Barefoot Technicians and Grassroots CEOs How India’s Self-Employed Women’s Association (SEWA) is unleashing technology to spark innovation and enterprise among the rural poor “I believe the World Bank’s new goal to end extreme poverty by 2030 can be achieved by all of us working together. And I know that to reach the goal, we at the Bank will have to think very differently. We will also have to work differently, collaborating closely with several partners, including committed grassroots organizations like SEWA. I have visited SEWA on three occasions (twice to Gujarat and once to Meghlaya), and each visit has had a deep impact on me. What amazes me is the levels of empowerment and confidence of economically poor women members of SEWA. Their conviction, their zeal and determination to fight poverty is truly inspiring. For example, a SEWA member, who lives in a makeshift hut of flour sacks for nine months in the desolate salt pans in Gujarat told me that her 4½ year old son wants to be a doctor. It is certainly a fight against long odds. But, it is confidence and empowerment that I have seen in these women and their families that gives me the conviction that we can, together, end extreme poverty in India by 2030.” – Onno Ruhl, Country Director, India, World Bank Barefoot Technicians and Grassroots CEOs How India’s Self-Employed Women’s Association (SEWA) is unleashing technology to spark innovation and enterprise among the rural poor Notes on Language The book limits its use of Hindi and Gujarati terms to those occasions where they clarify or enliven the narrative. For those seeking greater familiarity with the languages, many worthier resources are available. However, the text may alternately refer to the Community Learning Business Resource Centers (CLBRCs) in their commonly used Hindi form: Gyan Vigyan Kendra or simply, GVK. The reader should be alert to this. In addition, the Gujarati language attaches suffixes to first names to denote affection and respect or, for SEWA women, solidarity. For females, the suffix is ben, or “sister”; for males, the suffix is bhai, or “brother.” Hence, Ela Bhatt may be called “Elaben,” or a man may be called “Vinayakbhai.” These designations appear frequently throughout the text. Finally, the terms “ni” and “no” indicate the possessive case; thus, SEWA Manager ni School (SEWA Managers’ School) and Vali no Radio (Vali’s Radio). ©2014 International Bank for Reconstruction and Development The World Bank | 1818 H Street NW | Washington, DC 20433 Telephone 202-473-1000 | Internet www.worldbank.org This work was written by an outside consultant under the supervision of World Bank staff. The findings, interpretations, and conclusions expressed in this work do not necessarily reflect the views of The World Bank, its Board of Executive Directors, or the governments they represent. The World Bank does not guarantee the accuracy of the data included in this work. The boundaries, colors, denominations, and other information shown on any map in this work do not imply any judgment on the part of The World Bank concerning the legal status of any territory or the endorsement or acceptance of such boundaries. Rights and Permissions The material in this book is subject to copyright. Because the World Bank encourages dissemination of its knowledge, this work may be reproduced, in whole or in part, for noncommercial purposes as long as full attribution to this work is given. Any queries on rights and licenses, including subsidiary rights, should be addressed to the Office of the Publisher, The World Bank, 1818 H Street NW, Washington, DC 20433, USA; fax: 202-522-2422; Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh e-mail: pubrights@worldbank.org. Front Cover Photo Credit: SEWA Archives iii Table of Contents CHAPTER 1 1 Understanding SEWA — An Organization, a Movement, and a Spirit CHAPTER 2 vii Abbreviations 11 Linking Knowledge to Know-How — FOREWORD Understanding the CLBRCs ix Self-reliance: The Way to End Poverty CHAPTER 3 25 Lifeblood of the CLBRCs — PREFACE Meeting the Managers and xv Women Leading the Way Master Trainers CHAPTER 4 INTRODUCTION xix Tradition Races 35 Technology at the Core — Towards Technology Systems that Connect Members, Create Opportunities, and Keep Cash Flowing CHAPTER 5 45 Space Age Technology for Ground-Level Planning — The Sukhi Mahila SEWA Mandal GIS Initiative CHAPTER 6 CHAPTER 11 53 Tuning in to Grassroots 95 Life at the Center — Needs — SEWA’s Community A CLBRC Journal Radio Initiative CHAPTER 12 CHAPTER 7 107 Future Traditions — 61 Help for Farmers — Next Generations of Hedging Crop Prices SEWA and the CLBRCs and Mother Nature APPENDIX 1 CHAPTER 8 115 SEWA Timeline 67 RUDI — A “Pure and Beautiful” Rural APPENDIX 2 Distribution Network 119 SEWA Sister Organizations CHAPTER 9 122 Acknowledgments 79 “Will the Rest of Me Go to God if My Feet Can’t?” — The Salt Workers of the 122 About the Author Little Rann of Kutch CHAPTER 10 89 The Fresh Beauty of Age-Old Tradition — The SEWA Hansiba Museum v vi Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh Abbreviations AAU Anand Agricultural University IRMA Institute of Rural Management, Anand AIC Agriculture Insurance Company of India Ltd. ISRO Indian Space Research Organization AIDMI All India Disaster Mitigation Institute IT information technology CLBRC Community Learning Business Resource Center JSDF Japan Social Development Fund CLC Community Learning Center KCA Kutch Craft Association CSO civil society organization MGNREGA Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act CSR corporate social responsibility MIS management information system DIC District Industries Centre MMS Membership Management System DWCRA Development of Women and Children in Rural Areas NCDEX National Commodities Trading Exchange FAO Food and Agriculture Organization NGO nongovernmental organization FM Frequency Modulation NSSO National Sample Survey Organization GCP Ground Control Point RUDI Rural Distribution Network GIC General Insurance Company Ltd. SEWA Self-Employed Women’s Association GIS geographic information system SMS SEWA Managers’ School or SEWA Manager ni School GPS Global Positioning System STFC SEWA Trade Facilitation Center GVK Gyan Vigyan Kendra TLA Textile Labour Association ICT information and communication technology TTL task team leader IFFCO Indian Farmers Fertiliser Cooperative Limited UN United Nations IIM Indian Institute of Management URL uniform resource locator vii Photo Credit: SEWA Archives FOREWORD SELF-RELIANCE: THE WAY TO END POVERTY This is a ‘Foreword’ to the book forward-looking to end poverty and sharing prosperity in the world. In this world, no one is born poor; society makes one poor. Poverty is not God-given, it is most definitely man-made. Indeed, what is poverty is the hidden face – by Ela R. Bhatt, Founder, SEWA of violence with social consent. The multi-faceted nature of poverty raises many questions. What kinds of structures or systems cause or perpetuate poverty? How can they be dismantled or transformed? What are the factors that render the poor vulnerable and open to exploitation? And how can the poor empower themselves so they can confront injustice? These are not academic questions, but questions that the poor confront in their daily lives. In academia, as elsewhere, we have come to believe that once we identify the cause of a problem, a solution is bound to follow. If only that were always true! The gap between those who identify and analyze problems, and those who implement solutions is wide. The thinkers and the doers have different motivations and different understandings of both the problems and the solutions. ix But what is vitally important is for the people with the problems The Self-Employed Women’s Association, is a trade union of poor, themselves to come up with their solutions. This does not mean that self-employed women, in India. We have come together to form a others should not reach out to the poor. union to stop economic exploitation; we have formed our own cooperative bank to build assets, to tap resources, and to improve Even in dealing with answers to poverty, perceptions genuinely differ. the material quality of life. We have built trade cooperatives of women Both academics as well as activists are in debate about who are the farmers and artisans, assisted by our community resource centres, poor and how to reach them. One approach has been to view poverty and a trade facilitation network connecting local and global markets. solely as an income problem. By raising incomes and creating income We have built a social security network for our maternity needs, health generating opportunities, the poor can be empowered. The other and life insurance. We come together not in opposition to anyone, approach is to see it as a vulnerability problem. The vulnerability but in support of each other. Our goal is the well-being of the poor approach leads to social programmes such as child care, health care, woman, her family, her work, her community and the world we all live in. and education. Both approaches are needed, and both need to work We are in pursuit of self-reliance and freedom, or as Mahatma Gandhi in an integrated way. Since poverty is connected to both economic called it, swaraj. But Gandhi also said, Swaraj, or Freedom cannot be and social structures of society, we need a deeper understanding given; it is generated within one’s self. of where the poor are placed within those structures. And when we work with the poor, we come up with multiple different combinations A little ‘irregular’ thinking has allowed us to find an approach that of the two approaches. looks at what the poor are rich in: their large numbers. My SEWA sisters invariably remind me — We are poor, but we are so many! All that is said about the poor, is even more true for poor women: Their awareness of a collective strength has allowed us to focus among the poor there are more women than men, and their exploitation on building with hitherto unrecognized strengths, untapped skills, is more acute and of longer duration. Women are the most frequent and with non-monetary