FFEI is proud that it awarded a small amount of Rs.10,000 to this esteemed 
newspaper “Khabhar Lahariya” two years ago. Mr Vidya Bhushan Rawat helped us in 
presenting our award 
http://www.friends4education.org/scholarship/2007/07awards/07kl.htm
 
It is a pleasure to see good reports on it. Recently it has been selected for 
an International award as well. I congratulate every one responsible for its 
publication.
 
 
6. 
Dalit newspaper strives for social justice in Bundelkhand 
Posted by: "Siddhartha Kumar" mailsiddharth...@gmail.com   tellsiddhartha 
Mon Aug 17, 2009 10:39 am (PDT) 
http://www.deccanhe rald.com/ content/19806/ dalit-newspaper- strives-social- 
justice.html

Dalit newspaper strives for social justice in Bundelkhand
Sanjay Pandey in Lucknow

Sheer determination and hard work has earned this small group of women
international recognition

Launched in 2002 as a modest four-page newspaper in Uttar Pradesh's
backward Bundelkhand region, ‘Khabar Lahariya’ (waves of news),
bagged the prestigious UNESCO Literacy Award.

The news paper is in a local dialect using Devanagiri script and run
by semi-literate Dalit, Muslim and Kol women and has been creating
real waves in the impoverished and parched lands of Bundelkhand.

The all women newspaper, a weekly, which now has eight pages and
employs 20 plus ‘semi-literate’ women, symbolises the struggle against
social discrimination. ‘‘We had to face great difficulties in bringing
out and running the newspaper. The people from the upper caste did not
like it and our reporters had a tough time in gathering information’’,
recalls its editor Meera.

Interestingly barring Meera, who is a graduate, all the other staff is
semi-literate. ‘‘Our reporters do not find any difficulty in their
work as the newspaper is in Bundeli dialect’’, she told Deccan Herald
from Chitrakoot.

The work of reporting, page making and even selling the newspapers is
done by these 20-plus women. ‘‘With our limited resources, we can not
afford to sell the newspaper through hawkers. The reporters go from
one village to another to sell it’’, Meera said. ‘‘In fact it helped
the reporters ton get first hand news from the villages; especially
the problems they face and about the implementation of welfare
schemes'', she added.

Meera attributes the success of the newspaper to the dialect in which
it is published. ‘‘It is easy for the people of the region to
understand the Bundeli language’’, she points out.

No wonder ‘Khabar Lahariya’ today has a readership of 25, 000. The
number of copies printed stand at four thousand and it is sold for Rs.
two in as many as 400 villages in Chitrakoot and Banda districts of
Bundelkhand.

A Delhi-based NGO Nirantar had extended help to bring out the
newspaper after a newsletter ‘Mahila Dakiya’ by an NGO Mahila Samakhya
stopped publication in 1999.
The newspaper now is getting government and private advertisements
also, which has helped to sustain it, Meera said. The newspaper has
won the prestigious UNESCO King Sejong Literacy Prize 2009. The award
would be presented at the UNESCO headquarters in Paris in September.

Meera says that the award signifies ‘victory of women’s power’. She is
now making plans to start publication of the newspaper from some
other districts of the region as well. With its main focus on local
issues, Khabar Lahariya exposed the Tendu leaves scam. Its reports
were followed by many state level Hindi dailies.
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If his education was detrimental to the welfare of poor, he was a curse to 
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-Babasaheb Dr B R Ambedkar
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