Here is the class notes from Class 7 NCERT Civics – Chapter 5: Women Change the World
Introduction
- Women have always played an important role in society.
- Over time, they have fought for equality, education, and opportunities.
- Despite progress, gender inequality still exists in many forms.
Stereotypes About Women
- Stereotypes: Fixed ideas about what women can or cannot do.
- Common stereotype: “Women are good at household work, not suitable for technical jobs.”
- These stereotypes limit women’s opportunities.
Learning for Change
- In earlier times, many girls were not allowed to go to school.
- Lack of education kept them from getting good jobs.
- Over time, reformers and women’s movements helped bring change.
Example:
- Ramabai
- She never went to school but learnt to read and write from her parents.
- She was given the title ‘Pandita’ because she could read and write Sanskrit, a remarkable achievement as women then were not allowed such knowledge.
- She went on to set up a Mission in Khedgaon near Pune in 1898, where widows and poor women were encouraged not only to become literate but to be independent.
- Rashsundari Devi
- She was born in West Bengal, some 200 years ago.
- She taught herself to read and write in secret using her son’s textbooks and religious books.
- At the age of 60, she wrote her autobiography in Bangla.
- Her book titled Amar Jiban is the first known autobiography written by an Indian woman.
- Through her own writing she also gave the world an opportunity to read about women’s lives in those days.
- Rashsundari Devi wrote about her everyday life experiences in details.
- There were days when she did not have a moment’s rest, no time even to sit down and eat.
- Rokeya Sakhawat Hossain
- Rokeya Sakhawat Hossain was born into a rich family who owned a lot of land.
- Though she knew how to read and write Urdu, she was stopped from learning Bangla and English.
- In those days, English was seen as a language that would expose girls to new ideas, which people thought were not correct for them
- She wrote a remarkable story titled Sultana’s Dream in 1905 when she was merely 25 years old.
- This story imagined a woman called Sultana who reaches a place called Ladyland.
- Ladyland is a place where women had the freedom to study, work, and create inventions like controlling rain from the clouds and flying air cars.
- Advocated girls’ education; started a school for girls.
Schooling and Education Today
- According to the 1961 census, about 40 per cent of all boys and men were literate compared to just 15 per cent of all girls and women.
- In the most recent census of 2001, these figures have grown to 76 per cent for boys and men, and 54 per cent for girls and women.
- This means that the proportion of both men and women who are now able to read
- Now ,more girls are attending school, but still many drop out due to:
- Poverty
- Household responsibilities
- Early marriage
- Lack of transport or nearby schools
Struggles for Equality
- Women have formed organizations and movements to fight for:
- Equal pay
- Equal opportunities
- Legal rights
- Laws have been passed to protect women’s rights.
Women’s movement
- Different strategies have been used to spread awareness, fight discrimination and seek justice. Here are some glimpses of this struggle.
- Campaign
- Campaigns to fight discrimination and violence against women are an important part of the women’s movement.
- Campaigns have also led to new laws being passed.
- Raising Awareness
- An important part of the women’s movements’ work is to raise public awareness on women’s rights issues.
- Their message has been spread through street plays, songs and public meetings.
- Protesting
- The women’s movement raises its voice when violations violations against women take place.
- for example, when a law or policy acts against their interests.
- Public rallies and demonstrations are a very powerful way of drawing attention to injustices
- Showing Solidarity
- The women’s movement is also about showing solidarity with other women and causes
On 8 March, International Women’s Day, women all over the world come together to celebrate and renew their struggles.