assets. Our goal is to use work; meaningful, and direct recipients of hidden violence in society and in the economy. decent work, to build lives, assets, and community. Yet in my experience, poor women are also the most potent and peaceful force to address poverty. More importantly, women are more This book has recorded the technological journey of SEWA women likely to face violence, not with matching violence, but with actions developing their technical and managerial skills and linking their that are non-violent, inclusive and mutually beneficial. So, over the livelihoods to the mainstream markets, with confidence. The World past 40 years, while working with the women of SEWA, I have developed Bank, the Japan Social Development Fund (JSDF) and SEWA made a great faith in the leadership of poor women in building a non-violent it possible to work at the grassroots as one Team, as equals. However, and prosperous society. the caution is that technology should be at the service of the women and not the women at the service of technology. So let me tell you about our experience at SEWA. x In the formal sector, employment is created through the creation of Our economic structures are closely connected with social structures. jobs by firms, and this employment is generally regular, full time, Barriers are closely connected with gender, caste and class. protected employment, with a clear employer-employee relationship. Furthermore, social needs such as health, child care, education However, in the informal sector there are no ‘jobs.’ Employment is a and housing are all linked to economic capabilities, but also to the combination of self-employment, or own-account work, some wage provision of social security by the state. Thus, market and state employment, some casual work, or part-time work with a variety of structures have the ability to determine both poverty as well as employment relations. At any one time, a poor person could be working the well-being of the people. at a number of different employments. A small or marginal farmer The interrelated nature of these structures emerges quite forcefully also works as a weaver or basket maker, an agricultural laborer would in our daily work. In dry rural areas for example, the provision of also have cattle and be a milk producer, or a construction worker drinking water is closely linked to the capability of women to enter would return home and roll bidis, or cigarettes with her family at night. the labour markets, so that when we try to intervene to link the Sometimes the work is seasonal. A salt farmer may be an agricultural embroiderers with markets, we find that we also have to take up the worker during the monsoon season, or a rag picker may make kites drinking water issue with the Gujarat Water Board and devise better during the kite festival. Multiple forms of work are the norm among drinking water schemes for the women. Similarly, while organizing the working poor, and this risk distribution is key to their survival. women workers for better wages in tobacco processing plants, Though managing many types of work has its own challenges, it reduces we were faced with the need for child care for their children who risk, and provides opportunity to rearrange work and life as it unfolds. otherwise would be spending their days playing in tobacco heaps, Creating employment is not a matter of creating jobs in the formal breathing tobacco dust, while their mothers worked. The SEWA sector, but of strengthening the workers and producers who are already Cooperative Bank is one of the pioneers of microcredit. Very early working in the informal sector to overcome structural constraints and on, we discovered that without helping the small entrepreneurs to enter markets to maximize their potential. Needless to say that those deal with changing markets and policies, we could not expect the constraints and markets are created by society and such constraints loans to work towards poverty reduction. and markets let the poor remain poor. Since the economic and social structures are so interrelated, the As a labour union, our underlying approach is to see the poor as workers solutions too have to be integrated. This means that there is no one and producers, rather than just as income-deprived or vulnerable formula for poverty reduction; rather, it has to be an approach people. The first structural issue is their place in the economy. Where which addresses the various economic and social factors which do they fit into the economy? What is their contribution to the economy cause and perpetuate poverty. Hence SEWA’s approach has and what do they receive from the economy? What are the economic been integrated, enfolding multiple approaches, where various barriers they face? inputs are needed not one after the other, but simultaneously. xi xii Photo Credit: SEWA Archives Our strategy of poverty reduction is a joint action of struggle and Based on my experience with the working poor in India, I would like development. We strongly believe that the identification of barriers and to see an economy so well integrated with society, that a human hidden structural biases must come from the poor women themselves. being’s six primary needs are met with resources from 100 miles around. Essentially this process itself is one of self-empowerment. I call it, ‘building 100 mile communities.’ If food, shelter, clothing, primary education, primary healthcare and primary banking are locally produced At SEWA, we come together as workers and producers. We believe and consumed, we will have the growth of a new holistic economy that that productive work is the thread that first weaves the family and the world will sit up and take notice. eventually a society together. When you have work, you have an incentive to maintain a stable society. You not only think of the future, When we put the human being at the centre, we begin to get a more but you can plan for the future. You can build assets that reduce your holistic and integrated view of development. We begin to co-relate vulnerability. You can invest in the next generation. Life is no longer our activities with its impact on our own self, on the society we live in, just about survival, but about investing in a better future. Work builds and on the universe we live in. And in this way, we restore balance and peace, because work gives people roots, it builds communities and it harmony in the world. gives meaning and dignity to one’s life. My worldview I would sum up in three words: Women, Work, and Peace. In my experience, women are the key to building a community. Focus on women, and she will grow roots for her family, and work to establish a stable community. In a woman, we get a worker, a provider, a caretaker, an educator, and a networker. She is a forger of bonds — she is a creator and a preserver. I consider women’s participation and representation an integral part of the development process. Women bring constructive, creative and sustainable solutions to the world. xiii Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh PREFACE Women Leading the Way The World Bank Group has two main goals. The first is to end extreme poverty by 2030, and the second is to boost shared prosperity. This means guaranteeing that everyone reaps the benefits of economic growth, especially the bottom 40 percent of any society. This JSDF–SEWA project offers a bright example And if we don’t include that bottom part of the pyramid, if we don’t include women and of the concept of trans- young people in that economic growth, we are not building stability into these societies. formational engagement — that is, it sets in motion This book tells how a long-respected Indian women’s empowerment organization (the the homegrown engines of innovation and income, Self-Employed Women’s Association of India and a pioneering social development fund unleashing a technological (the Japan Social Development Fund (JSDF)) partnered together to deliver an original initiative spark and entrepreneurial that jointly teaches business principles and technological savvy to poor, sometimes illiterate fire that reaches and transforms even society’s women. The initiative is the Community Learning Business Resource Center (CLBRC), launched most marginalized. through the JSDF–SEWA Economic Empowerment Project for Women. – by Joachim von Amsberg xv SEWA’s rich history and reputation began in India’s trade union struggles But this book doesn’t just hail innovation; it celebrates the lives of of the early 1970s. SEWA carved a new path in social development the women transformed by the initiatives. Thus, we hear their voices when it set to organizing India’s most marginalized constituency — and learn their remarkable stories of change and empowerment. poor, self-employed tradeswomen and female agricultural workers The women work with passion towards sustainable income generation, without regular incomes. yet collectively never lose sight of essential community needs for health, education, safe drinking water, electricity, and sanitation. The CLBRCs are unique, holistic, community-based enterprises that use information and communication technology (ICT) to design and The World Bank Group and the JSDF hope to see more projects like implement pioneering services for innovation and empowerment — the Economic Empowerment Project for Women and more results especially for illiterate people and youth. The CLBRCs apply business like the CLBRCs. This JSDF-SEWA project offers a wonderful example principles and technological applications to operate as financially of the concept of transformational engagement — that is, it sets in independent entities. motion the home-grown engines of innovation and income generation, Technology drives the CLBRCs’ rush towards innovation, and SEWA unleashing entrepreneurship which reaches and transforms society’s members have embraced it. Poor, uneducated women, who previously most marginalized. In this way, the activities of SEWA help contribute had never seen a cellphone, now conduct elaborate business transac- to poverty reduction. tions — such as placing