Community Correspondents

Gayatri Ambedkar

Gayatri is a social worker since 2001 and a Community Correspondent. The veteran activist has worked consistently to break down historically ingrained and accepted caste and gender-based discrimination whose effects she personally experienced. Girls in her village were prohibited from continuing their education and were married at an early age. Gayatri, however, was determined to study. The higher secondary school was 15 kilometers away, making it accessible only by cycles. But girls were not allowed to use cycles, which forced Gayatri to copy a student’s notes to continue learning. When she noticed that her method wasn’t effective enough, she chose to take a risk-- learn how to cycle and get to school. Her transgression was initially met with more pronounced verbal abuse by a few people and frequent taunts from community members. But with immense courage and her parents’ support, she completed not just class 12 but three years of a BA programme in Politics and Home Science. “After me, women from my village are being educated,” she says. At an early age, Gayatri began noticing how members of the same village and area treated one another differently. There were rules to be followed and enforced, “when visiting people’s homes, there was a certain way we were required to behave with ‘upper’ caste members and a certain way with members who were from castes ‘lower’ than ours,” she shares. Gayatri says she was curious, albeit cautious and scared, and chose to join the All India Dalit Mahila Adhikar Manch (All India Dalit Women’s Rights Movement) as a secretary. Soon enough, she became a Community Correspondent with Video Volunteers because she felt that her affiliation with other organisations was not bearing fruit in the ways that she would have liked. “Previously, I only had only printouts and no proof to ground an issue. However, video is a very factual medium which we can use to portray the problems of our own communities and of communities around us,” she shares.   Gayatri has particularly worked on women’s and Dalit rights, and on access to education in her activism with VV and beyond. In 2013, Gayatri made a video about students studying in fields and open spaces in the absence of a safely accessible school. She organised the community and persuaded higher authorities to set up a school. A year later, a school was built with a budget of 6.5 lakhs with three teachers and 80 students. The video, which Gayatri cites as her most important work, will affect generations of Khullaspur residents-- giving them safe access to education. Her leadership is bound to have a lasting impact too. Gayatri’s 2016 video on MNREGA workers demanding job cards was awarded the “Most Viewed YouTube Video” at the Video Volunteers National Meet 2017 with 45.5 lakh views. Education, however, continues to remain a cause she is particularly invested in. In partnership with a school, Gayatri also leads a monthly training session with school girls from classes 9 to 12. Here, she not only seeks to develop some vocational skills but also an understanding of gender dynamics. After these sessions, the students and Gayatri then dance and enjoy together, in the most heartening of gestures. Gayatri is also a part of Video Volunteers' campaign #KhelBadal to dismantle patriarchy. The campaign is taking on patriarchy through stories of women and men who face, negotiate and challenge patriarchy in everyday life — at home, at work, at school, in cultural and public spaces. Under the campaign, she makes films that capture the nuances of routine, normalised gender discrimination, stories of change and runs Gender Discussion Clubs where lively, introspective conversations around gender equality and patriarchy happen.

Videos from Gayatri

Impact Story

Tragic death of two children motivates a community to build a new school

 
/ December 13, 2016

The tragic death of two girls was the catalyst for transformation in a village in Uttar Pradesh. Watch how community joined forces with VV to demand a school in their village, under RTE Act, 2005.   When the brand new government school was inaugurated in a village of Uttar Pradesh, the...

Woman thrashed and abandoned for not paying dowry

 
/ October 13, 2015

The Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act was passed in 2005 to ensure the safety of women against domestic violence. However, a decade later, women like Mamta, from Uttar Pradesh, remain without justice. Hailing from Baritola village of Ambedkar Nagar in UP, Mamta has been a victim of domestic...

Is this road or a drain? We’re all a bit confused….

 
/ March 31, 2015

31st March 2015 | Khullashpur village, Ambedkar Nagar District, Uttar Pradesh | Gayatri Residents of this village wade through slush and sewage to travel anywhere. There are no provisions for a drainage system here which means all the dirty water from various pipelines converges on the main road. Upon talking...

Stranded: Widows in UP

 
/ November 17, 2014

The widows of Dhamaruwa village of Uttar Pradesh are a truly disenfranchised community. The government’s failing to provide the widow-pension has weighed most heavily upon these women, reports Community Correspondent Gayatri Devi. “My husband passed away two years ago, but I haven’t received any widow-pension,” says Shilawanti Devi. Adding further,...

Securing concrete houses for dalits of Hullaspur

 
/ September 16, 2014

“For 60 years I have been living here and there is no sign of a house or a colony,” says Sita Devi, a resident of a Dalit suburb in Hullaspur village of Uttar Pradesh. The Housing and Development Board of India’s most populous state has failed 30 families, including that...