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Grassroots Nation
Author: Rohini Nilekani Philanthropies
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Grassroots Nation is a new podcast series from Rohini Nilekani Philanthropies in which we deep dive into the life, work and guiding philosophies of some of the country’s greatest leaders of social change. Part personal narrative, part oral history, each episode gives you, the listener, a chance to revisit watershed moments in India’s past through the eyes of the country’s social architects and find out how these events were the catalysts for their life’s calling.
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Mari Marcel Thekaekara is a writer and co-founder of ACCORD – the Action for Community Organisation, Rehabilitation and Development.
Born into a deeply religious family, Mari was brought up with a Jesuit Catholic education that taught her to question all her beliefs and developed a deep sense of empathy within her. She went on to join several institutes that shaped her passion for social action such as the All India Catholic University Federation, or AICUF, and the International Grail which is a socio-cultural movement grounded in Christian faith.
Mari met Stan Thekaekara in 1980, a meeting that shaped the rest of her life. In 1984, Mari and Stan with their young family moved to the Nilgiris in Tamil Nadu, to work with the tribal communities of Gudalur. Their early work culminated in ACCORD, an organization which today works on multiple aspects of tribal rights and livelihoods.
Mari has written extensively on the issues of Dalit and Adivasi human rights for national and international newspapers and magazines such as The Hindu, Frontline, Economic and Political Weekly, New Internationalist and The Guardian.
Much of her research over the years has been focused on safai karamcharis, or the manual scavenger communities. In 1999, she published a book ‘Endless Filth.’ Her work has received international acclaim, including a piece she wrote for The Hindu on children of sanitation workers that won the Press Club “best article of the month” award in 2004.
At every turning point in her life, Mari Marcel Thekaekara has chosen to lead the way with love and respect for the people around her.
In this episode, Mari is in conversation with Dr. Roopa Devadasan, a Public Health expert and school teacher and former colleague.
This conversation was recorded at the Bangalore International Centre in Bengaluru.
For more information, reach us at www.rohininilekaniphilanthropies.org
Additional Audio
Malasar Tribe Promised Land Pattas, but Also Asked to Vacate by NewsClickin CC BY 3.0
Gudalur adivasi to vattakalie by Sivaraj Ravi
Gujarat Officials Deny Continuation of Manual Scavenging by VideoVolunteers CC BY 3.0
Outlawed 25 Years Ago, Manual Scavenging Still a Reality in India by VideoVolunteers CC BY 3.0
This is Part 2. We recommend you listen to Part 1 first.
Stan Thekaekara is a social activist who has worked with indigenous and Adivasi communities for over forty years.
He co-founded ACCORD, or the Action for Community Organisation, Rehabilitation and Development and organisation that helped found the Adivasi Munnetra Sangam (AMS), a membership based tribal organisation with 4000 families as members.
Stan is the founder of Just Change, an international cooperative linking producers, investors and consumers in an effort to reimagine a community-based trade and marketing system.
Stan has served as a trustee of Oxfam GB and was Visiting Fellow at the Skoll Centre for Social Entrepreneurship at the Said Business School, Oxford University.
This is part 2 of a conversation between Stan and Dr. Roopa Devadasan a Public Health expert and school teacher. This conversation was recorded at the Bangalore International Centre in Bengaluru.
ADDITIONAL AUDIO
Journey of Adivasi Munnetra Sangam by Adivasis of Gudalur
The AMS Thaen Kootam (AMSTK) for the Kattunayakan tribe in Gudalur by Adivasis of Gudalur
For more information, please find us at www.rohininilekaniphilanthropies.org
Stan Thekaekara is a social activist who has worked with indigenous and Adivasi communities for over forty years.
Born into a deeply religious family in Bengaluru, Stan found himself grappling with his privilege at a very young age. These feelings, accompanied with his exposure to social action through All India Catholic University Federation, or AICUF, set him on the path to working with marginalised communities.
After stints in Bihar and Andhra Pradesh, Stan and his young family moved to the Nilgiris in South India, where he was involved with mobilizing the Adivasis of the Gudalur valley to fight for their rights. In 1986 he co-founded ACCORD, or the Action for Community Organisation, Rehabilitation and Development. Through his work in ACCORD, he also helped found the Adivasi Munnetra Sangam (AMS), a membership based tribal organization with 4000 families as members.
In all his endeavours, Stan Thekaekara has set out without a larger plan and a belief that the community would find him and shape his purpose. In his life living and working with the Adivasis, he learnt the importance of balancing progress, with cultural preservation.
