India's first female Dalit radio makes waves
26 Oct 2008, Roli Srivastava, Times News Network
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/India/Indias_first_female_Dalit_radio_makes_waves/articleshow/3641458.cms

HYDERABAD: Algole Narsamma makes for an unusual reporter. Every morning at
10, she starts her journey to various villages in search of stories that are
neither breaking news nor juicy snippets that sell. But the 25-year-old
mother of two says she is always sure her reports strike a chord with
listeners every time they are aired.

Algole is a producer at 90.4 FM, the radio channel started "by Dalit women,
for Dalit women". It's making waves not only in her village, Machnoor, but
nationally. Algole's reports on farming tools, and folk songs are a hit in
Zaheerabad, where most women her caste toil in the fields. The audience base
has been expanding in the 11 days the channel has existed. Many listeners
are even buying FM-enabled cellphones to catch the station.

About 70 villages in the Medak district of Andhra Pradesh have been tuning
into India's first female Dalit community radio. Every night at 8, the
channel airs a one-and-a-half hour package of local news and views, tidbits
on herbal medicines for animals and folk songs and stories.

This all-woman, all-Dalit Sangham (community) radio station, which boasts
the signature tune, 'akka chillelu kudi podame (come sisters, let us go to
the sangham radio)', is seen as the first 'audible' voice of the state's
Dalit women. Algole claims the station "represents" over 5,000 women. Her
studio partner General Narsamma doubles as reporter and jockey. She has
studied to Class 10 and is adept at the computer, editing programmes before
they are aired.

The station is an initiative of the Deccan Development Society (DDS), an NGO
that works with 100 groups of the poorest Dalit women. "They still earn Rs
10-15 for six to eight hours of work," says DDS director PV Satheesh. The
low incomes are a reflection of Zaheerabad's poor land, which offers limited
livelihood opportunities in agriculture. There is hardly any
industrialization, and development plans do not reach the targeted
populations. This is why Kancha Ilaiah, one of the state's best known
campaigners on Dalit issues, is elated at the news. He says the radio can
even generate new struggles. For instance, domestic abuse is no longer news
but if they air a case of the wife resisting her husband's violence, women
will be empowered.

The station has already received a congratulatory note from the upper-caste
sarpanch. But the best feedback so far is from those it's meant to serve.
One listener asked if her children could work as reporters. Another felt
proud to be interviewed by the radio. "I always heard others," she said.
"Now I hear my voice, my views. I too will be recognized some day."

Satheesh and others point out that the radio station was possible because
Dalit women in the area are used to working outside the home. "Most women
who joined self-help groups were Dalit. Their mobility was never a problem,"
says P Prasanthi, programme director of the AP Mahila Samatha Society, a
part of the government's Mahila Samakhya Programme. She may have a point.
Sixteen women have already volunteered to get stories for the radio
station.

[EMAIL PROTECTED]
_______________________________________________
cr-india mailing list
[email protected]
https://mail.sarai.net/mailman/listinfo/cr-india

Reply via email to