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The Barli Development Institute for Rural Women focuses
on giving poor young women literacy training, practical
knowledge of health, nutrition and sanitation, skills
for income-generation, and an awareness of village-level
environmental conservation. Empowered by their training
as agents for social change, graduates have had a
measurable impact on the well-being of their families
and home villages.
Originally
established as the Baha'i Vocational Institute for Rural
Women, the Institute became an independent entity with
its own board of directors in September 2001, taking the
name Barli Development Institute for Rural Women. The
Institute has trained more than 1,300 young women and
girls since 1985.
Located in
the city of Indore in Madhya Pradesh, the Institute
offers all of its training programs free of charge to
women, drawing its trainees mainly from tribal areas
throughout a region that is marked by chronic poverty
and malnutrition, due in part to low crop yields,
frequent droughts, a shortage of drinking water, and
poor soil.
Its
programs seek to overcome obstacles that have
traditionally hindered the development of women, which
in turn have hindered the development of all. To this
end, it offers a spiritually oriented curriculum that
empowers women with an opportunity to reflect on the
nature of their relationships with others and with their
social institutions. The students examine age-old caste,
tribal, and class prejudices, in the light of Baha'i
principles such as the oneness of humanity, equality of
women and men, respect for diversity, and service to the
community. At the same time, they are encouraged to
identify positive elements in their culture that need to
be preserved and strengthened.
The
Institute works on these goals through a holistic
approach to education, giving each trainee leadership
training courses in literacy, tailoring, agriculture,
artisan crafts-work, human rights, environmental
awareness, self-esteem and personality development,
social commitment, nutrition and health, and
income-generating skills. Art, music, and dance are also
incorporated into the curriculum.
The
objective is that, once empowered with such training,
the women can return to their home villages and become
"pillars" of their families and communities --
agents for changing the social and physical
environments. Indeed, "barli" is the local
word for the central pillar of the house, and like the
"barli," which supports the physical
structure, the woman supports the structure of the
family and the community.
Woven
throughout the Institute's curriculum is a strong
environmental component. Trainees learn that caring for
the environment is a spiritual responsibility, as well
as an important service to the community. Students are
taught about planting and maintaining trees, finding
local sources for seeds, and the use of environmental
and energy conservation techniques such as composting,
vermiculture, the use of biodegradable products, and
proper waste management. One of the institute's earliest
health education campaigns freed that area of guinea
worm by teaching the importance of clean water.
More
specifically, the trainees learn conservation strategies
by doing. At the Institute itself, rainwater is
harvested and, in an innovative arrangement, used to
re-charge the underground aquifer. Wash-water is reused
for irrigation. Gardens, tended by the trainees, provide
most of the Institute's food. Trainees prepare meals
using state-of-the-art solar cookers; some become
"experts" able to support the use of solar
cookers in their villages.
Indeed, for
the last 17 years, the Institute has been a leader in
researching, experimenting with, and using solar cooking
technologies. In the mid-1980s, it began using solar box
cookers for some of its cooking and promoting their use
in the villages. In May 1998, a 7.5 square-meter
parabolic solar cooker was installed the Institute;
another was installed in 2000. Now, for approximately
250 days in a year, 100 percent of all cooking uses
solar energy. Further, trainees are shown the savings to
the environment -- and their time -- that are possible
through the use of solar devices, and they are
encouraged to propagate the use of solar box cookers,
highly efficient parabolic concentrating cookers, and
other energy saving devices in their villages.
The
Institute is currently involved in manufacturing SK14
cookers. So far, nine of these concentrating parabolic
solar cookers, which are capable of cooking for 10-12
people at once, have been set up in outlying villages by
the Institute in a pilot program. The Institute plans to
distribute 40 more such cookers, funded mainly by
primary school children in Austria, in the coming
months.
Graduates
have had a measurable impact on their communities.
Although more than half of the trainees are illiterate
when they arrive, 99% leave fully able to read and write
Hindi. Studies show that 96% of them use their income
generation and related skills upon their return home and
that 46% have established small businesses of sewing
clothes and started generating income while 7- 9% are
employed in various jobs. Some 97% of graduates are
using safe drinking water practices; some 70% now
include leafy vegetables in their diet; and 41% are
growing and selling vegetables. In addition, women in
five villages have planted some 2,500 trees
Other
studies have shown that the women have indeed helped to
create a new atmosphere of mutual respect and unity in
their communities, helping to displace caste prejudices
in tribal communities once notorious for their high
crime rate and alcohol abuse. The Institute collaborates
actively with government officials and non-government
organizations -- exchanging information, methodologies,
and research information.
The
Institute's training programs typically run either six
months or one year, although short-term workshops and
training sessions are occasionally offered on select
topics. Graduates receive a certificate through the
National Open Schools program. The Institute obtains
funding from a range of sources, including the Baha'i
community of India, the Swedish International
Development Agency, and the Two Wings Foundation.
The
Institute has received numerous awards and citations for
its work on the environment and development. In 1992, it
was made a member of the United Nations Environmental
Programme's Global 500 Roll of Honor for outstanding
Environmental Achievement. In 1994, the Institute was
listed in UNESCO's INNOV database as one of 81
successful basic education projects in developing
countries.
On 13
November 2002, the Institute was presented to Her
Majesty Queen Elizabeth II as a "sacred gift"
from the Baha'i International Community, as part of an
Alliance on Religion and Conservation celebration of her
Golden Jubilee. For more information, click
here.