By Akansha Yadav
Earlier this year, I was giving
social audit training to a group of women and men in Gumla district of
Jharkhand when a toddler of a young mother (a trainee) decided to be cranky for
her attention. She tried to humour him and feed him but to no avail. While this
distracted her from the class, others too started glancing at her with
impatience. Embarrassed and under the pressure of those accusing glances, she
tried her best to console the child. Gradually, people sitting at the back
started raising demands of either quietening the child or leaving the room.
Some even whispered why come to a class with a child !?! Amongst that mixed
din, a loud male voice stood out categorically asking the mother to take the
child outside. Embarrassed, she started to rise, pick up the toddler when I
intervened and asked her to sit again. My team members and I tried to distract
the child and finally got him to play again with others... and so we continued
the training after a gap of about 20 odd minutes.
I feel this incident highlighted
some significant social behaviour towards mothers coming to work and a brief
insight into the gradual process as to how they are forced to leave the work
force. The mother obviously did not have any help at home where she could have
left the the child, nor a crèche at the centre for training (which was already
in shambles!). Her concentration in the class was divided between her child and
the discussions, though her participation and responses were quite good. Had
she gone home that day with the child, she would have not completed that
training, or gone on the field to conduct field interviews for social audits.
Apart from the experience, it would have also deprived her from the honorarium
she would have earned for her work. All because she is a mother with no day
care help for her child.
Another issue that I felt got
raised was embarrassing a mother for bringing her child to work. She can't
leave him at home and if she does, it also means she stays back and
automatically gets out of the workforce in due time. A man (amongst many others
sitting there!) feels he has the authority and social sanction to tell a women,
his fellow trainee nonetheless what she should do with her child. He does not
feel an iota of shame or realises the kind of embarrassment he has caused to a
mother.
While gender sensitisation is the
buzz word of this decade, how exactly does it translate in real life, in social
and work scenarios? I say this because the training that all of them were
undergoing at that moment included village survey on gender based indicators
and specifying outcomes on how a certain welfare scheme has affected lifestyle
and lives of women in the village amongst other things. Theoretically or
verbally perhaps, the man who shouted across the room was in-sync with terms
like women empowerment, participation, economic freedom etc, etc.. but clearly
there was a disconnect. He was trying to learn this as a professional skill
with no intention of understanding or assimilating it in his social life. He
mentioned delay in time and class schedule with much more urgency, without
grasping the practical compulsions of dealing with a young child.
If no-one in the class interferes and even the trainer does not
interfere, the mother would have picked up the child and gone home. Why this
behaviour does not outrage others? How exactly we can enforce gender
sensitisation in practice? Why we do not emphasise on the need for formal and
compulsory child care for working mothers? Possibly this insensitivity and
its many manifestations are the reasons, why educated or ambitious mothers have
to stay at home!
And if you'd like to follow her on Twitter, you will find her @akanshayadav
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