In 2000, he founded Just Change, an international cooperative linking producers, investors and consumers in an effort to reimagine a community-based trade and marketing system.
Stan has also served as a trustee of Oxfam GB and was Visiting Fellow at the Skoll Centre for Social Entrepreneurship at the Said Business School, Oxford University. Stan is married to Mari Marcel Thaekekara, the journalist, writer and co-founder of ACCORD.
In this episode, Stan is in conversation with Dr. Roopa Devadasan a Public Health expert and school teacher.
This conversation was recorded at the Bangalore International Centre in Bengaluru.
This is part one of a two-part episode.
For more information go to www.rohininilekaniphilanthropies.org
Padmashri Dr Darshan Shankar is the Chairman of the Indian Institute of Ayurveda and Integrative Medicine, Managing Trustee of Foundation for Revitalisation of Local Health Traditions (FRLHT) & Founder Vice Chancellor of the Trans-Disciplinary University (TDU) in Bengaluru.
Born into a family of modern scientists, Dr. Shankar has always stood for innovation in education from a very young age. While working on problems of development and healthcare, his outlook throughout his career has been one for combining eastern traditional knowledge systems with western science.
He began his career in 1973 at the age of 23, at the University of Bombay, where he designed and implemented a postgraduate program based on ‘experiential learning’ that won the Commonwealth Award in 1976.
He went on to work on issues of tribal development in forested tribal talukas of Maharashtra for the next twelve years and from 1985 to 1990, Dr. Shankar directed an all India Network of NGOs called Lok Swasthya Parampara Samvardhan Samiti (LSPSS) which is a network of individuals, groups and organizations working to revive indigenous systems of primary healthcare in India.
In 1993 he moved to Bengaluru, and co-founded the FRLHT, TDU and a 100-bed healthcare research centre called the Institute of Ayurveda and Integrative Medicine.
For his contributions he’s won several national and international awards, such as the Normal Borlaug Award in 1998 for efforts in conservation of wild populations of medicinal plants, Columbia University’s Award in 2003 for revitalisation of traditional health-care systems in India, and was also conferred with the Padma Shri by the Government of India in 2011.
Today Dr. Shankar is an educator, researcher and inspiration for young people. A pioneer in reimagining formal education systems, he has always advocated for building more multicultural institutional frameworks that can foster creativity and individuality for the people that enter it.
In this episode, he is in conversation with A.V. Balasubramanian, a biologist and molecular biophysicist who founded the Centre for Indian Knowledge Systems in Chennai, which works on sustainable agriculture. Having shared interests of science and traditional knowledge systems, Balu and Dr. Shankar’s association began in 1986, at a tribal village near Karjat.
Additional Audio:
Traditional Knowledge Digital Library - A collaborative effort by CSIR and the Ministry of Ayush by Ministry of Ayush
I-AIM Healthcare Hospital! by I-AIM Healthcare
Our customers recommend us to others for many reasons! | Listen why | I-AIM Healthcare Center by I-AIM Healthcare
Maja Daruwala has been an advocate for human rights and social justice for over four decades.
Born in 1945, as the second daughter of Field Marshal Sam Maneckshaw, Maja grew up in the cantonments of India, where her early syncretic experiences impressed upon her the fraternal and plural nature of India, then still a young nation.
Maja Daruwala went on to study law in England and became a Barrister at Lincoln’s Inn. Her interests have always lain in protecting civil liberties, gender equality and systemic reform. For over twenty years, Ms. Daruwala was the director of the Commonwealth Human Rights Initiative, an international NGO that advocates for the protection of human rights across the Commonwealth with a special focus on prison reform.
In more recent years she has been the Convenor and the Chief Editor of the India Justice Reports. These reports are the first of their kind - reports that measures the standards of the Indian Justice System - the police and prison systems, the judiciary and legal aid system in India. The report leverages a comprehensive data set to see how the system has shifted - for better or worse - over time.
Maja Daruwala is in conversation with Gautam John, a fellow lawyer and CEO of the Rohini Nilekani Philanthropies.
In this free wheeling conversation they discuss Maja’s early inspirations, her work in law, and her important contributions to reforming and improving upon India’s mammoth justice system.
Grassroot Nation is a podcast from Rohini Nilekani Philanthropies and has been produced by Vaaka Media. For more information, including additional resources please go to www.rohininilekaniphilanthropies.org.
