In poverty-stricken Purulia district, West Bengal, young girls boldly reject 
underage marriage..Forty per cent of the world’s child marriages takes place in 
India. UNICEFWFS UNICEF 
 
Right to childhood: Afsana Khatun are child workers studying in special schools 
run under the National Child Labour Project. Their teachers and schoolmates 
helped convince their families to call off their underage marriages. WFSAjitha 
MenonJyotsana was married at the age of 11. She had four children, but they all 
died before they turned one. Now she lives with her second husband after her 
first husband deserted her,” reveals Rekha Kalindi, 11, from Purulia district, 
West Bengal. Fear and horror are apparent in the young girl’s voice, as she 
narrates the ordeals of her elder sister, Jyotsana. Little wonder then that 
when her parents tried to get her married, young Rekha’s protests managed to 
catch the attention of even the President of India.Rekha’s father Karan 
Kalindi, 49, had fixed her marriage last September. Karan rolls beedis for a 
living and wanted Rekha off his hands as soon as possible. He figured it would 
be one less mouth to feed. This
 father of six, whose monthly income is just Rs 600, also knew he would have to 
give considerably less dowry for a minor daughter.However, what he hadn’t 
anticipated was Rekha’s determination to avoid her sister’s fate. A student of 
the special school run in her village under the National Child Labour Project 
(NCLP), she garnered support from her classmates and teachers and even asked 
the Assistant Child Labour Commissioner, Prasenjit Kundu, to intervene. Her 
outraged father denied Rekha food and water for a couple of days but she would 
not budge. After repeated interventions from an NCLP team and her teachers, 
Rekha’s parents finally called off the marriage.WFS UNICEF 
 
Rekha Kalindi, Sunita Mahato“Under the NCLP, all students get a monthly stipend 
of Rs 100 and, in partnership with UNICEF’s Child Activist Project, share 
information on issues like child rights, early marriage, education, gender 
equality, and so on. Young girls attending school are now voicing their protest 
against early marriage,” says Kundu.Power of education“I want to study. I want 
to become a teacher. I will consider marriage only after I turn 18,” says 
Rekha, whose fight for her rights caught the attention of President Pratibha 
Patil, who invited her to Delhi for a meeting. As a child activist, Rekha also 
recently addressed 6,000 beedi workers, asking them to educate their daughters 
and not consider marriage before they turn 18.Rekha’s story vindicates the 
merits of education. She lives in Bararola village in Jhalda II Block, which 
has one of the lowest female literacy rates in the country at 18.4 per cent. 
While the average literacy
 rate in Bengal is 74 per cent, in Purulia it is 56.14 per cent, with women 
here notching only 37.15 per cent literacy. According to a UNICEF report, 
teenage pregnancy and motherhood is nine times higher among women with no 
schooling, than among those with 12 or more years of education. Forty per cent 
of the world’s child marriages takes place in India, leading to over 78,000 
women dying in childbirth each year.Rekha, who rolled beedis along with her 
parents, got the benefit of education when the NCLP initiated schools for child 
labourers. The project, which began in 2006, today has 90 remedial schools in 
Purulia catering to 4,500 children.“Rekha has done what laws could not do. Her 
stand has forced every family in the Kalindi community, where girls are married 
at 11-12 years, to rethink,” says Budhamani Kalindi, Rekha’s friend. She adds, 
“Earlier my parents were also thinking of finding a groom for me. Now there is 
no pressure. I can go to
 school with an easy mind.”Pushed by povertyAccording to a survey by the West 
Bengal Department of Women and Child Development, 48 per cent girls in the 
State were married when they were minors. In fact, in Purulia an alarming 51.2 
per cent of girls marry before they are 18. Child marriage is also endemic in 
the adjoining districts of Murshidabad, Malda, Birbhum, South Dinajpur, South 
24 Parganas, Nadia and Cooch Behar.In rural Purulia 43..65 per cent of families 
are below the poverty line (BPL) and the children are pushed into menial jobs, 
early marriage and prostitution networks.Afsana Khatun, 13, another child 
labourer who attends the Dhobadi NCLP special school, lives in a slum in 
Katinpara, Purulia town. Her sister, Shabana, was married at 11. But when their 
father, Samsuddin Ansari, a hawker with a monthly income of Rs 1,200, tried to 
do the same with Afsana, the child rebelled. With the help of her classmates, 
Ruksana Khatun and Sakina Khatun,
 Afsana requested her teachers and NCLP officers to intervene. Afsana’s parents 
were counselled and they finally abandoned the marriage plans.“I want to study 
and get a job, only then will I consider marriage,” says Afsana.Taking on the 
communityIn the Kurmi community, which comes under the OBC category in Purulia, 
child marriage is commonplace. “Both my sisters, Judani and Subhadra, were 
married when they were 13. They have remained illiterate. But I go to school. I 
know it’s illegal to marry before 18. Therefore, when my father arranged my 
marriage with a dowry of Rs 30,000, I refused to comply with his wishes,” says 
Sunita Mahoto, 13, who also lives in a slum in Chitaahi, Purulia.Teachers and 
NCLP officers had intervened here too. But the Kurmi community was incensed 
over this and its leaders pressurised Sunita’s parents, Mahakam and Sorubali 
Mahato, not to give in to her revolt. Mahakam, a beedi roller with a monthly 
income of just Rs
 400 and a one-acre plot on which paddy is cultivated once every year, feared 
going against his community. But Sunita stuck to her guns and 
prevailed.Prolonged discussions and reasoning have given rise to positive 
voices within the community. As Sunita herself points out, “Elders like 
Durgacharan Mahato, 53, and Arun Mahato, 44, are now actively advocating the 
education, rather than marriage, of minor girls.”age proofOne major reason why 
it is easy to fudge the ages of these girls and get them married early is the 
low level of birth registrations — only about 40 per cent of births are 
registered in India. But the compulsory registration of births and marriages 
would need sustained awareness generation at the ground level.“Intervention 
programmes run by the district labour department in collaboration with 
organisations working in the field will go a long way in eradicating social 
evils like child marriage,” says Shantanu Bose, District
 Magistrate, Purulia.Recently, when Rekha was invited by the President to 
Delhi, the NCLP team requested that Afsana and Sunita too be allowed to 
accompany her. The girls met the President, who congratulated them on their 
courage and gave them Rs 10,000 each as a token of appreciation. The girls have 
resolved to spend this money on their education. All three enjoy working on 
computers. They excel in their studies and love to paint.Now they want to work, 
become financially independent and chart a more hopeful future for themselves.© 
Women’s Feature Service

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