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SIFPSA Showcase
We
are starting a new column, “The SIFPSA Showcase” in
which we will be highlighting the achievements of the many faceless
workers who have contributed in no small measure to the SIFPSA success
story.
In this issue, we bring you face with Shahjahan Begum, a rural woman
who decided to take up community service as a village level volunteer
with a SIFPSA supported project on reproductive and child health,
implemented by Kamla Nehru Memorial Trust, a local NGO in Allahabad
district. From being a demure, veiled housewife, to a woman who
now walks tall as a gram pradhan, Shahjahan Begum’s tale is
one of grit, determined commitment to making a difference in the
lives of the village women and contributing substantially towards
SIFPSA’s achievements.
Married
for the past 22 years, Shahjahan Begum, a mother of five, aged 40,
belongs to Daundupur village in Allahabad district. Hailing from
a background where talking about family planning and reproductive
health issues is a social taboo, Shahjahan Begum broke away from
the village stereo type and took up the mantle of a community based
distribution (CBD) worker in 1998. Reaching out to women to make
them aware about family planning methods by undertaking arduous
door-to-door home visits, Begum had to initially face a lot of opposition
from people of her community. But her undying commitment to the
cause finally brought her social acceptability. Her unrelenting
efforts to initiate a dialogue with more and more women on reproductive
health issues and to address their concerns and fears, gained her
immense popularity. And within a short span of time, Shahjahan Begum
was elected the gram pradhan or village headwoman of Daundupur village!
For the past 6 years she has been playing a crucial role in helping
women, mainly from the muslim community, access family planning
services.
“Initially
I faced a lot of resentment from the people of my community,
but I decided not to give up.” |
Sharing her experiences of working with the community, she confesses,
“Initially there was a lot of resentment from people of my
community, but thanks to my husband’s constant encouragement
and support from my organization, I decided not to give up. And
slowly I was able to overcome the women’s hesitation, by getting
them to open up and talk about private and sensitive issues of family
planning and reproductive health”.
Shahjahan Begum recounts with great pride an occasion when she helped
save the life of a woman from her village. Her weather-beaten face
softens, as she vividly narrates the incident when, late one night,
she took Kulsum, who was bleeding excessively, to a nursing home
and helped her get a hysterectomy. “To this day I am proud
of having saved Kulsum’s life. This has left an indelible
mark on the village folks, who look up to me as someone who is always
available in their time of need and treat me as their good samaritan.”
Begum says her greatest achievement in life was, “Stepping
out of home to take up community service among village women”.
Her eyes glow with pride when she recollects getting an award from
the District Magistrate for being the best volunteer of the Kamala
Nehru Project and being honoured for her work.
Today as the gram pradhan, her opportunity of making an impact on
the life of the community is even bigger through various federally
funded anti-poverty and rural development programmes. Begum represents
a small, but growing number of courageous rural women who broke
away from age old traditions and went on to become a SIFPSA village
level volunteer and today as a village pradhan, is a community leader
in her own
right.
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