AUDIO USED:
Black July Protest in Downing Street | tgte protest by Lanka Media News
The CHRI JOURNEY: IN OUR OWN WORDS | CHRI by Commonwealth Human Rights Initiative
Legal awareness material 'Apnar Legal Aid' A Play on the Right to Legal Aid of Indian Prisoners by CHRI
India Justice Report: An Explainer by Tata Trusts
Dr. A.N. Yellappa Reddy is a renowned environmentalist, a former indian forestry services officer and member of the Lok Adalat or Karnataka High Court for environmental project initiatives.
Throughout his career, Dr. Reddy has actively championed the conservation of natural forests, water systems and rehabilitation of endangered flora and fauna.
Born in the small village of Adugodi to an agriculturist father, Dr. Yellappa grew up with a deep and abiding respect and fascination for nature and science. After earning degrees in Agricultural Sciences from the Coimbatore Agriculture College in 1960, and then a postgraduate degree in Soil Sciences, he dedicated decades to the Indian Forestry Services and also served as an Administrator of Forests.
As a key member of the Forest Services research wing he developed innovative eco-restoration technologies and bio-strategies for the restoration of native vegetation in the most degraded areas of the Western Ghats.
Dr. Reddy was instrumental in the formation of several important environmental laws, such as the Karnataka Preservation of Trees Act of 1976, and the Forest (Conservation) Act of 1980. He is well known for his work in reviving the concept of Sacred Gardens or Pavitra Vanas where indigenous knowledge from tribal groups and ayurveda is combined in growing gardens.
Dr. Reddy has always advocated for the idea of an ecological economy, one where economic gain occurs through taking ownership of decentralized ecological services.
Dr. Reddy retired as the Secretary of the Department of Ecology, Environment and Forests for the Government of Karnataka, and now spends his time as an author, educator, and role model for many young environmentalists.
Today he is in conversation with Maya Chandra, a filmmaker and communications specialist who is the founder of Maya Films.
This conversation was recorded at his residence in Bengaluru.
For more information, go to www.rohininilekaniphilanthropies.org
Vijay Mahajan, is the co-founder and founder of some of India’s most well known livelihoods and social enterprise groups: the NGO PRADAN, and the BASIX Social enterprise group that has transformed the livelihoods of over three million lower income households across twenty states in India, as well as in other countries across the world.
Born in 1954, Mahajan graduated from the Indian Institute of Technology Delhi in 1970. He graduated from the Indian Institute of Management Ahmedabad in 1981 and in 1988 he spent time at the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University as a mid-career fellow.
He began his professional career at Phillips, a job that led him to travel extensively across rural India. After his MBA at IIM Ahmedabad, he joined the fabled NGO ASSEFA, and worked with the Bhoodan Movement in Bihar, the voluntary land reform movement where land was given to the landless poor. After working with the landless poor to develop the land they had received, through extensive land, agriculture and water development, Mahajan co-founded PRADAN, or Professional Assistance for Development Action in 1983 and in later years, the first entities that would grow to become the BASIX group in 1996.
At BASIX, Mahajan led his team in offering agricultural and technical development assistance, livelihood financial services that included microfinance, and institutional development support.
Today, Vijay Mahajan is the CEO of the Rajiv Gandhi Foundation and the director of the Rajiv Gandhi Institute of Contemporary Studies. He is in conversation with his former colleague and mentee, Preeti Sahai,an adaptive leadership educator and coach.
This conversation was recorded at Vijay Mahajan’s office in Delhi.
For more information, go to www.rohininilekaniphilanthropies.org
Audio used:
Unleashing change agents by PRADAN CHANNEL
The Pioneering develolpment apporach of Basix by basix b
Devaki Jain is one of India’s best known feminist economists, with a long career working closely with institutions to first recognise and then mainstream women’s issues.
Born in 1933 in the erstwhile princely state of Mysore where her father was a minister, Devaki has degrees from the University of Mysore and the University of Oxford and taught economics at Delhi University.
In this episode of Grassroots Nation, Devaki speaks of how walking with Vinoba Bhave influenced her early work, her lifelong friendships with Gloria Steinehm and Iris Murdoch and her marriage of over forty years to the Gandhian economist Lakshmi Chand Jain, a relationship she greatly credits her long life and career to.
Across her career Devaki has held a range of positions in the United Nations. She founded the Institute of Social Studies Trust in Delhi, was associated with the Centre for Women's Development Studies (CWDS), DAWN, or the Development Alternatives for Women for a New era and the Central Social Welfare Board, or CSWB to name a few.
