Women Empowerment
Shakila and
Kamini are two Kalandar girls who till this time last year saw their
future with bleak eyes. A quick marriage, several mouths to feed as the
children came, and then the struggle to make ends meet….that was what they saw
for themselves. For both of them there was no chance to be independent
financially, or even to earn a little pocket money to put aside when the days
were hard and the income lean.
Wildlife S.O.S Vocational Training Project,
with much needed financial support from The Ford
Foundation however changed their lives and gave them an avenue to
earn a second family income. It also gave them the courage to speak up in family
matters and enjoy more respect within the family, because they too NOW
contributed to the family’s income.
In such
small ways does a community change and quietly a future gets built for the
entire village of kalandar families.
These are their stories.....
Kamini worked hard at the tailoring classes run by Wildlife S.O.S and moved from sample pieces to
stitching her own clothes. Her parents were very protective of her because she
suffered from fits ever since she was a child. Her father Gulfam surrendered a
bear and through the seed money provided to him by Wildlife S.O.S, he adopted
an ‘Alternate Livelihood’ by raising poultry and selling eggs. But his earnings
were slim. Her brother was given a job at the Van Vihar Bear Rescue Facility, a
collaborative project between Wildlife S.O.S and the Madhya Pradesh Forest
Department.
Using her imagination she started stitching
beads onto the kurta/pyjamas she was sewing. The project development officer of
Wildlife S.O.S in
Bhopal Prerna Sharma, began to supply her tailoring books and designs. She also
participated in the Wildlife Week Creative workshop and the Awareness
programmes conducted by Wildlife S.O.S. Soon Kamini starting
getting orders from the women of her village and from shopkeepers
and those outside.Today she earns a satisfactory amount from
both her tailoring and her bead work. All it took was the vocational training
school, a lot of encouragement and a little guidance to empower Kamini and give
her control of her own life.
Shakila’s story too changed after she enrolled at the vocational training centre. Here she learnt
the art of using the date palm leaves to weave into mats. There was a
tremendous demand for these from the hotels of
Bhopal
. She is earning well by selling
these mats and she contributes to her family earnings.
Asha-bi’s story is that of a
successful entrepreneur who not only mastered a skill but also knows how to
market her wares and that of her friends at the vocational school. One of our
best students, she used her hours at the tailoring school to stitch for a large
family of female relatives with her daughter happily modelling the dresses she
stitched. She showed innovation and creativity by making file folders, bags,
and purses and is earning well selling them in the city.
Educating the Kalandar Child, for a
future that’s bright!

Wildlife
S.O.S has changed Asha Bi’s life in more ways than one. Her children are all
attending school and have their uniforms, books and schoolbag sponsored by the
Wildlife SOS Education programme. The story is repeated in the households of
several Kalandars in
Bhopal whose children can now avail of the Education programme.
It wasn’t always that easy, to convince the
children and more importantly the parents, that going to school was important.
Nizar, son of Iqbal Miya and Salma-bi, was the first child and only child going
to school in this village. Naturally bright, very hard working, he seemed an
amazing child, so different from the others. Wildlife S.O.S proudly sponsored
his school fees and books as well as additional tuitions needed to ensure his
success and enrolled him in a regular recognized school. He was the only boy to
get a First Class in his government school exams that year and he brought much
honour to the Kalandar community.
Wildlife
S.O.S simply held out a hand to someone who had the will to change his life and
whose hard work will ensure his bright future.

His example soon sparked a desire amongst the
others and this year, for the 2007 – 2008 session Wildlife S.O.S is pleased to announce
over 60 children enrolled with regular schools and under the aegis of our
Education programme are receiving a formal education.
Wildlife S.O.S was working hard at raising
funds to provide books, uniforms and schoolbags to these children and this is
where
The Ford Foundation extended
its support to Wildlife S.O.S’s Community Rehabilitation Initiative that gave a
much needed thrust to our mission of ‘giving both man and animal a life of
dignity and freedom’.