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  * The Blue Women *

*The day women manual scavengers from India walked the ramp in a New York
fashion show*

Once, Rani Athwal picked up human excrement in Alwar a city in India's
northern state of Rajasthan. She went from house to house scraping dry
latrines, putting the nightsoil in a basket, which she carried away on her
head. A societal pariah, people in the community treated her as an
'untouchable'.

This week she sashayed down the ramp in a New York City fashion show.
"People would avoid looking at me and now the whole world is watching," she
said.

The road that took Athwal from the toilets in her city to the streets of NYC
has been a long one. From the age of 11 Athwal worked as a "scavenger" going
from house to house cleaning toilets. "Picking up filth all the time would
cause a lot of scratching, vomiting and make me sick," she recalled. "I
couldn't eat."

Scavengers who have been performing this demeaning task for centuries are at
the bottom of the informal caste system in India. Many Indians treat them as
untouchables. "You never get used to how people behave," said Athwal. "It
always hurts when someone avoids touching you." Untouchability is illegal in
India but the practice widespread in many parts of the country.

Five years ago, Athwal, now 36, broke away from generations of humiliation
when she joined Sulabh International Social Service Organisation, a
non-profit organisation working for the social upliftment of scavengers.
"Life went from hell to heaven," she said.

This week 36 Sulabh women dressed in blue saris descended on the United
Nations in NYC to raise awareness about the plight of scavengers in India
and called for the improvement of sanitation facilities around the world.
The United Nations has declared 2008 as the International Year of
Sanitation.Before making it to NYC these women have gone through a long
period of rehabilitation with Sulabh, which provides adult education and
vocational training that enables them to change their occupation. "I can
read, write, embroider, make pickles and candles," said Athwal.

"They can operate bank accounts and are totally independent," said
Bindeshwar Pathak who founded the organization in 1970. So far Sulabh has
rescued 60,000 out of approximately 700,000 scavenger women in India
according to the United Nations Development Program. Pathak started a
sanitary revolution in India after he developed the well-known Sulabh
Shauchalya, a scavenging free eco-friendly toilet, which the inventor claims
reduces global warming, saves water and turns human waste into fertiliser.
Thirty years after his invention Pathak is building toilets around the
world. "Today 2.6 billion people on this planet do not have access to safe
and hygienic toilets," he said, speaking at the UN.

Sulabh has developed 26 toilet designs, trained 19,000 masons to build low
cost toilets, installed more than 1.4 million household toilets and it
maintains more than 6, 500 public pay per use facilities in India. Now the
organisation has joined with the UN to cut by half the number of people
lacking access to basic sanitation by 2015. So far Sulabh has sold its
technology in Afghanistan and 15 African countries. It also plans to build
toilets in the Dominican Republic, Haiti, Laos, Madagascar and Tajikistan.

This week Pathak got the Sulabh women to the UN to walk in a fashion show
with India's top models. "Our purpose is sanitation not fashion," he said.
"But to achieve that objective we have to combine scavengers with fashion
models."

The clothes were designed by an eminent New Delhi high-fashion designer
Abdul Halder. "I just do the designing all the hard work and labor comes
from the women," he said. "They do the stitching, dying, embroidery,
painting and tailoring." In the fashion show held in the Delegates' Dining
Room at the UN on Tuesday, a Sulabh woman dressed in plain blue sari walked
the ramp alongside a flamboyantly dressed model. They walked to a fusion of
Indian and western music for a crowd of about 200 people.

The first line was vibrant satin saris with hand painting of scavenger women
carrying human excrement and brooms. Next was a glittering line up of Indian
bridal wear of chiffon and georgette.

"The wedding costumes were inspired by these women who told me it was their
dream to get married in beautiful wedding clothes," said Haider. And finally
the models walked out in western white wedding gowns of net and taffeta
silk. "We want them to learn western designs so that the clothes they make
are globally accepted," said the fashion designer.

Indian model, Sonalika Sahay, 27 has shared the ramp with the Sulabh women
back home. "So far they've been cleaning up our dirt," she said. "This is
about celebrating their work and recognising them in society." Athwal who
walked the ramp for the third time loved the loud music and the NYC crowd.
"I walk with the models who are wearing the clothes I made and we're all
making India proud," she said. "My kids get so happy when I tell them." A
mother of four, Athwal is now earning enough from her work at Sulabh to put
her children in school. She does not want them to lead her life. "I did what
my parents did," she said. "Now that I have stopped, my children won't do
it."



  *tehelka Posted on July 25, 2008*











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