sales orders and digital money transfers or making insurance and loan installment payments — through sophisticated applications on their personal phones. This book describes other examples of the use of technology — such as community radio stations, geographic information systems (GIS) to record land use data, membership management and job portal systems, and much more — that the CLBRCs have inspired and that SEWA women have put into practice. The chapters also offer a glimpse into the day-to-day operations of these community-run enterprises. xvi Photo Credit: Micheal Riley xvii Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh INTRODUCTION Tradition Races Towards Technology “What can we do to This book tells a story. A story of shared struggle, create shared prosperity? dynamic partnership, and daring technological The answer is not to try to slow down technology. innovation working together along society’s poorest Instead of racing against the margins. It tells how an esteemed women’s movement machine, we need to learn partnered with an inventive development fund to to race with the machine.” turn poor, illiterate and semi-illiterate women into – Erik Brynjolfsson, Director, MIT Center for Digital Business grassroots CEOs and accomplished users of technology to create livelihoods and increase incomes. The narrative begins with the Self-Employed Women’s Association (SEWA) — a vast and respected organization born in the Indian labor movement and, for 40 years, driven by the drama of history and nurtured by the individual transformations of millions of dedicated women. For decades, SEWA has fought to bring full employment and self-reliance to its self-employed women members. Its major instruments in this struggle have been vocational training and technological innovation. xix Enter then the Japan Social Development Fund (JSDF). The JSDF’s BOX 1 mission is to finance projects that take original approaches to development challenges (see box 1). The JSDF first partnered with The Japan Social Development SEWA during 2005–09 on a capacity building project that conceived Fund: Unlocking Potential in and inaugurated the SEWA Manager ni School (SMS). This Institute Poor Countries aimed to prepare a cadre of female grassroots managers, trainers, and entrepreneurs who would guide the way to self-reliance and The Japan Social Development Fund (JSDF) was established in sustainable income for India’s poor women. June 2000 during the Asian financial crisis by the Government of Japan, and administered through the World Bank, to furnish However, it is the outcome of the second JSDF–SEWA project alliance direct aid to the poorest and most vulnerable groups in World that occupies the bulk of this book. The project is the Economic Bank member countries. The JSDF helps local communities and Empowerment Project for Women, launched in 2011, and its outcome civil society organizations (CSOs), including nongovernmental is the homegrown engine of learning and innovation known as the organizations (NGOs), become involved in the development 1 Community Learning Business Resource Center (CLBRC). process. The Japan Ministry of Finance funds the program. The JSDF is unique as its grants are not distributed by central government, but directly by CSOs to the local communities. JSDF grants are dispersed on the basis of a proposal submitted by the intended recipients through a World Bank task team leader (TTL). The grants do the following: • Respond directly to the poorest and most vulnerable groups • Test innovative methods and approaches at the project, country, or regional level • Launch pilot initiatives that can be scaled up through World Bank-financed operations or government activities Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh • Build ownership, capacity, empowerment, and participation of local communities, NGOs, and other civil society groups. xx With this new element, SEWA began redefining the boundaries of Born in trade union struggles, sensitized original thinking and innovative solutions. SEWA, a revered national by Gandhian principles, and steeled by association sensitized by Gandhian principles and steeled by years of organizing India’s self-employed women, committed itself, through 40 years of organizing India’s self-employed its CLBRCs, to embrace twenty-first century technologies and business women, SEWA — through its CLBRCs — is principles. In doing so, the organization revitalized its mission to embracing twenty-first century technologies empower marginalized women, advance the lives and livelihoods of its members, and unite and uplift communities. and business learning principles. Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh xxi FORMED IN STRUGGLE The following year, SEWA, with support from the European Union, Swiss Both SEWA and the CLBRCs found their beginnings in the chaos of Red Cross, Canadian International Development Agency and others, human and natural disasters. In the early 1980s, SEWA broke with its launched 50 Community Learning Centers (CLCs) to provide local parent trade union, the Textile Labour Association (TLA), after a period services and trainings that would help women restore their lives, includ- of tension that surfaced after caste riots. SEWA’s strong support for ing training for livelihoods and disaster resistance. SEWA also saw the the dalits, (the oppressed) conflicted with TLA’s hands-off approach. centers as a way of compiling membership data to maintain cohesion in Facing irreconcilable differences, SEWA set its own course. the face of catastrophe. This initiative became the starting point for what would later be known as the SEWA Membership Management System. Finally, the CLCs would serve as hubs for preserving and promoting community heritages, a vital component of SEWA’s mission and of community well-being. Photo Credit: Vinayak Ghatate Forced migration following drought of 2001 The idea for the CLBRCs first took form after another kind of turmoil. Photo Credit: Vinayak Ghatate This time it was the terrible earthquake of 2001 in Gujarat state that forced certain realities to light. When SEWA leaders reached out after the quake to help affected members and young people, the victims responded with one simple question: “Have you brought us work?” More than anything, they needed to produce, gain incomes, and Earthquake affected women participate in SEWA’s rehabilitation program rebuild their lives, not sit and hope for relief. But to organize and train poor women — especially in the numbers SEWA understood that the devastation had not only brought on a needed to beat back the effects of the earthquake’s devastation — crisis of livelihood, but had fragmented the cultural and social core of SEWA needed more and better trainers and leaders to make an impact. many of the communities. Along with helping members find work, Thus, in 2005 SEWA, with JSDF support, launched a capacity building SEWA wanted to ensure that traditions and cultural bonds would project that, chief among things, yielded the SEWA Manager ni School survive and remain strong. (SMS) in Ahmedabad. xxii “BAREFOOT” BANDS OF even better tools for self-reliance, specifically in TRAINERS AND MANAGERS technological and business training. For this, The SMS did indeed make an impact. It prepared SEWA looked to establish more facilities like the thousands of grassroots women managers, technical CLCs. However, the new centers would have to and vocational trainers, and financial leaders who be expanded and upgraded in technology and then returned to their local areas to take charge practical business knowledge to produce skilled of massive organizing and training campaigns for workers and village entrepreneurs. so-called barefoot managers, organizers, technicians, In 2011, SEWA again partnered with JSDF, this and bankers. By 2013, over 800,000 women had time to implement the Economic Empowerment Source: SEWA Archives. received training through the school, and the project Project for Women, which launched the CLBRCs — developed 60 new training modules and products. or, specifically, began the ambitious process Despite its impact, the SMS success only showed of transforming SEWA Community Learning that more was needed — and more was possible. SEWA had to provide Centers into SEWA Community Learning Business Resource Centers. Photo Credit: Vinayak Ghatate xxiii xxiv Photo Credit: Anupam Joshi POWERED BY TECHNOLOGY On the marketing end, the CLBRCs have introduced the posting of The CLBRCs are community-based enterprises that design and spot and future commodity prices in village squares to help farmers implement pioneering services for innovation and empowerment. decide whether to sell or store their crops, and helped link farmers They respond to community demands — from SEWA members and to markets through other initiatives such as the RUDI rural food others — with fee-based trainings and services that generate income, distribution network. Many of these activities depend on poor, especially for young people, and link communities to resources. uneducated women whom the centers have trained to use cell phones The CLBRCs apply business principles and technological applications as sophisticated business tools. to operate as financially independent entities. Information and The coming chapters will show other ways the CLBRCs support skills communication technology (ICT) is a key driver of each CLBRC. training for local communities, even helping local artisans in technical training and in finding markets. Chiefly, the JSDF-backed CLBRCs offer business development, expert advice, learning, and technical training in creative and often unexpected ways. A few of the key ICT initiatives include: GIS for village land-use mapping. The CLBRC team of the tribal women’s district association, Sukhi Mahila SEWA Mandal,2 at Bodeli, Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh Vadodara district is using satellite imagery to map information about land use, roads, rail, wells, slopes, and canals. A packaging unit of RUDI spices in Visavadi CLBRC, Surendranagar The CLBRCs have shown remarkable creativity and energy in uplifting women, families, and communities. They do this by unleashing the great potential of technology to motivate people at the grassroots. And, once motivated, marginalized people discover new strength and confidence to remake their lives. Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh Under the JSDF–SEWA project, each CLBRC identifies and helps develop local economic activities. These activities may include supporting farmers through training, tele-agriculture, soil testing, organic farming inputs, or even agricultural tool-lending libraries. Mapping village resources on satellite imagery using GPS devices xxv Google Apps and Microsoft Office initiative. Because ICT is vital for the centers’ communications and service delivery, SEWA invited a team from Google to train the CLBRCs to use Google’s products — Gmail, Drive, Calendar, YouTube, and others. SEWA also partnered with Microsoft to teach the CLBRCs Microsoft Office tools. Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh Recording in progress for “Vali no Radio” Community radio. The JSDF-supported project is helping CLBRCs in five districts train and establish radio broadcasting teams to launch Vali no Radio, a SEWA community radio network. Teams have already An alumna of Microsoft’s “Unlimited Potential” program prepared more than 1,000 hours of recorded programming while they wait for final government license approval. In the meantime, the teams Digital money (MasterCard). A SEWA grassroots leader, or aagewan, air local, bi-weekly narrowcasting sessions on agriculture, health care, makes as many as five visits a month to each rural household to collect government programs, girls’ education, folk songs, traditional culture, loan or savings installments, membership fees, cash against sales, and and other subjects of community interest. more. SEWA worked with MasterCard to create a mobile Mobile applications for grassroots sales- application that instantly credits women. “RUDIbens,” saleswomen for each cash payment to the SEWA SEWA’s massive rural food distribution Bank or other central location, network (RUDI), have learned to use a spe- thus wiping out delays in the cially developed mobile phone application — transaction process. RUDI Sandesha Vyavhar — to update sales made during the scores of household visits Photo Credit: Vinayak Ghatate each day. The technology has dramatically increased the efficiency of the market supply The CLBRCs have succeeded chain — and the saleswomen’s income. in unleashing the great potential of technology for people at the grassroots. xxvi SEWA Membership Management System. SEWA has a membership of Interactive e-learning programs. The first JSDF-supported project over 1.7 million women, which means that scores of actions are taking helped SEWA Managers’ School develop business learning modules. place every day. Fragmented information and manual records prevented With the second project, the CLBRCs are converting these modules central management from consolidating data. To modernize the system, into interactive applications that use innovative software to enrich SEWA developed its own custom membership management system. learning, reduce the need for human trainers, and open the door to distance learning. SEWA Livelihood Portal. The CLBRCs have begun linking employers and young job seekers through a single online platform. Trainees register with their skills, and companies register with their requirements. The Livelihood Portal connects them. Member benefited from of SEWA’s Livelihood Portal Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh xxvii OTHER GRASSROOTS INNOVATIONS • Some centers host “Grameen Malls” 3 to sell home and agricultural In addition to the highlighted initiatives, this book introduces a host of products, stationery, ready-made garments, and other items. other CLBRC activities and trainings that help poor, rural women build The availability of local malls saves people the time and effort of and bolster micro, small, and medium enterprises. For example: travelling to distant shopping locations. • The CLBRCs monitor the use of home technology appliances, • SEWA CLBRCs introduce a “Green Livelihood Initiative” that sells such as refrigerators and cook stoves, and then offer trainings in solar-powered lights and fuel-efficient cook stoves. the most efficient use of them. • Centers introduce telemedicine as SEWA partners with local • A few centers train teams of mobile photographers to earn income doctors and the Apollo Hospitals chain to connect doctors with by taking passport and other personal photos or covering festivals groups of villagers through teleconferencing. This is a giant step and other events. The CLBRC houses and lends the cameras. forward in the doctor–patient treatment process. • The CLBRCs link members to government offices and programs, banks, and village councils (panchayats) for mutual cooperation and benefit. Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh Solar torch for field work A Grameen (rural) Mall, Gram Haat, Ahmedabad Photo Credit: Michael Riley xxviii ORIGINAL THINKING AND DOING The following chapters explore a wealth of innovative thinking and problem solving that yields original, sometimes unprecedented, solutions. Whether it be solar power, computer systems, or family care, the CLBRCs continue to expand, evolve and innovate, never resting. This unstopping pulse of innovation within the centers renews and revitalizes the SEWA body. But these pages record more than innovations. They celebrate people, especially the extraordinary SEWA women members — the once poor, once vulnerable, often illiterate, and now empowered women from remote …we encounter what seems a wealth of parts of rural India who became SEWA’s grassroots executives and now innovative thinking that yields original, show other women the way out of poverty. We will meet some of them. sometimes unprecedented, solutions. Finally, this book considers SEWA’s future plans. In forty years, SEWA has grown from being one wing of a labor union to become a thriving, soon-to-be 2 million member alliance for poor women’s empowerment. NOTES As it looks to its next 40 years, or even to adding its next 2 million 1 members, SEWA ponders the new generations of SEWA women — their The Community Learning Business Resource Center (CLBRC) is the project name for the centers. In Gujarat, hopes, their needs, their links to tradition. they are more commonly referred to in the Gujarati Here, the CLBRCs seem poised to bridge the old to the new. To many language as Gyan Vigyan Kendra (Gyan = Knowledge; of the older generation, technology may still need demystifying; but to Vigyan = Technology; Kendra = Center). This book refers most of the young, technology is fast becoming a familiar tool. to the centers alternatively as CLBRCs or GVKs. 2 Mitaben Ahir, a young girl studying basic computer at the Radhanpur District associations are federations, owned and managed vCenter and the daughter of a SEWA artisan, expressed how the CLBRC by the local women. An elected executive committee of members heads each association, with the district training helps her to merge tradition with innovation: coordinator acting as secretary of the association. I have completed my 10th standard and now I want to continue my 3 training in computers so that I can become a real fashion designer. A Grameen Mall promotes the sale of organic foods I don’t want outside fashion designers to decide what I create. and traditional, environmental-friendly home products. I want to learn to use the computer to see what fashions are out The objective is to promote the three elements Sanskruthi there, how I can improve and learn… but I want to do my own (tradition), Prakruthi (nature), and Aharam (food). In addition to food and snacks, visitors can purchase designs based on our traditions. My training has ignited a spark in such items as jute bags, earthen compost bins, and me so that I know I can do it and that I will do it. traditionally woven saris. All products are sold directly Chapter 1 describes the house that SEWA built — or, as some would say, to consumers to curb the role of middlemen. the banyan tree that SEWA grew. xxix Photo Credit: SEWA Archives CHAPTER 1 Understanding SEWA An Organization, a Movement and a Spirit “When someone asks me BEGINNINGS what the most difficult The Self-Employed Women’s Association (SEWA)4 was part of SEWA’s journey has been, I can answer born in 1972 of Gandhian principles and trade union without hesitation: tenacity in the same streets that had earlier ignited the removing conceptual blocks. Some of our biggest battles Indian Independence Movement.5 have been over contesting In 1917, Mahatma Gandhi led the first successful strike of textile workers in the city of Ahmedabad preset ideas and attitudes in Gujarat state. This event began a historical progression that led in 1920 to the founding of India’s of officials, bureaucrats, oldest and largest textile workers’ union, the Textile Labour Association (TLA). It would also lead experts, and academics.” in 1948 to India’s final colonial break with Great Britain. – Ela R. Bhatt, Founder, SEWA The TLA’s first leader, Anasuyu Sarabhai, a disciple of Gandhi, followed his principles of satya (truth), ahimsa (non-violence), sarvadharma (integrating all faiths, all people), and khadi (propagation of local employment and self-reliance). The Mahatma affirmed the dignity and even sanctity of work. Thus, like Gandhi, Anasuyuben insisted that trade unions work to protect all aspects of workers’ lives — factory, home, and family. 