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HUMAN RIGHTS COUNCIL
FORUM ON MINORITY ISSUES
Fourth Session: Guaranteeing the Rights of Minority Women
Geneva, November 29-30, 2011
Minority Women/ Girls: The Right to Education
Minority Women & Girls in India:
Critical elements to consider towards Equity in Education
FARAH NAQVI
Independent Writer & Activist, India
I speak in the context of India, and largely though not exclusively, in the context
of Muslims who constitute 13.4% of the total population and are the largest
religious minority. In sheer numbers Muslims in India are well over 140 million
people, with over 67 million Muslim women and girls, more than the entire
populations of many European countries.
Yet Muslim women in India today have the lowest literacy indicators and lowest
formal work participation rate of women from any socio-religious community.
Addressing these deprivations means battling both global Islamophobia and in
India a strong right wing movement with a national political presence.
Against this backdrop I will make a few critical points.
I. GENERAL RECOMMENDATION:
Violence targeted against Muslim and Christian minorities, against Tribals
(indigenous peoples) and Dalits (the ‘lowest’ castes) has taken place with
regularity in India over the years. Multiple forms of sexual assault against
women from these communities have been a critical part of the overall pattern of
violence. The most visible arm of the State – the police and law enforcement– are
often seen to be partisan in these cases, and the wheels of justice have either not
turned at all, or turned far too slowly.
Over time this has lead to an enormous breach of trust between State and large
sections of the Muslim community, particularly those in ghettoes, those on the
margins, and those who need State interventions for equitable development the
most. State-led efforts for educational, economic or political empowerment of
Minority women cannot succeed in the face of this general trust deficit. It must
be bridged.
Therefore addressing the issue of targeted, and mass violence against
minority groups and ensuring the right to life, justice and comprehensive
reparation through robust State legislation has to be named as the critical
backdrop to any educational initiative for minority women.