TELUGU
WOMAN NOMINATED FOR NOBEL PEACE PRIZE
(July 4, 2005) By Venkatasrinivas Polavarapu (Gani Pola)
Hyderabad,
India: She is one among the thousand nominees from India for the
Nobel Peace Prize for this year. Leave alone the chance blooming
into reality, Vasantha Kannabhiran, a prolific feminist writer from
Hyderabad in India believes that all the Indian women whoever worked
for the uplift of the underdog women, fought against the devil of
HIV/Aids or sacrificed their lives for the cause of human rights
and alleviation of rural poverty are eligible to get the
Nobel prize.
Wife
of a prominent civil rights activist Kannabhiran, Vasantha started
her career in public life as an English lecturer in Hyderabad in
the early 70s. Her fifteen year stint as a teacher came to an end
in 1985 when she resigned out of frustration that the job did not
elevate her capabilities to serve the society.
A sort
of I must do something more continued to haunt her.
With like-minded friends and women groups, she started a small voluntary
organization Sthree Shakti Sanghatan, which successfully
took up several issues that bothered the women community. For a
brief while, she worked as Secretary to her husband, during which
period she concentrated more on national and international issues,
particularly concerned with the human rights violation.
Not
content with that she established her independent social organization
Asmitha in 1991. Enlightenment dawned on her that she
found that much had to be done not in the urban areas, but in the
remote parts of the rural lands. As a founder member of Ekta,
a popular voluntary organization, Vasantha gradually began to put
forth her philosophy For real social development and peaceful
co-existence, the participation of the younger generation is a must.
In
more than many ways, she created a path for herself as an eloquent
speaker during her days as a lecturer. Her public contacts range
from a villager to a national to international figure. Her extensive
camps in the villages opened her mind to their pestering problems.
She was a live witness to the rural maladies such as unsafe drinking
water, perennial diseases, illiteracy, malnutrition and what else!
During
the early 90s, she became a power in the rural belt. She conducted
mass literacy campaigns, forced the governmental agencies to have
a look at the perennial social problems cutting across various aspects.
Her campaign for social justice for the rural women gained momentum
with wide publicity in the media. She wrote several pamphlets and
books exposing the apathy of the government towards rural poverty.
Some her books are Twilight without Borders and
The Environment of Women. Vasantha profusely thanks
her children elder daughter Chitra who works as a scientist
championing the cause of the blind, and her younger daughter Kavita,
who is her best critic for all their encouragement in her
social mission.
For
the last one century, the Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to 90 personages
on 83 occasions, of which the number of women recipients was only
10. A woman who receives the Nobel Prize need not be an international
figure. There are umpteen numbers of women who suffer and die miserably
in the fields. There are women who constantly fight dreaded diseases
like AIDS and HIV. There are women who render selfless service for
the cause of orphans. Their undertaking is noble all through. All
of them are eligible for the Nobel, Vasantha observes.
A Swiss
womens group divided the world into 20 zones and from each
zone selected 2000 names fit the stand the test of the ultimate
global honor. Of the 91 women selected from India, Vasantha Kannabhiran
happens to be a prominent name. The other two women from Andhra
Pradesh are Prameela, a health worker from Guntur and Mugulamma,
a handicapped woman associated with literacy campaign.
Release
Source: www.c2b2bnews.com
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