1 In 1954, Anasuyuben helped install a Women’s Wing in TLA that offered trainings and other activities for females in the millworker households. The Women’s Wing expanded in the early 1970s after complaints of contractors exploiting women tailors reached the ears of the young labor lawyer heading the wing, Ela Bhatt. She met with some of the women, Photo Credit: SEWA Archives and soon more of the “shadow” workers came forward, including cart pullers, head carriers, and other tradeswomen. Government legislation and labor policies didn’t apply to the self-employed, leaving the women open to exploitation. Events mushroomed until, at the initiative of Ela Bhatt and TLA president Arvind Buch, the Self-Employed Women’s Association (SEWA) was proclaimed in December 1971. It labeled itself a trade union — a radical idea since the self-employed had never before organized. At first, the Labour Department resisted the idea; but SEWA persisted, and in April 1972, the organization was registered as a trade union, with Elaben Bhatt its first head. By 1980, relations between SEWA and TLA had begun to deteriorate. SEWA’s growing work with the “marginal” work force often conflicted Photo Credit: SEWA Archives with TLA’s backing of organized labor. The final break came in 1981 after caste riots set the two at odds. SEWA championed the so-called untouchables; TLA took a hands-off attitude. These differences set the two on separate paths (see appendix 1). 2 FULL EMPLOYMENT AND SELF-RELIANCE Today, SEWA is an ever-growing member-based organization of poor self-employed women workers. According to most estimates, these Photo Credit: Martje van der Heide women make up 94 percent of India’s work force. SEWA’s goal is to bring full employment and self-reliance to its members through vocational and other training and, as we will see, technological innovation. SEWA’s membership now stands at around 1,919,600; most are based in 14 districts of Gujarat state (see figure 1.1). At this writing, SEWA’s SEWA’s membership crossed 1.9 million by the end of 2013 6 membership now stands across 11 other states. Membership will likely reach 2 million by the end of 2013. SEWA welcomes all castes, religions, SEWA believes that all its members and nationalities into its ranks. should become managers and owners. F I G U R E 1 .1 SEWA organizes tradeswomen and supports them in creating member-run SEWA Membership federations, cooperatives, and associations within the trades. in Gujarat State In the villages, members may form into unregistered trade groups federated at the block level 7 or as registered 01/01/2013 to 31/12/2013 federations at the district level with their own exec- LOCATION MEMBERSHIP utive committees. Agriculture is the most common Urban Ahmedabad City 382,240 occupation for most of SEWA’s rural members — Surat City 15,440 Bhavnagar City 9,005 which explains why SEWA plans much of its technical, Total Membership Urban 409,685 financial, and marketing services for farmers. Rural Ahmedabad 46,000 Mahesana 50,357 SEWA organizes women workers for full employment. Banaskantha 85,000 Surandranagar 62,840 Source: SEWA. This means that, in addition to income, workers obtain Kutch 30,000 Kheda 170,010 economic security, food security, and social security. Vadodara 62,800 Sabar0tha 32,000 Gandhinagar 35,000 SEWA also organizes for self-reliance. The organization works to build Panchmahal 2,000 Rajkot 8,000 capacity and leadership and encourages women to speak up to become Tapi 6,532 part of decision-making processes in public and at home. SEWA believes Total Membership Rural 590,539 Total Membership Gujarat 1,000,224 that all its members should become managers and owners. 3 B O X 1 .1 Organizing for Rural Needs and Community Trust Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh SEWA’s urban membership includes women vendors and hawkers SEWA organizes the self-employed into four categories: • Home workers (weavers, potters, ready-made garment workers, agricultural product processors, tobacco [bidi] rollers and incense [agarbatti] workers, artisans ) SEWA’s growth is need-based. Members define the community’s critical issues — work, water issues, daycare, education, medicine — and SEWA • Vendors, hawkers, and other small businesswomen (sellers of organizes the community to address the need. Members have ownership. vegetables, fruits, fish, eggs, clothing and household items) • Manual workers and service providers (farmers, construction workers, According to village team leader Subhiben Bhalaiya, SEWA learned this handcart pullers, head-loaders, domestic workers, laundry workers, approach when organizing agricultural workers. waste collectors, and contract laborers) “As more and more farmers came to us for help, we started alternative • Small producers and women who invest time, labor, and capital to programs for income. But the community didn’t have the skills or local market items (agriculture, raising cattle, salt workers, gum collectors, resources for these programs.” cooking and vending). For example, SEWA wanted to train women on looms to make shawls. Although SEWA began as an urban trade union, two-thirds of its current But without local resources, SEWA had to buy and supply everything. membership is rural. Thus, SEWA learned that rural organizing required Worse, local demand for the shawls didn’t exist, so the product sat unused. adjustments to fit local needs and resources (see box 1.1). “What we learned was that local, alternative programs have to be based on the local skills or the local resources as well as the local need,” said Subhiben. “Organize around those, and you get participation.” Since then, SEWA works through a trust-building formula that relies Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh on local organizers to set down roots — which may take up to a year or more. Once roots are set, the SEWA model requires another three to five years to become strong, and longer still to be sustainable. Says Subhiben, “There are no shortcuts… we must invest in the organizing SEWA began as an urban trade union, process for local empowerment.” but adapted soon to rural needs 4 SEWA SERVICES SEWA Bank Members access a number of livelihood-linked services through SEWA. SEWA Bank is a regulated for-profit urban cooperative bank with But experience has taught SEWA that, to make livelihoods sustainable, a social objective. The bank offers financial services to populations it often must devise an integrated “livelihood package” of skill building, normally barred from formal finance channels because of irregular and market linkages, microfinance, and social security. undocumented income, small financial transactions, and no traditional collateral such as land tenure. SEWA Bank serves clients by crafting SEWA augments the package with other services: savings and credit loans, underwriting practices, and community-based delivery models that programs, health care, child care, nutrition, shelter, insurance, legal aid, help clients and earn profit for the bank. and communications services. Until 2013, SEWA Bank, as an urban cooperative, was required by law to Meanwhile, supportive services create self-employment opportunities. restrict its operation to the Ahmedabad city limits and so could not work For example, midwives charge for assistance, and day-care workers directly with rural women. The bank tried to leap this hurdle by lending to collect for taking care of children. The service-givers therefore gain district federations, which in turn lent to rural “self-help” groups. But this financial viability for their enterprises, even to the point of forming their became awkward since women from the outlying areas still had to travel own cooperatives. to Ahmedabad to make transactions. Many of the SEWA services — such as SEWA Bank and SEWA Manager SEWA federations in the rural areas filled the gap by developing and ni School — have burgeoned to the point of becoming SEWA sister increasing the number of links between rural members and local rural organizations. (For a list of all SEWA sister organizations, see appendix 2.) branches of other banks. The following describes how they work as part of the overall organization: Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh 5 SEWA Manager ni School BOX 1.2 The SEWA Manager ni School (SMS) emerged from a JSDF-supported Capacity Building project of 2005. Its intent was to build a cadre of JSDF and SEWA: “barefoot” managers and owners. With backing from the project’s pilot A Decade of Partnership phase, SEWA began setting up training modules. The JSDF–SEWA partnership is almost ten-years old. A partner They then began selecting master trainers who would teach in the in true spirit, the JSDF has shown a steadfast commitment to villages. Trainers needed a sound knowledge of a trade, the ability to supporting SEWA values and SEWA innovations for its poor, teach, and a willingness to teach others. rural women members. Although SEWA Manager ni School is part With the current Economic Empowerment of SEWA, it pools resources with several Project for Women, 2011 – 2015, the JSDF management institutes to create training is supporting SEWA’s establishment of modules. SEWA’s collaborators include the a network of Community Learning and Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad, Business Resource Centers (see chapter 2). the Ahmedabad Management Association, The CLBRCs promote technology for and the Institute of Rural Management, Anand. innovation, research and development, communication, and information dissemination The Manager ni School now offers training by and for the poor. The project has also modules across a range of member interests — Photo Credit: SEWA Archives helped SEWA members build alliances with Rural Marketing, Agricultural Management, private sector partners. Community Organization, Computer Basics, Networking, Risk Taking, ICT Tools for With their emphasis on technology, the centers Livelihood, Community-Driven Development, help build sustainable economic organizations The aspiring managers of Negotiating Skills, and Information and Sagwara CLBRC, Rajasthan and efficient supply chains. Most important, the project shows Communication Technology. The SMS has, through its CLBRCs, recently that poor rural women can choose and use technology to build migrated some of its modules to interactive e-learning (see chapter 2). sustainable micro, small, and medium enterprises. As of mid-2013, the Managers’ School had trained almost 800,000 women and developed 60 new training modules and products. 