posted on 2024-09-06, 07:03authored byRobert Chambers
The Working Women's Forum in South India is a remarkable organisation with
some 36,000 members, all of them poor working women. They are both urban and
rural, and include marketeers, women who sell services, and women who work at
home - beedi and agarbathi makers, laceworkers and others. Poor working women
suffer five oppressions against which the WWF enables them to struggle - class
exploitation, caste inferiority, male dominance, physical weakness, and a
closed world. The WWF is a counter-culture, of reversals, turning pillars of
normal Indian culture on their heads - class, caste, male dominance, hierarchy
and directions of learning. To multiply its impact to touch more of the tens
of millions of oppressed poor women in India involves decisions about
priorities. One major question is whether others could learn with and from
the Forum and start similar organisations elsewhere.
History
Publisher
UNICEF
Citation
Chambers, R. (1985) The Working Women's Forum: A Counter–Culture by Poor Women. New Delhi: UNICEF