One of Devaki’s early realizations was the importance of systematically counting the contributions of women because their work was seldom recognised. Throughout her career as a feminist economist, Devaki has consistently tried to influence and talk about the circumstances of Southern women and women in developing country contexts to raise their status and to value their economic contributions. Her work has inspired generations of women’s rights academics, workers and activists.
Devaki has authored a number of books including a perceptive and comprehensive book on Indian women for the first UN conference on women in 1975, The Journey of a Southern Feminist, and her memoir, The Brass Notebook. At 90, she plans to write the definitive book on feminism.
The Padma Bhushan awardee is in conversation with Navsharan Singh, a friend and Delhi-based researcher and human rights activist. This conversation was recorded at Devaki Jain’s office in New Delhi.
For more information, go to www.rohininilekaniphilanthropies.org
Audio Used:
Women in (Recognized) Work | Feminist Economics Part 2 by New Economic Thinking CC BY 3.0
Inspirational and Omnipotent Leader of Bhoodan Movement- Acharya Vinoba Bhabe by Argus News CC BY 3.0
In this episode of Grassroots Nation we hear from Dr Ravi Chopra is the founder Director of the People’s Science Institute in Dehradun, Uttarakhand. Through his career he has helped establish several pioneering organisations in the social and development sector, from livelihoods, disability rights, human rights, water resources management and much more.
Born in 1947, the year India gained her independence, Dr. Chopra was one of the country’s midnight children. After earning a B.Tech. in Metallurgical Engineering and Materials Science from IIT Bombay in 1968 he went on to complete his doctorate in Metallurgical and Materials Engineering at Stevens Institute of Technology, New Jersey.
Dr Ravi Chopra has always been guided by his keen interest in the interactions between technology, society and the environment and his unwavering belief in the role of young people in nation building. He has spent his entire career of over fifty years committed to improving the lives of his fellow Indians and has been associated with many different organisations and projects, from FREA,to helping produce the first citizens' report on The State of India's Environment in 1982 to working with pani panchayats, PRADAN, and finally establishing the People’s Science Institute in Dehradun in 1988. PSI as it is commonly known has pioneered work in water resources management, environmental quality monitoring, disaster mitigation and conservation of rivers, particularly in the Himalayan region.
From the optimism of the 50s to the tumultuous years of the Indo-China War and the Emergency, to more recent upheavals in the nation, Dr. Chopra recounts the story of both his life and that of this nation. Both are deeply intertwined.
Dr Chopra lives in Dehradun with his family. His wife, Jo Chopra Mcgowan, is the founder of the Latika Roy Foundation.
In this episode, Dr Chopra is in conversation with Suchitra Shenoy, a non-fiction writer who has worked extensively in the social sector. Suchitra is a founding member of the Inclusive Markets team at the Monitor Group, that examines market-based solutions to poverty.
This conversation was recorded at the People’s Science Institute in Dehradun.
For more information, go to www.rohininilekaniphilanthropies.org
Welcome to Season 2 of Grassroots Nation, a podcast from Rohini Nilekani Philanthropies, a show in which we dive deep into the life, work, and guiding philosophies of some of our country’s greatest leaders of social change.
Professor Madhav Dhananjaya Gadgil is one of India’s most prolific and well known ecologists. He was born in 1942 into an illustrious family - his father, Dhananjaya Gadgil was an Indian statesman and economist who put together the Gadgil formula. From an early age, Madhav Gadgil was interested in nature, a curiosity that was nurtured by his family, and his neighbour, the renowned sociologist Irawati Karve. He cites his early communications with ornithologist Salim Ali and the writings of JBS Haldane as also being early influences.
After obtaining a PhD in Mathematics at Harvard in 1969, Madhav Gadgil returned to India - much unlike the majority of his peers - to build a career here. His contribution to Indian ecology is vast, establishing key research centres, as is his work on environmental policy - he has sat on numerous committees, was a member of the prime minister’s scientific advisory council and more recently, was the Chairperson of the Western Ghats Ecology Expert Panel.
In this conversation, Professor Gadgil speaks of his extensive research in the Western Ghats, the influence of Marathi poetry on his approach to difficult situations and his prolific writing in English and Marathi.
He was awarded the Padma Shri in 1981 and the Padma Bhushan in 2006. In 2023, he published his autobiography, A Walk Up the Hill in multiple Indian languages.
Professor Gadgil is married to the meteorologist Professor Sulochana Gadgil.