6 ROOTS AND BRANCHES Looking closely at the branches, we see a lattice of organizations, OF THE SEWA ORGANIZATION associations, cooperatives, and groups — from communications and SEWA has adopted the image of the sacred banyan tree (Vat Vriksha education groups to banks and credit unions to dairy cooperatives and in Sanskrit) to illuminate the growth and reach of its organization tribal federations — linked through the source to each other. (see figure 1.2). Each part strengthens the others. The roots of the And while the SEWA organization tree grows upward, needs and SEWA tree are deep and strong, sourced in the rich soil of tradition priorities are first voiced through the grassroots members. These and shared struggle. Its base grows thick from these roots and gives members talk to their leaders, the aagewans, who pass on member life to new offshoots and intertwining appendages of federations needs to spearhead teams. The spearhead teams then provide the and sister organizations that, although spreading out in different channels from the villages to the district coordinators. directions, all grow in harmony to strengthen the tree and nourish the vibrant foliage of membership. From here, local and district coordinators communicate with districts- in-charge sitting in Ahmedabad, who then inform the president and executive director. Everyone at the top is a worker who rose through FIGURE 1.2 the ranks, from where the agenda still takes shape. And women at every SEWA Banyan Tree level take part in making decisions. The roots of the SEWA tree are deep and strong, sourced in the rich soil of tradition and struggle. Source: SEWA. 7 SEWA belongs to its members — a home-grown movement with women As Reema Nanavaty declares: “Wrong? Failure? Never! Only lessons leaders. Through their movement, the women become strong and their learned. We analyze, learn from mistakes, and start again. We call it our economic and social successes become visible. Each year members ‘constructive struggle’… and we never give up.” hold a general meeting to evaluate their personal progress and SEWA’s Chapter 2 looks at the next step in SEWA’s growth: its CLBRCs. As progress. Members are encouraged to speak out, offer ideas, point engines of innovation, the centers draw much of their inspiration from out mistakes, identify needs, and show innovation. No idea is wrong. this bold SEWA spirit. Everything is possible. Photo Credit: Somnath Bhatt SEWA members participate and share ideas at a review meeting 8 Through their movement, the women become strong and their economic and social successes become visible. NOTES 4 www.sewa.org 5 For a compelling and extensive personal account of the founding, early struggles, and scope of SEWA, see Ela Bhatt’s book, We Are Poor But So Many (Oxford University Press: 2006). 6 Apart from Gujarat state, SEWA has a presence in Assam, Bihar, Delhi, Jammu & Kashmir, Kerala, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Meghalaya, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhand, and West Bengal. 7 In India, a block is one sub-level of the district, which is an administrative sub-level in the state. A district is normally divided into four sub-district levels: blocks, taluks, gram panchayats, and villages. 9 Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh CHAPTER 2 Linking Knowledge to Know-How Understanding the CLBRCs “I was completely unprepared for my OUT OF THE RUIN… first visit to a SEWA CLBRC — a bright, airy, family-friendly community center. In January 2001 an earthquake of magnitude The level of activity was stunning… in one room a professionally produced 7.7 struck Gujarat state. The quake killed about video was instructing women on land 20,000 people across Gujarat and southeastern issues, while close by a Vodafone representative delivered a training module Pakistan, injured 167,000, and destroyed nearly on inventory management to a group of RUDI (agro-produce distribution network) 400,000 homes. In Ahmedabad, Gujarat’s largest saleswomen. I also talked to members running a community radio center, with city, dozens of multi-storied buildings collapsed programming aimed at local interests. Everywhere in the center posters offered and hundreds of people perished. Many of these information on a range of topics. It was were SEWA members. clear that the CLBRCs are successfully leveraging communication technologies Although Gujarat and its SEWA members had suffered — and would suffer — other of all kinds for use by poor, illiterate women. It’s also clear that the CLBRCs calamities, including cyclones, religious riots, and financial crises, the earthquake have been designed to last.” awakened SEWA to a new priority: what disaster survivors wanted most after food, clothing, and shelter was a chance to earn incomes to rebuild their lives and livelihoods. – Shobha Shetty, Practice Manager, Rural Development, South Asia Region, “Have you brought us work?” they asked. The World Bank 11 SEWA saw that the devastation had also left behind other harmful residue in the form of community and cultural fragmentation. All had to be addressed. In the year following the earthquake, SEWA established 50 Community Learning Centers (CLCs) to respond to the member needs, including the creation of livelihoods and learning how to cope with disasters. In addition, the centers began organizing and tracking local memberships Photo Credit: SEWA Archives to maintain cohesion. The 2001 earthquake in Gujarat caused widespread devastation Many SEWA members were affected by the 2001 Gujarat earthquake. During the year following the earthquake, SEWA established Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh 50 Community Learning Centers (CLC). Finally, the CLCs, SEWA decided, would become hubs to preserve and promote traditions and local heritage, which were in danger of being lost forever in the ruins. The formation of the CLCs marked the birth of an idea that would later mature into the establishment of the CLBRCs. Photo Credit: SEWA Archives The earthquake rendered 400,000 families homeless 12 A JSDF–SEWA PARTNERSHIP Inspired by the success of SMS graduates, SEWA leaders then began SEWA soon realized that CLC capabilities were limited mostly to to envision a new kind of center — a “business resource center.” basic services — such as helping members fill out government forms, These centers would become hubs of business learning and develop- photocopying, and other small administrative help. They weren’t ment that offered members the training and skills to learn self-sufficiency providing the skills to produce lasting livelihoods. SEWA decided that and gain sustainable incomes. it had to provide better resources and better trainings — a decision Reemaben Nanavaty describes how the idea took shape: that began a now decade-long partnership with the JSDF. We wanted to upgrade the CLCs to Community Business Phase 1: JSDF Capacity Building Project Resource Centers. We knew we had to bring in management skills and information technology components relevant to In 2005, JSDF first supported SEWA in launching a “barefoot manager” the different trades and occupations to improve operational capacity building project that produced the SEWA Manager ni School efficiency. Depending on the community’s needs, we had to ask (SMS). The project, which closed in 2009, was an ambitious undertaking ourselves how to turn CLCs into Business Learning Centers… to put a cadre of grassroots managers and entrepreneurs into the field. centers that could meet the needs of a changing membership. Photo Credit: SEWA Archives Mr. Onno Ruhl, Country Director, India, The World Bank, inaugurates Na Rympei CLBRC, Meghalaya 13 Photo Credit: Vinayak Ghatate SEWA members at Visavadi CLBRC, Surendranagar Phase 2: The JSDF Economic Empowerment Project for Women “We had to ask ourselves In 2011, SEWA partnered for the second time with JSDF, which furnished how to… meet the needs of a a grant of US $1.82 million for a new project: the Economic Empowerment changing membership.” Project for Women. This project piloted the CLBRCs, which became commonly known by their local name. Gyan Vigyan Kendra (GVK).8 The project intends that the CLBRCs become self-reliant and sustainable This current JSDF project, which runs until February 2015, pilots the by developing innovative skills and using new technologies. Each CLBRC transformation of SEWA’s Community Learning Centers into Community should be independent, community-owned, and economically and Learning and Business Resource Centers (CLBRCs). The program installs operationally sustainable at the grassroots. CLBRCs across five states: Gujarat, Rajasthan, Assam, Meghalaya, and Activities for the second JSDF-supported project began in March 2011 Bihar. The World Bank oversees the project. in Gujarat state with pilot models to establish seven CLBRCs. In the Through the CLBRCs, the project aims to increase employment opportu- three years since then, the project has upgraded seven more centers nities and income — especially in meeting the aspirations of young for a total of 13 CLBRCs across five states, with most of them in Gujarat people to gain market-led skills that lead them to emerging opportunities. state (see box 2.1). 14 B O X 2 .1 GVK STRUCTURE AND OUTPUT Each center serves 15 to 20 villages, each of which counts up to five to The 14 SEWA CLBRCs seven thousand households. Master trainers from the CLBRCs instruct members, and different centers offer different programs, depending on 1. Ganeshpura Gyan Vigyan Kendra in Mehsana district, Gujarat available expertise and on community demand. 2. Visavadi Gyan Vigyan Kendra in Surendranagar district, Gujarat 3. Kamlasadan Gyan Vigyan Kendra in Patan district, Gujarat Under the project, SEWA members manage the centers. Each center 4. Pij Gyan Vigyan Kendra in Anand district, Gujarat plans its own budget and business plan and runs its own workshops and trainings. Members and others in the community pay for trainings and 5. Nakhatrana Gyan Vigyan Kendra in Kutch district, Gujarat other services, or at least offer a token contribution. 