Thursday, January 16, 2025
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My Half of the Sky: An author’s attempt to profile the indomitable women of the North East

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Guwahati:Traditional, yet modern, resilient and capable of enduring all odds — are the women from North East as portrayed by Assam’s prolific writer Indrani Raimedhi in her latest book. The book ‘My Half of the Sky’, profiles twelve women of diverse background from the region who have confronted great odds and endured heart-breaking ordeals to stand by what they believe in.
A HIV-positive patient who loses her husband and child to AIDS and turns a crusader, the daughter of an impoverished farmer surmounting all odds to become an Olympic medal winning boxer, world’s only female elephant catcher, a rustic devoting her life to save women from being branded as witches and being killed, women who have overcome their physical disabilities to fight for rights of others like them are among the twelve women whose lives have been featured in the book.
“The stories of these women are stories of struggle, hope, despair and triumph, and though they all are from the North East, it must be acknowledged that they go beyond the confines of a geographical place and are bound to inspire anyone from any part of the world,” she says.
Their narratives dispel gender stereotypes, reveal facets of this beautiful, troubled part of the country and “my book also stands for the premise that all issues are womens issues”, says Raimedhi, a journalist with a leading English daily of Assam and an author with nine books to her credit.
Eminent journalist B G Verghese, writing the foreword of the book, points out that the notion that unlike their sisters in most other parts of the country, women in the North East necessarily enjoy a greater degree of freedom and a privileged position in society is exaggerated.
Raimedhi has rendered a singular service by revealing another facet of this very diverse region through a series of fascinating stories of some of its remarkable women who have fought privation, discrimination and adver-sities of every kind to become icons and blaze new trails, says Verghese.
Jahnabi Goswami took the unprecedented step of being the first HIV positive woman in the North East to come out in the open after losing her husband and baby daughter to AIDS, going on to set up the Assam Network of Positive People to help people with HIV, AIDS and fight for their rights.
Parvati Barua is the celebrated Elephant Queen, the only woman elephant trainer in the world, who was born into an affluent and privileged zamindar family who instead chose to answer the call of the wild, taming and training elephants.
Raimedhi also profiles Mary Kom, the daughter of an impoverished farmer in a Manipur village, who with grit and tenacity travels the long road to international fame as an Olympic boxer even as the dice seems loaded against her.
As a teenager, Sahitya Akademi winning author Rita Chowdhury spent years as a fugitive student revolutionary hiding from the law who went on to chronicle the Assam move-ment against foreign nationals, capturing in gripping prose the drama of those stirring years.
Padmashree awardee Bertha G Dkhar’s world may have turned dark as she became blind but braving great odds, she created Braille in the Khasi language and ushered in a quiet revolution in the area of education for the visually challenged.
Dr Manisha Behal is credited with single-handedly professionalizing social work in the North East and her NGO, North East Network, is a leading organisation working in the area of women’s rights.(PTI)

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