Saturday, March 13, 2010

Weekly on Volkskrantreizen.nl: article 16 (Dutch)

Jaap Scholten covered Willem and Franz' discovery of Mc Donald's and two football hero's in Gujarat. Click here for article 16 'Voetballen in Gujarat'.

[Preview]

De snelweg van Mumbai naar Ahmedabad is lang en saai. Tijdens het rijden dwalen mijn gedachten de hele tijd af naar de garnalenmeisjes in Mumbai. Hoe graag ik het ook zou willen voorlopig zal het leven van deze meisjes en hun families weinig of niet veranderen. Daarvoor zijn heel veel nieuwe ideeën, veel geduld en nog meer empathie nodig.


Gujarat
Onopgemerkt rijden Willem Grimminck en Franz Gastler Gujarat binnen. Gujarat is een welvarende deelstaat van India. Veertig procent van India’s industriële productie is made in Gujarat en bijna driekwart van de petrochemische industrie is hier geconcentreerd. Maar wie ook aanzienlijk bijdragen aan de welvaart zijn de vele Gujarati’s die het land van de heilige koe hebben verlaten voor een carrière in het westen en maandelijk een cheque opsturen naar opa en oma. Gujarat staat ook bekent om het grote aantal hindoes dat principieel geen vlees eet. Mahatma Ghandi, de beroemdste zoon van Gujarat,, was één van hen. Het hindoeisme is sterk verankerd in de samenleving van Gujarat en dat zal voorlopig niet veranderen want de regionale overheid wordt gedomineerd door politieke partijen die sterke banden hebben met de conservatieve hindoebeweging ‘Pure Veg’ (pure vegetarian). Lees verder

Callenging child marriage: Sita Kumari

Case Study: Sita Kumari (14)

SITA KUMARI, from the tiny tribal village of Hutup in Ranchi District, attends 9th class at a local government school. She is the second of five daughters – Gita, Sita, Reeta, Neeta and Babita! – of Muni Devi, an illiterate housewife who earns some income by brewing rice beer, and Charku Mahto, a daily wage mason commuting to nearby Ranchi city. Her family’s income is roughly Rs 2,500 ($50) per month.

They have two cows (but no milk), two goats and one hen. Unlike her two younger sisters who play on her team and are all smiles, for Sita football is a serious affair. Last spring, Sita’s parents arranged the marriage of her fifteen year old sister, and in an interview with The Hindustan Times (“Bend it like Bekhambhai”, Sunday 6 December 2009), her mother and father made it clear that unless something big happened for Sita, she would be next. But things are changing. According to her mother, football has delayed the prospect of marriage. Her father says he would be delighted if she made the state team and even happier if she moved out of their house into a sports or school hostel – more titles mean less dowry and better marriage prospects, and leaving the house means one less mouth to feed.

This is looking more and more probable. After participating in a selection for the Sports Authority of India (SAI) State Girls’ U16 team in July where she was not selected, she paid attention to what was evaluated and a month later had mastered the moves. She has made it back into the final selection for the team after a few more months’ practice and a week at India’s premier football academy, Tata Football Academy (TFA) in December.

“I feel happy and I have been attending evening class [at Yuwa Club],” she says. “Study is important for me, but math is very hard. My mother’s behavior is changing. She used to always think about me doing housework.”

Sita working with her father in their vegetable garden (Photo credits: Ashok Nath Dey for The Hindustan Times)

Monday, March 8, 2010

UNIFEM approval

YUWA's growth strategy and related our request to FIFA are emerging and already endorsed by the United Nation Development Fund for Woman (UNIFEM).