6. Bodeli Gyan Vigyan Kendra in Vadodra district, Gujarat 7. Demai Gyan Vigyan Kendra in Sabarkantha district, Gujarat The center teams generally consist of the following personnel: 8. Sanand Gyan Vigyan Kendra in Ahmedabad, Gujarat • A center-in-charge who has overall responsibility for center operations 9. Dehgam Gyan Vigyan Kendra in Gandhinagar, Gujarat • Two coordinators that assist the center-in-charge and oversee all the 10. Kokila Vikas Ashram Gyan Vigyan Kendra in Sonitpur district, programs, which may include savings, capacity building, technology, Assam or other themes 11. Na Rympei Community Learning Business Resource Center in Ribhoi district, Meghalaya • Five spearhead team leaders who, as links to the grassroots, 12. Sagvada GyanVigyan Kendra in Dungarpur district, Rajasthan organize women into self-help groups, familiarize people with new initiatives, and reach out to build community participation in 13. Nari Gunjan Gyan Vigyan Kendra in Parsa block in Patna, Bihar trainings and other activities • Seven to ten master trainers who conduct technical, social, and managerial trainings from the center. As of mid-2013, the 14 GVKs had trained more than 100 grassroots managers — including center-in-charges, coordinators, and spearhead Photo Credit: SEWA Archives team members — and 150 technical master trainers. These trainers have instructed more than 57,000 women in livelihood trades such as agricul- ture, livestock, nursery tending, agro-processing, and micro-enterprise. SEWA members showcase food products produced by women-led micro-enterprises at Na Rympei CLBRC, Meghalaya 15 A COMMUNITY BRAND The core of the CLBRC concept rests in three goals: • Increase employment opportunities and incomes • Link young people to emerging professional openings • Create technological links and use innovative tools to make the centers sustainable. SEWA’s bottom-up approach means that ideas for training coalesce from grassroots demand. They then work their way up through the weekly federation and monthly district meetings to the spearhead teams and continue to be sifted and evaluated all the way to the center in Ahmedabad. Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh F I G U R E 2 .1 CLBRC Services Barefoot managers on their way to the Sagwara CLBRC, Rajasthan In all, the centers have linked over 65,000 women to livelihood opportunities, and helped hundreds of women to gain access to micro-finance. Almost 1,900 self-help groups have been created or linked through the GVKs. In addition, the RUDI food distribution initiative has furnished affordable, high-quality food products to tens of thousands of households, and the Hariyali (Green) Livelihood Initiative has supplied over 20,000 women with solar lanterns and energy-efficient cook stoves (see chapter 8). Source: SEWA. The project encourages centers to test new technologies and trainings that develop business ideas and provide services based on community needs. SEWA may help organize, but the local members ensure the working success of the center. 16 TEACHING GRASSROOTS TECHNOLOGY The CLBRCs are demand-driven and ICT-powered. Information and communication technologies help streamline center operations and allow SEWA to improve existing services while inspiring new ones. Dynamic partnerships form a vital part of the equation. Jyoti Macwan, general secretary of SEWA, traces the progression: SEWA clarifies the needs, then we put the technology into the hands of our aagewans and members. We then help them to demystify it, so that they make the best use of it to cut down costs, improve operations, or generate new opportunities for livelihood. For example, an escalating membership made it more difficult for the center to track data in the villages. SEWA needed a reliable system for profiling its 1.7 million members that local centers could access and manage. The information technology (IT) team began hunting for ways to install a membership management system, but no software met the needs of SEWA. So, the research and development began. “We learned by doing,” said Jyotiben. “And after two years in process, with feedback from our members, we came up with our own membership management system, which we can teach members across all our centers to use” (see chapter 4). SEWA also needed faster communication within and across its member- ship network. Again, teams at the center went looking for ideas until they Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh decided, in a bold move, to approach one of the development teams at Google to discuss affordable communications solutions. 17 Google accepted the challenge and, after discussions with the BOX 2.2 SEWA team, developed a “Notice Board” that allowed communication A Buzzing Problem between the centers and the districts. However, many illiterate members couldn’t read it, so the teams came up with a voice-based notice board. That was the beginning of what became a showcase initiative for SEWA and Google: Google Apps (see chapter 4). The innovation benefitted both sides — a “win-win” outcome. In this case, SEWA increased efficiency in its centers and across its network, and Google, for the first time, entered and learned to work in India’s Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh rural market. Other corporate partnerships brought similar results. Meanwhile, in Vadodara district, a center worked with the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) to help map water sources and land use patterns through the use of geographic information systems One older SEWA woman relates one of her first encounters (see chapter 5). Village team members learned to use hand-held with a cell phone: Global Positioning System (GPS) devices to mark off position points. The first time I had a cellphone with me, I was nervous about using it because I had forgotten my SEWA To teach technology to the grassroots, the centers had to create an training. I was sitting near a road when it started enabling environment. Many of the women are uneducated, so may buzzing in my hand. I became so scared that I threw not have ever seen a computer or cell phone before (see box 2.2). it in the road. I started crying because I thought I had They often get discouraged, cry, or even leave the class when first done something to break it… Then two boys happened confronted with a keyboard or cell phone application. As Veenaben to pass. They asked me why I had thrown the cell phone Sharma, a center coordinator, reminds us, “One has to be patient and in the street. When I told them, they began to laugh. invest in the process.” They said, “There’s nothing wrong…” and reminded me how to use it. I felt embarrassed, but at least I knew I hadn’t done anything wrong — and now I use my cell phone all the time. 18 GOVERNMENT PROGRAMS Meanwhile, the SEWA centers have partnered with a number of AND PRIVATE PARTNERSHIPS corporations and academic institutions to upgrade CLBRC services. SEWA is not linked to any one government program or political The partners range from multinational corporations, universities, affiliation. But many of their center services depend on staying aware management institutes, hospitals, and local companies. A short list of beneficial government programs and how to link community of collaborators includes: members to them — especially large plans like the Mahatma Gandhi • Anand Agricultural University National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA),9 which supports • Apollo Hospitals unemployed rural workers. The CBLRCs look for ways to partner with • Ekgaon Technologies Private Limited (designs technologies government, not compete with it. If government is doing it, SEWA is not. for developing communities) • Google India Private Limited However, centers may complement government programs or fill a gap • Gooru Learning (a free search engine for learning) that a government program misses. For example, one government • Harvard University program runs day-care centers — but only from 8:00AM to 11:00AM. SEWA saw that this fell short of the time women needed; most were • HP Learning Initiative for Entrepreneurs (HP LIFE) leaving for work at 8:00AM and not returning until around 4:30PM. • India, China and America (ICA) Institute • Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad SEWA offered to take up the slack by opening day care in the centers from • Indian Space Research Organisation 12:00PM to 5:00PM. This support closed the gap and satisfied everyone. • Jayant Agro-Organics Limited Other times, because of SEWA’s experience in grassroots organizing, • MasterCard Worldwide government has asked SEWA to intervene when government programs • Microsoft Corporation India Private Limited require a local response, such as after the religious riots of 2002 — • Foundation India when SEWA went to work to help and organize both factions — or with • S P Jain School of Global Management other rehabilitation issues. • Washington University in St. Louis 19 BECOMING INDEPENDENT most training institutes.) The centers offer more than 20 training modules JSDF support has laid the groundwork for self-sustaining CLBRCs, and in technology and management that range in length from one-half day to the centers have reaped impressive results and numbers since project a mini MBA program that lasts three months.10 SEWA shapes its trainings launch. But projects have expiration dates, and for this project, the entire to accommodate demand and links them to applications that members focus of technology training and business principles must be on self- consider relevant (see box 2.3). SEWA links some of its programs with sufficiency — especially within a smooth-running, independent CLBRC. local and even national institutes. Centers have already moved toward self-reliance. Training and other However, the training isn’t confined to a small SEWA circle. As one community fees support the local centers, and members or village aagewan reports: government have offered land and buildings to house the CLBRCs. When we started doing trainings, we were getting demands from SEWA member dues also contribute to overall support and stimulate other organizations across other states for