4
We strongly believe that this kind of a ‘comprehensive’ leadership training
model can present some answers to the problems that minority women face.
Not only is capacity building and leadership training for minority women
an empowering end in itself, it is also a vital means to another end.
Because even as the State seeks to make social and physical infrastructure, civic
amenities, and schools available in Minority neighborhoods, there is a critical
need for ‘push and pull factors’ to work in tandem. In other words, the Minority
community will also have to reach out to systems of local governance to make
the system responsive. This pilot scheme for leadership development of minority
women aims to place minority women in the vanguard of this ‘pull factor’. For
experiences of organizing women all over the globe, to which so many women in
this very room can bear testimony, tell us that given the right support and inputs
women can and will make the system respond.
III. RECOMMENDATIONS FOR SCHOOL-BASED EDUCATION FOR MINORITY
GIRLS
A. Education for Minority Girls: Why do we aim so low?
In making recommendations for minority girls, there is always an emphasis on
elementary education. This is valid for there is an acute problem of basic
education. Yet, it also means that we appear to stop dreaming the big dream for
them. This reflects in our activism and our policies. When we ask States to
ensure schooling for minority girls, we must also with equal vigour and passion
ask them to ensure professional education, technical education and higher
educational opportunities for minority girls, Muslim and Dalit. We need to think
beyond the basic welfare approach to education, and create for minority girls a
global public environment that legitimizes aspiration - towards true excellence
and the highest possible intellectual endeavors. For this is how role models can
be born, and minority women’s leadership created.
B. Anti-Discrimination Legislation to cover Education
Finally, we need to speak not just about access to schooling, but right to an
education that is dignified and empowering; that does not harm the child’s sense
of self or dignity; that questions and critiques; that which gives outcomes of both
expanded minds and expanded job opportunities. In each of these arenas,
education systems the world over are plagued by discrimination against
minorities. I would suggest for the future an entire session of this Forum
dedicated to unearthing, documenting and suggesting ways to end the multiple
forms of anti-minority discrimination that afflict our education systems – in
funding, in location, in teacher recruitment, in quality, in curriculum, in
classroom practices, and in outcomes. We have heard the word ‘Discrimination”
many times, in all the statements by previous speakers this morning. But we
cannot begin to end this without strong legal instruments. I believe there can be