Apart from those
are living in so-called high society, we Indian still love
everything in a traditional way. We
are also vary proud about the rich tradition that we have but there are some
shocking one too. One of such is discrimination towards girl
child. It is an age old practice in India where people pray to the various
Goddess but while going family way every one want a boy.
Owing to a “tradition”
that reflects gender bias, several parents in Satara (Maharashtra )
have named their third or fourth daughter Nakoshi, in the hope that the
next child will be a boy. They all got rid of the name ‘Nakoshi', which
means unwanted in Marathi. However, in a region where gender bias only
starts with the name, and the parents think of daughters as a burden,
there is a possibility that the change will only be restricted to the renaming
ritual, and not reflect in the actual change in mindset. In a bid to
undo the damage, and spread awareness about protecting the girl child, the district
administration organised a public event to rename and honour the girls.
The process to
identify “Nakoshis” in the State was initiated by Ahmednagar-based
activist Sudha Kankria who first noticed the trend in 2007. In a recent ceremony all girls from Satara
got rid of the name “Nakoshi” meaning unwanted in Marathi, and
hopefully, the humiliation that came with it.
Nakoshi Kirdat has a similar
story to tell. She had her name changed to Neeta when she got married at
18. However, she remained “Nakoshi” on paper. “I was sent to school only
till tenth class, as my parents didn't have money to educate me. But I always
wanted to do something important, and gain respect. I have accepted the fact
that my parents didn't want me when I was born, but I didn't want to
give up on myself,” she states, with the faith that the new name will also give
her a new identity.
Discrimanation
against girl child and women
About 500000
foetuses aborted every year only because they are female. Preference for the
son in India
is a well-documented phenomenon. Bias society neglect the girls and
women resulting in their early death, female infanticide, and female foeticide.
Most Indian
still maintain the ridiculous theory - “Raising a girl is like watering the
neighbour’s garden” generally sums up the way girls in India are seen - as an economic
burden on their parents.
The tragic tell
of a mother shows how everyday scores of girls child killed andd al are of the records
- "I lay on my bed weak after childbirth. My mother-in-law picked up
the baby and started feeding her milk. I knew what she was doing. I cried and
tried to stop her. But she had already given her milk laced with poisonous
juice of the oleander plant. Within minutes, the baby turned blue and died".
Due to
technological progress, techniques for preconceptual and prenatal sex
determination become cheaper and more accurate; at the same time, the general
income level rises. Thus, these methods become more and more affordable for the
middle and lower class, providing people the opportunity to act
according to their reproductive preferences.
The child sex
ratio will gradually increase over the next decades; however, irreparable
damage has already been done, not only to the countless girls who were deprived
of their natural right of life, but also to society as a whole.
In 1992 Amartya
Sen calculated that 37 million women were ‘missing’ in India
. The UN in 2001 estimated that there were 44 million missing women in India .
!!!Don’t you relise that you are here because your mother
was a woman?!!!
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