharanpur, UP where she spent a lot of her time and built this understanding.

 These debates need to be continued and through these debates we attempt to continue the discourse for a pro-people alternative development process.

We are having two senior women activists Kalyani Menon Sen and Smita Gupta, who will speak on the issue of land and forest rights. This will be followed by an open discussion. The discussion will be chaired by Dr. M. Mohanty who is well known scholar and happen to be Bharatidi's teacher too.



We solicit your presence and participation in the programme.

Gangaarya, Roma, Rajnish, Munnilal, Ashok Choudhary, Sokalo, Lalti, Sarita, Behna, Fatimabi, Matadyal, Jung Hindustani, Kausahalrani, Avijit, Vipin, Praduman, Amit, Shanta, Dr. Surendra Nischal, Vinod Pathak, Sanjay Garg

 

 NATIONAL FORUM OF FOREST PEOPLE AND FOREST WORKERS

 

 

 ALL ARE CORDIALLY INVITED









--
NATIONAL FORUM OF FOREST PEOPLE AND FOREST WORKERS, (N.F.F.P.F.W.)
Near Homeguard Commandant Office
Saraswati Vihar, Near Kargi Chowk
Haridwar Bypass
DEHRADUN - 248001 (Uttrakhand)
Contact : 09412990913 (Munni Lal) 09412348071 (Vipin Gairola)




--
NFFPFW / Human Rights Law Centre
c/o Sh. Vinod Kesari, Near Sarita Printing Press,
Tagore Nagar
Robertsganj,
District Sonbhadra 231216
Uttar Pradesh
Tel : 91-9415233583, 05444-222473
Email : romasnb@gmail.com
http://jansangarsh.blogspot.com




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