Today, Professor Madhav Gadgil is in conversation with Professor Gurudas Nulkar, the director of the Centre for Sustainable Development at the Gokhale Institute of Politics and Economics in Pune. Professor Nulkar is a well known ecologist and academic.
This interview was recorded at Professor Gadgil’s residence in Pune.
Audio used: Segment from a news bulletin from NDTV Profit/BQ Live 27 Aug 2018 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EjwWqIh5PN8&t=23s
Dr Armida Fernandez is one of India’s foremost neonatologists, treating babies born in some of the most underprivileged and marginalized homes in Mumbai. She has dedicated her life to service in public health. From pioneering the cause of neonatology in the country by focusing on low cost solutions that are available to all, she has championed breastfeeding in India and even started the first human milk bank in the country.
In 1999, Dr Fernandez’ founded SNEHA or the Society for Nutrition, Education & Health Action which has two primary goals: that of improving health-seeking behaviour among underserved communities and improving the quality of public health services. With over 500 people, today SNEHA works across urban centres with women and children and their families with a mission of raising health for all.
From working in maternal and infant health care she then expanded her work to domestic violence against women and children and even palliative care, through the establishment of the Romila Palliative care centre in 2017.
Dr Armida Fernandez is in conversation with Sonalini Mirchandani, a former civil servant and the founder CEO of The Communications Hub, a leading development communications organization. This conversation was recorded in Mumbai.
Additional audio courtesy SNEHA (Society for Nutrition, Education & Health Action). For more information, go to www.rohininilekaniphilanthropies.org
We continue our journey with pioneers in literacy and learning in India, Dr Madhav Chavan and Dr Rukmini Banerji of the Pratham Education Foundation. In this episode we dive deep into the story of Pratham and the ASER survey.
Pratham is one of India’s best known non governmental organizations and was established in 1995 by Madhav Chavan and Farida Lambe. Since then the organisation has striven to improve literacy amongst India’s children with the mission ‘Every Child in School Learning Well’. Pratham conducts the Annual State of Education Report (ASER) Survey, a nationwide household survey on the state of education in rural India by capturing vital information in child enrollment and learning outcomes.
Dr Madhav Chavan grew up on a commune in Maharashtra and went on to study chemistry at the Institute of Science in Mumbai and completed his PhD from Ohio State University. After a brief stint as a professor in America, he returned to India in 1983 and began working with Doordarshan where he produced programmes on literacy. He then worked with UNICEF, and the National Literacy Mission in the informal settlements of Mumbai. All of these experiences in literacy led him to co-found Pratham in 1995.
Dr Rukmini Banerji grew up in Bihar, and was a stellar student and sportswoman. She studied at St Stephens College and later at Oxford University, where she was a Rhodes scholar. She earned her Ph.D at the University of Chicago. Dr Banerji joined Pratham on returning to India in 1996 and has worked extensively in designing and supporting large scale partnerships with various state governments to improve learning outcomes in children. She has been the organization’s CEO since 2015.
Additional Reading:
Banerjee and Duflo’s journey with Pratham by Rukmini Banerji
Marginlands by Arati-Kumar Rao
Archival audio: Ad for ASER courtesy Pratham.
In this episode, we hear from pioneers in literacy and learning in India: Dr Madhav Chavan and Dr Rukmini Banerji of the Pratham Education Foundation.
Pratham is one of India’s best known non governmental organizations and was established in 1995. Since then the organisation has strived to improve literacy amongst India’s children with the mission ‘Every Child in School Learning Well’. Pratham conducts the Annual State of Education Report (ASER) Survey, a nationwide household survey on the state of education in rural India by capturing vital information in child enrolment and learning outcomes.
Dr Madhav Chavan grew up on a commune in Maharashtra and went on to study chemistry at the Institute of Science in Mumbai and completed his PhD from Ohio State University. After a brief stint as a professor in America, he returned to India in 1983 and began working with Doordarshan where he produced programmes on literacy. He then worked with UNICEF, and the National Literacy Mission in the informal settlements of Mumbai. All of these experiences in literacy led him to co-found Pratham in 1995.
Dr Rukmini Banerji grew up in Bihar, and was a stellar student and sportswoman. She studied at St Stephens College and later at Oxford University, where she was a Rhodes scholar. She earned her Ph.D at the University of Chicago. Dr Banerji joined Pratham on returning to India in 1996 and has worked extensively in designing and supporting large scale partnerships with various state governments to improve learning outcomes in children. She has been the organization’s CEO since 2015.
