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Targeting India

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Neighbours: Night's End
The Nation: Out of Focus
Media: Swadeshi Times
The Nation: Gandhi Vs Gandhi
The Nation: Politics Goes POTO
Diplomacy: Mission Kabul
Heritage: History on Sale
Media: Swadeshi Times
Cinema: Look Who's Preening
Offtrack: Live and Let Live
Care Today: New Vocations

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Fifth Column: Tavleen Singh
Politically Correct: P. Chidambaram
Kautilya: Jaiiram Ramesh

NEWSNOTES


Caplooks
Confessional
Tremors

 
METRO TODAY
Metroscape
Looking Glass
 

Saeed Jaffrey was accorded the honour of inclusion in Michael Aspel's legendary red book, This Is Your Life.

NRI DIARY

London Diary
India Calling
Society: Runaway Brides
Development: Voice Over
Looking Glass
Diaspora: Beyond Books
The world: Growing Divide
American Roundup
Weekly Round Up
The Arts: A Global Canvas
Profile: Priming Up

 
DESPATCHES

Government officials find novel ways to enforce the ban on sex-determination tests. But the vigil has to be stricter, says INDIA TODAY principal Correspondent Anna M.M. Vetticad.
Silent Crusade
 
INDIA TODAY CONCLAVE

Unfortunately, due to the conflict in Afghanistan and turmoil in the region, we have been compelled to postpone the India Today Conclave.
 
CARE TODAY
 
SPECIALS
 
INDIA TODAY HINDI
 
 
 CURRENT ISSUE DEC 3, 2001  

UK SPECIAL: DEVELOPMENT

Voice Over

No newcomer to basic rights issue, Mallika Dutt tries to empower women through mass media

  NRI DIARY
OTHER NRI DIARY STORIES

London Diary
India Calling
Society: Runaway Brides
Development: Voice Over
Looking Glass
Diaspora: Beyond Books
The world: Growing Divide
American Roundup
Weekly Round Up
The Arts: A Global Canvas
Profile: Priming Up

When Shameem Pathan fled a life of domestic abuse in Ahmedabad to make her way in the world behind the steering wheel of a TATA truck, little did she know that her life story would one day inspire millions of Indian women to stand up for their basic human rights. Her story was beamed into millions of Indian homes this year in a song Mann ke Manjeere produced by Mallika Dutt. The video won the Screen Awards in Mumbai and was even nominated for an MTV Music Award, much to the surprise of top music producers who believed that only love songs could sell.

"I think the media tends to underplay the intelligence of the public," says Dutt, who is also president of Breakthrough, a non-profit media group. In the face of extraordinary opposition and a limited budget, Dutt managed to produce three music videos and an album that focused on the dreams and aspirations of women. It stayed on the top 10 charts for three months .

By choosing popular mass media to spread empowerment messages to women and under-represented groups, Breakthrough plans to change the way we look at the world around us. "The message put out by the Indian mainstream media is that women are either sexual or physical objects or that they are helpless victims of dowry or violence," says Dutt in an interview in her apartment in Uptown Manhattan, "But it's important for people to know that women too are entitled to basic human rights."

Dutt is no newcomer to fundamental rights issues and has spent almost 20 years sparking changes in the world around her. As a programme officer of the Ford Foundation she helped fund non-profits groups all over the nation and in her final year of law school she started the internationally renowned group sakhi for South Asian Women which has worked on a range
of issues domestically and abroad. In the early days, she was often worried about her safety. "We used to get hate mail when we went out to some of these communities, and people always used to call us names and scream at us." But now her version of in-your-face-activism has a wide range of supporters from outspoken feminists to film producers. Even Amitabh Bachchan wrote a letter of support. Now outspoken opposition has dwindled to almost zero. Breakthrough's real challenge is to change the unspoken values of society.

Although Breakthrough's message travels across international boundaries, Dutt realises that "it is very important for us to work in the medium of cultural traditions". The road to these goals is long, but through mass media she believes it is possible. "Breakthrough is about changing macro-level public consciousness, but at the end of the day it is about asking every individual 'What are you doing to change the problems in society?'"And Mann ke Manjeere is a giant step in that direction-juxtaposing real life examples against those projected in films. For the first few weeks after the video was aired, their website (www.letsbreakthrough.org) got over 50,000 hits a day.

Future plans for Breakthrough include fight against caste discrimination in India, creating a curriculum for schools and organising independent workshops that focus on social change.

-Scott Carney

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