NOBEL PRIZE FOR PEACE 2014 SHARED BY INDIA AND PAKISTAN
From Sampath’s Desk:
2014 NOBEL PRIZE FOR PEACE SHARED BY KAILASH SATYARTHI OF INDIA AND
MALALA YOUSAFZAI OF PAKISTAN
The most coveted Nobel Prize for Peace 2014 was conferred on two well deserving persons in the Indian sub-continent - Pakistani education campaigner and teen-aged girl Malala
Yousafzai (then aged 17) and India’s children rights activist
Kailash Satyarthi (then aged 60 and now 66).
Malala hailing from Mingora, Swat, Pakistan was shot in the head by
a Taliban gunman on 9.10.2012 in Pakistan after she became prominent and famous
for her campaigning for girl’s education. She had won the award for what the
Nobel Committee called her ‘heroic struggle’ for girls’ right to education. She
is the youngest ever winner of the prize.
She undertook against all odds a relentless campaign for girls’
education in a country where fundamentalists don’t want to confer the right to
education enjoyed by males on females who formed one half of the population and
held half the sky. This underscores that women education has been a challenge
and far cry in many societies across the globe. Muslim women in many countries
struggle to grab their rights of education and employment on par with males and
are not that atop in the socio-economic ladder/pyramid. A complex web of
circumstances makes even their schooling a daunting task. Still, braving the
fundamentalists’ bullets, Malala had the courage, tenacity, perseverance and strength of purpose to spread
her message to girl children in his country and all around the world asking
them to stand up for their rights. The Nobel Prize to these two activists
should make the girls and women all over the world bold enough to come out of their protected
cocoons to seize due respect and recognition they rightly and richly deserved.
Kailash Satyarthi of Vidisha, Madhya Pradesh, India (B.E/M.E. from
Barkatullah University and Honorary Ph.D from Alliance University – known for
his activism for children’s rights and their education) had maintained the
traditions of Mahatma Gandhi and headed various forms of peaceful protests
focusing on the grave exploitation of children for financial gains. He had also significantly contributed to the development of important international
conventions on children’s rights. The ‘Bachpan Bachao Andolan’ (Save
the Childhood Movement) that Satyarthi started in 1980 was a marked success and
fast spread across the country benefiting at least 80000 ill-destined
children so far from the scourge of illiteracy. No wonder, he dedicated his
prize to children entangled and enmeshed in the vortex of slavery, bonded
labour and trafficking. He was also a recipient of Robert F Kennedy Human
Rights Award in 1995.
For eons together, womenfolk - from womb to tomb - remained repressed, suppressed, subdued and almost enslaves with equality denied to them on feeble and
flimsy subterfuges of race, religion, customs, traditions, beliefs, practices
and other reasons by the dogmatist, diehard, conservative and reactionary males, effectively
preventing them progressing - socially, educationally and economically. Women were
always forced to live fully dependent on males – even for their small needs.
Discrimination of women was prevalent ubiquitously all across the world
transcending all barriers.
Every child irrespective of economic status of their parents is
entitled to right of education and hassle-free enjoyment of childhood. But
alas, we see children doing petty and menial jobs in factories, brick-kilns,
matchbox/firework industries, restaurants, shops, and even as domestic servants - to eke out their livelihood and also support their families. Girl
children, traditionally a neglected lot, suffer still worse. In some cases,
violence and lack of parental care drive children away from home. The runaway
children are abused. Some poor parents even sell their children because of
acute poverty. Child beggary is an anathema and bane of society. Is it not
heart-breaking to see children as mendicants in public places? Can alms
given to them be a permanent solution?
The U.N. Convention on Rights of Child runs thus, “Child, for full
and harmonious development of his or her personality, should grow up in a
family environment, in an atmosphere of happiness, love and understanding. The
child should be fully prepared to live an individual life in society, in the
spirit of peace, dignity, tolerance, freedom, equality and
solidarity.” Albeit the much-vaunted U.N. charter/provisions, how many
countries strictly follow them in both letter and spirit and how many children in the world enjoy the bliss of childhood?
Parents must not use the smokescreen of sanctity of family to hide
certain ugly realities perpetrated by them against their own children. They
should realize that children are asset to them and society, also
fountainhead to posterity. An abused child tends to think, “Offence is the best
defence.” Child abuse is opprobrium.
The global voice as represented and manifest in the conferment of
Nobel Prize for these two most deserving rights activists of India and Pakistan
must stir up the conscience of the world people to do full justice at least
hereafter to those who have been denied the same for long. Let us hope the
spirit of the Nobel Prize for Peace conferred on and shared by these two in the sub-continent
open a new chapter of decent life with dignity for children and marginalized sections of the society.
Perhaps there is also a lesson for India and Pakistan for peaceful
co-existence as friendly neighbour countries.
R.SAMPATH
5/11/2020
(The article was originally written by me on 11/10/2014, now re-edited on
5/11/2020

Excellent piece. Well said.
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