This is the first episode in a two part series. Madhav Chavan and Rukmini Banerji are in conversation with author and philanthropist, Rohini Nilekani. In this episode we will hear about the history of Pratham, the early influences on their lives and educations, and the power of volunteerism, and of primary education as a societal mission that has to be solved at scale.
This conversation was recorded at the Bangalore International Centre in Bangalore.
Additional Reading:
Land, caste, class and gender – Gail Omvedt’s writings were united in their vision of utopia by V Geetha
The Teachers' Strike and After: Emerging Trends and Issues by Amrik Singh (1988)
TV serial Akshardhara becomes tool for social change by M. Rahman
83rd Amendment to the Indian Constitution
UNESCO’s World Declaration on Education for All, Thailand, 1990
Archival Audio:
ADULT EDUCATION PROGRAMME by National Literacy Mission Authority GOI OFFICIAL CC BY 3.0
Aloysius Fernandez prepared for a life of service in the Church - and was even ordained as one in 1953. But when he witnessed the abject suffering caused by the Bangladesh refugee crisis and the blight of poverty on people in Maharashtra in times of drought he decided to leave the Church and pivot to working in development. An economist by training, Al Fernandez spent over forty years at Myrada, helping transform the idea of financial inclusion and microfinance, and pioneered the Self-Help Group model in India. In 1987, NABARD, the national bank for agriculture and rural development provided the first social venture capital to these Self-Help Groups, setting off a veritable Self-Help Group movement in India and laying the foundation for microfinance in the country.
Al Fernandez has held many illustrious positions in his career - as the Deputy Director of Caritas India, as Executive Director of Myrada, as Chairman of the Board of the microfinance institution Sanghamithra Rural Financial Services and as the Chairman of NABFINS. But his contribution to the nation goes beyond these titles.
In this episode of Grassroot Nation, Al Fernandez is in conversation with his colleague Vidya Ramachandran.
For additional information including additional resources and show notes, please go to www.rohininilekaniphilanthropies.org
Additional Reading:
The Myrada Experience – 50 Years of Learning by Aloysius P. Fernandez
Myrada’s Publications
South Asia Partnership Canada
Myrada- Spin off Institutions (MPIs)
Pedagogy of the Oppressed by Paulo Freire
The Myrada Experience of “Building Poor Peoples Institutions” by Aloysius P. Fernandez (2015)
PARTICIPATORY RURAL APPRAISAL AND PARTICIPATORY LEARNING METHODS By Myrada
Why Sanghamitra is Different by A P Fernandez (a chapter in the book Microfinance in India edited by K G Karmakar)
Archival Audio:
WATER SHED | ಜಲಾನಯನ ಪ್ರದೇಶ | MYRADA KAMALAPURA KALABURAGI | BFT TRAINING by Siddhu Power M
MASS NGO GHATAPRABHA BELGAUM by MASS NGO BELGAUM
How did a Doon School and St. Stephens College Alumni end up spending his life in service to rural India? Bunker Roy, born Sanjit Roy in 1945 in Burnpur, Asansol had a privileged, elite upbringing. But a visit to Bengal during the famine in 1965 affected him deeply, and made him question the privilege he enjoyed. This led him to reject a prospective career in the private sector to work in rural India.
Bunker moved to Tilonia village in Rajasthan, and began working on water issues in the drought prone region. In 1972 Bunker set up the Social Work and Research Centre, and their work expanded from water and irrigation to include broader issues such as empowerment and livelihoods. The Social Work and Research Centre, now called the Barefoot College, is built on Gandhian principles of practicality, local indigenous knowledge and self-sufficiency.
The impact of the Barefoot College is difficult to quantify, and goes well beyond the thousands of rural women from across the world who have been trained as solar engineers, to include innovation in water, energy, livelihoods, education and sustainability.
In this conversation with journalist and curator of Ahimsa Conversations, Rajni Bakshi, Bunker talks about the challenges during the early years of Tilonia, the difference between education and literacy and why we should all think about living in rural India for a year.
For additional information including additional resources and show notes, please go to www.rohininilekaniphilanthropies.org
Archival Audio:
Solar Mamas present a wonderful rendition of "We Shall Overcome" & " Hum Honge Kamyab" by Narendra Modi
Solar Mamas of The World | Barefoot College by Barefoot College International
Barefoot College Story- DST( Department of Science and Technology, Government of India) Film by barefoot college Tilonia
Born in pre-independence India in 1939 Dr Kamaljit S. Bawa grew up in Kapurthala in Punjab, witnessing partition and inspired by the speeches of our country’s founding leaders.
