Now, ‘Balika Panchayat’ in Maharashtra’s Nanded district fights alcoholism and child marriage
The Hindu
Balika Panchayat initiative empowers young girls in Nanded to address social issues and prepare for future governance roles.
The gram panchayat of Yergi in drought-hit Marathwada region’s Nanded district, says that their village has seen a significant decline in alcoholism recently. It attributes this achievement to the efforts of a group of girls, aged between 12 and 18, whose door-to-door campaigns in the village have spread awareness about the evils of alcohol abuse.
The mobilising force behind this group and its success is the Balika Panchayat initiative, which aims to organise young girls in villages into mock “panchayats,” to target and address local social issues. The Balika Panchayat in Yergi has also stopped two child marriages, spread awareness about elephantiasis and led a Swachhta Abhiyan in their village with around 2,200 residents.
First introduced in Bhuj, Gujarat, the concept was brought to Nanded district’s 60 villages by its Zila Parishad CEO Minal Karanwal, an IAS officer of the 2019 batch.
“It has been done before, but I was inspired by a few videos where the girls from Bhuj were talking like leaders. One video, where a girl was interacting with the then Union Minister Smriti Irani, was especially memorable,” Ms. Karanwal said, explaining why she set up a Balika Panchayat in Nanded.
Structurally, a Balika Panchayat closely mimics a regular gram panchayat, with five officeholders. One of the five is chosen to act as a sarpanch (village head). In the first phase of this project, which began in February this year, the girls were tasked with familiarising themselves with the workings of the Panchayati Raj system and organising campaigns centred around key social issues, such as alcoholism and domestic abuse.
The sarpanch of Yergi’s Balika Panchayat, Mahadevi Danevar, 18, says that she has seen an improvement in the prospects young and adolescent girls in the village have access to as a direct consequence of the initiative. She says that while there has been some pushback, the community has been largely supportive of their projects.
In the second phase of the project, which began recently, the members are writing, voting on, and enacting resolutions, much like a real gram panchayat. Ms. Danevar’s Panchayat in Yergi has recently passed a resolution that ensures that every girl in the village will have access to higher education.