Winds of Change
Women
empowerment has become the buzzword today with women working alongside men in
all spheres. They profess an independent outlook, whether they are living
inside their home or working outside. They are increasingly gaining control
over their lives and taking their own decisions with regard to their education,
career, profession and lifestyle.
With
steady increase in the number of working women, they have gained financial
independence, which has given them confidence to lead their own lives and build
their own identity. They are successfully taking up diverse professions to
prove that they are second to none in any respect.
But while
doing so, women also take care to strike a balance between their commitment to
their profession as well as their home and family. They are playing multiple
roles of a mother, daughter, sister, wife and a working professional with
remarkable harmony and ease. With equal opportunities to work, they
are functioning with a spirit of team work to render all possible co-operation
to their male counterparts in meeting the deadlines and targets set in their
respective professions.
Women
empowerment is not limited to urban, working women but women in even remote
towns and villages are now increasingly making their voices heard loud and
clear in society. They are no longer willing to play a second fiddle to their
male counterparts. Educated or not, they are asserting their social and
political rights and making their presence felt, regardless of their
socio-economic backgrounds.
While it
is true that women, by and large, do not face discrimination in society today,
unfortunately, many of them face exploitation and harassment which can be of
diverse types: emotional, physical, mental and sexual. They are often subjected
to rape, abuse and other forms of physical and intellectual violence.
Women
empowerment, in the truest sense, will be achieved only when there is
attitudinal change in society with regard to womenfolk, treating them with
proper respect, dignity, fairness and equality. The rural areas of the country
are, by and large, steeped in a feudal and medieval outlook, refusing to grant
women equal say in the matters of their education, marriage, dress-code,
profession and social interactions.
Let us
hope, women empowerment spreads to progressive as well as backward areas of our
vast country.
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