It was on a field project to the Northeast of India as a Masters student that opened his eyes to ‘a whole new world’ and set him on his journey in the space of conservation biology. Dr Bawa earned his PhD from Panjab University in 1967 at the age of 28, and moved to the United States to work as a post doctoral researcher in ecology. During his time here he was inspired by a number of scientists and thinkers whose work has been pathbreaking, from Dan Janzen, an evolutionary ecologist, to EO Wilson, who is credited with coining the word biodiversity, to Michael Soule, who is often referred to as the father of conservation biology.
In this episode, Dr. Bawa speaks of his time spent conducting research in Costa Rica to his long career at the University of Massachusetts in Boston, to returning to India to become the Founder President of ATREE, the Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecology and the Environment, that was established in 1996.
In this episode of Grassroots Nation, Dr. Bawa is in conversation with Hari Sridhar, a researcher affiliated to the Konrad Lorenz Institute, Austria and Archives at NCBS.
Additional Reading:
Synchronization of Sexual Reproduction of Trees Within the Dry Season in Central America by Daniel H. Janzen (1966)
Geographical Ecology: Patterns in the Distribution of Species by Robert H. MacArthur (1984)
Silent Spring by Rachel Carson (1962)
ATREE’s Edible Insects for Sustainable Livelihood Program
The Society for Conservation Biology
War and Peace and Conservation Biology by David Ehrenfeld (2000)
Archival Audio used:
Raghu pati Raghav Raja ram playing on instrument Taarsehnayi. Bhagta Singh by INSTRUMENTS LOVERS CC BY 3.0
Uttarakhand, August 28 Lata and Reni (Nikon) by Anushka Meenakshi, Iswar Srikumar CC BY 3.0
Our work with the local Soliga community around BRT by ATREE
This is part 2 of Aruna Roy’s story. Listen to part 1 on our feed.
In part 1, Aruna spoke about her early life and upbringing, her career with the Indian Administrative Service and her move to Tilonia, Rajasthan to work at the Social Work Research Centre where she developed deep friendships with the women of the village, and equally learnt from them.
In this episode, Aruna speaks about her move to Devdungri in 1987, to live by the values of sangharsh, or struggle, in the search for a way to work for the betterment of society through collective action and citizen participation. She recounts how the first few years were spent learning how to live with the hardships of rural life and grappling with earning the trust of the people of Devdungri.
Along with her colleagues Shankar Singh and Nikhil Dey, Aruna founded the Mazdoor Kisan Seva Sanghatana (MKSS) in 1990, where they relied on the mobilisation of collective action in order to secure the rights of the rural poor. She also speaks of the Right to Information movement through the National Campaign for the People’s Right to Information or NCPRI, which resulted in the Right To Information Act in 2005.
Aruna Roy is in conversation with journalist and curator of Ahimsa Conversations, Rajni Bakshi.
Additional Resources:
Dunu Roy is a well known development sector leader and runs the Delhi-based Hazards centre.
Read about the School for Democracy at https://schoolfordemocracy.org.
Archival Audio:
Sushila chants ‘Humara Paisa Humara Hisaab’ by Nikhil Dey
Main Nahin Maanga- MKSS Song on RTI Demand by Mazdoor Kisan Shakti Sangathan, Rajasthan, India
People's Audit to Fight Corruption by Mazdoor Kisan Shakti Sangathan, Rajasthan, India
For additional information including additional resources and show notes, please go to www.rohininilekaniphilanthropies.org
Activist. Feminist. Social leader. Aruna Roy is in a category of her own. She has been at the forefront of several people-led movements such as the Right to Information movement, the Right to Work campaign which led to the establishment of MGNREGA, and the Right to Food movement.
A Gandhian, Aruna believes that change comes from within, and all her life choices have been motivated by her values and her desire to contribute towards the realisation of the founding ideals of our nation. She brings to her work a deep sense of humility and respect for her fellow citizens.
In the first of this two-part episode, Aruna speaks of her early years as an IAS officer, and then at the Barefoot College in Tilonia, Rajasthan, how Roop Kanwar and Bhanwari Devi informed her feminist journey and work, and her own learning curve when it came to participatory decision-making.
Aruna Roy is the co-founder of the Mazdoor Kisan Shakti Sanghatan was awarded the Ramon Magsaysay Award for Community Leadership in 2000 for empowering Indian villagers to claim what is rightfully theirs by upholding and exercising the people's right to information.
Aruna Roy is in conversation with her long-time friend and associate, journalist and curator of Ahimsa Conversations, Rajni Bakshi.
For additional information including additional resources and show notes, please go to www.rohininilekaniphilanthropies.org
Archival Audio:
Politics of Change: Mahila, the movie by Annemie Maes CC BY 3.0
पति की चिता पर सती होने को बैठ गई पत्नी, आनन-फानन में पहुंची पुलिस by Etv bharat up video CC BY 3.0
Music:
Fire_Burning_03 by Foleyhaven CC BY 3.0
In our second episode, we meet Dr Hanumappa Sudarshan, a tribal rights activist who dedicated his life to working on rural healthcare and livelihoods. Dr Hanumappa Sudarshan is the founder of the Vivekananda Girijana Kalyana Kendra and the Karuna Trust.
Dr Hanumappa Sudarshan was born in 1950, and it was being a helpless witness to his father’s death at a young age that made him realize that while everyone should have easy access to good healthcare, the most vulnerable and marginalized communities in our country do not. This led him to dedicate his life to seva for the first mile.
In 1973 he graduated as a medical doctor from Bangalore Medical College, and instead of following many of his peers into lucrative urban private practice, he began what would become a long career in social work, first with the Ramakrishna Mission. In 1979 he moved to the Biligiri Rangana hills of Karnataka that are home to the Soliga tribe, where he has since worked for the upliftment of these marginalized tribal communities.
Dr Sudarshan shares with us his personal philosophy, one that is rooted in service and science, with a deep sense of spirituality and heightened self awareness. His work is based on a practice that brings with it a boundless love for humanity and oneness - with people, with nature and with the universe.
Dr Hanumappa Sudarshan is in conversation with his friend, and fellow leader in social entrepreneurship Sunita Nadhamuni, Chairperson of Arghyam foundation.
To know more about Karuna Trust visit https://www.karunatrust.org/. Grassroot Nation is a podcast from Rohini Nilekani Philanthropies and has been produced by Vaaka Media. For more information, including additional resources please go to www.rohininilekaniphilanthropies.org.
Additional Resources:
‘India's Tuberculosis Program Provides Hope to Millions’ by the World Bank
Accredited Social Health Activist (ASHA) Program
Ayushman Bharat - Health and Wellness Centre
Declaration of Alma Ata 1978 by World Health Organisation
Audio:
Gorukana - a film on tribal development by Karuna Trust
World Leprosy Day 2021 by Health and Family CC BY 3.0
Famous Quotes of Swami Vivekananda by Swami Vivekananda's quotes
2006 Alma Ata recollections by Jack Bryant and Carl Taylor by Henry Taylor CC BY 3.0
Karnataka's indigenous tribes, like, the Soligas need solid support systems, not mere slogans
R Gandhi CC by 3.0
In this first episode of Grassroots Nation we meet Dr Ashok Khosla, an environmental visionary, a pioneer of sustainable development and the founder and Chairman of Development Alternatives.
Dr. Khosla began thinking about the environment and our collective future well before climate change became something we hear, discuss and worry about on a daily basis.
An experimental physicist by training, his early memories were marked by partition, and as a young man Dr. Khosla went on to study science, first at Cambridge University and then at Harvard University. At Harvard, Dr. Khosla worked with Roger Revelle, one of the pioneers who studied global warming and helped design and teach the first undergraduate course on the environment.
He’s built global institutions that have been at the forefront of environmental work, he’s shaped and designed India’s early environmental frameworks that set the country on course for sustainable development.
A man with a deep love for the job, a wry sense of humor and an absolute technophile and self-confessed gadget geek, Dr Ashok Khosla is in conversation with his longtime colleague and friend, the CEO of Development Alternatives, Shrashtant Patara.
To know more about Development Alternatives visit https://www.devalt.org/. Shrashtant Patara is the CEO of Development Alternatives and Executive VP, Development Alternatives Group. An architect by training, Patara has been with the Development Alternatives Group since 1988. You can read more about his work here.
Grassroot Nation is a podcast from Rohini Nilekani Philanthropies and has been produced by Vaaka Media. For more information, including additional resources please go to www.rohininilekaniphilanthropies.org.
Audio used: Integral India: Four Days in 1947 by Indian Diplomacy (CC BY 3.0)1972 United Nations Conference on the Human Environment (Part 1) by MDJarv / 1992 Rio Earth Summit Adverts by ricjl (CC BY 3.0) / IBM Computer commercial 1986 by jlehmann
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