training. Some wanted a greater sense of ownership and shared accountability. us to show them how to set up their own Community Learning Centers... Their requests for training also helped us evaluate which Training normally generates the most income. SEWA and community modules were needed so we could standardize them. People come members eagerly fill seats in CLBRC classrooms to take advantage of to our centers from other areas — even other countries. SEWA’s quality content and affordable costs. (SEWA charges less than Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh JSDF support has focused on self-sufficiency 20 BOX 2.3 Interest on member loans also returns a good portion of revenue to most centers. SEWA members have an exceptional rate of repayment, Interactive e-Learning Modules which almost guarantees good future yields on lending services. Centers also offer desktop services such as printing, copying, or other By making modules interactive through computers, more administrative functions — especially filling out government forms. women who find it difficult to learn through conventional Indeed, SEWA centers spend much of their time connecting people classrooms can learn interactively through the CLBRCs. with government programs (see above). The centers developed e-learning modules that operate Another source of revenue is SEWA’s RUDI Company (see chapter 8). through games and quizzes, and combine theory with practice. RUDI, a rural food distribution network for SEWA members, creates So far, SEWA has created electronic modules in: incomes for farmers, saleswomen, and centers. Other SEWA women sell • Financial Management solar lights and fuel efficient cook stoves as part of the Hariyali Green • Time Management Livelihood Initiative. • Team Building The CLBRCs always look for new sources of income — some large, some • Community-Based Organization Management small. For example the Bodeli CLBRC saw that many of its members • Strengthening Self-Help Groups owned household and field appliances (refrigerator, mixer-grinders, and so forth) but weren’t using them efficiently or maintaining them • Drive for Achievement correctly. So, a small team created a survey questionnaire, interviewed • Communication Skills a hundred or more households, and mapped all the appliances they • Capacity to Take Risk owned. With that information the team devised several fee-based training sessions on effective use of appliances. Other schemes tap into larger, even monumental, ways to gain revenue. Future chapters will spotlight some of these ingenious enterprises as well as the full range of SEWA trainings. The CLBRCs become the engines of technological invention that unleash an entrepreneurial fire across the grassroots. 21 TECHNOLOGY AND INNOVATION And with this, according to Mr. Ghatate, something else important is FOR THE BOTTOM OF THE PYRAMID happening — namely, learning on both sides. In sum, the CLBRCs are unique, community-based enterprises that While community members are learning the ways of modern deal in innovation and empowerment. They spark innovation, inspire technology and applying them to their needs, the tech research and development, and instigate communication technology. companies are opening their eyes to the innovations they The CLBRCs respond to community demands with trainings and services need to make the community’s life easier and better — that provide skills to generate incomes — especially for young people — which, in the process, gives them access to a new market and link communities to resources. With SEWA’s strong organizational of a billion plus households! and grassroots foundation, the CLBRCs provide the structure for testing The CLBRCs, by definition, work on the principle that innovation is new concepts, making new partnerships, and scaling up new innovations. not restricted to universities, research laboratories, and corporate The centers become the engines of technological invention that unleash institutions. Instead, the centers nurture innovation across the rural an entrepreneurial fire across the grassroots. landscape by providing both the physical and social infrastructure to Vinayak Ghatate, World Bank project team leader for the Economic empower and inspire. Empowerment Project for Women, says that what makes the CLBRCs The coming chapters will take a closer look at some of the CLBRCs’ successful is their ability to put theory into practice: innovations and services. But first we join a conversation among those Since the late 1990s, a lot of phrases referring to technological who set the standards for CLBRC success: the managers and trainers. partnerships have surfaced in development circles — for example, “last mile connectivity,” “technology innovations for the grassroots” and, especially, “demystifying technology.” And, in fact, since then we have seen a few promising technology partnerships crop up around the world. But what we haven’t much seen is a systematic, scientific approach that links leading tech giants with the bottom of the pyramid — in this case, the marginalized grassroots women in rural India. But this project, through the CLBRCs, is doing just that. 22 NOTES 8 The JSDF provides funding for the project, which is administered by the World Bank. The US $1.82 million breaks down as follows: 40 percent supports operating costs; 16 percent for training; 20 percent for consulting fees; and 24 percent goes to goods and equipment. Grant disbursements are made in regular, six-month installments. 9 MGNREGA is an Indian job program. It provides a legal guarantee for at least one hundred days of employment in every financial year to adult members of any household willing to do public unskilled manual work at the minimum wage. This act was meant to improve the purchasing power of semi- or unskilled rural people. Around one-third of the designated work force are women. 10 A “mini” MBA, while not a formal degree, is a training regimen that focuses on all the fundamentals of business. 23 Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh CHAPTER 3 Lifeblood of the CLBRCs Meeting the Managers and Master Trainers “We now have faster THE CAN-DO CONTINGENT communication with our The previous sections have discussed some of the members through CLBRCs. We know their issues and roles of the SEWA leaders. But who are these women? needs, and, as leaders, In this chapter, we meet some of the center coordinators and master trainers who provide we are able to address the grassroots structure, cohesion, and know-how that keep the CLBRCs running strong. them sooner. This builds These women are part of a team of thinkers, teachers, and doers. our confidence, and we are able to win the trust The women come from districts that number from 45,000 to 150,000 SEWA members, and and faith of our members.” their store of expertise ranges wide. They’ve worked as construction and agricultural workers and learned to train others in technology and business skills. Many of them have been with – Ramilaben, Grassroots Leader and Master Trainer SEWA for 12 or more years. We sat with a large group of these women during a managers’ meeting in Ahmedabad. What follows is an abridged account of their words and stories. 25 Pinaben, agricultural worker An agricultural worker, Pinaben has been with SEWA for 12 years. Early on she took leadership training and was asked to organize groups in her village. “I began by organizing a savings and credit program in my village,” she recounts, “where other women contributed 10–20 rupees a month.” She did so well that the district federation asked her to raise nursery Photo Credit: SEWA Archives saplings for the nursery program. “I ended up earning 5,000 rupees (US $83) a month from the saplings… I bought a pump for irrigation and drinking water on my farm.” This investment soon began earning new income for her from growing produce. Bhavnaben, who wasn’t allowed to venture out from her home before she joined SEWA, now runs two businesses Bhavnaben, agricultural worker Bhavnaben has been a SEWA member for 12 years. She first trained in photography and in making washing powder. Later she completed SEWA’s mini-MBA training. Now she teaches others. Bhavnaben faced a lot of resistance from family and neighbors when she started. She explains that: Photo Credit: SEWA Archives My community is very orthodox. There was a lot of pressure to not let me go out of the house. Neighbors told my parents, “Why do you let your daughter go out and work? “I am a SEWA member… an empowered woman!” She will do something wrong.” My answer: “Watch what I do and then tell me if you see anything wrong.” She then took a training course on how to interact with the local governing bodies (panchayat). Now she attends village meetings to She persisted and, in addition to training SEWA members, she runs two find out what programs are available and who can benefit. She then small businesses: photography and selling solar lights. Once she started shares this information with the villagers. “When people asked me earning money, all the criticism stopped. “I’m the one responsible for where I work,” she states, “I say that I don’t work anywhere. I am a taking care of my family and earning an income — and I will do what I SEWA member… an empowered woman.” have to do to achieve that.” 26 Valiben, agricultural worker Recently, Vali took a one-month course in primary health care at Valiben has been with SEWA for 18 years. She is a master trainer in a local hospital. “I’m now thought of as a doctor in the villages,” agricultural and animal husbandry. She’s responsible for federation she says proudly. activities and for posting spot and future prices on the village Although she’s still illiterate, she says that life with SEWA has made commodities board. her determined that her children receive an education. Valiben came from a very poor family where there was never enough money for food or clothing, or education. “Before joining SEWA, I was a poor woman without self-respect,” she says. “Now, after taking so much training with SEWA, I can speak in public. I’ve even visited Rome (Food and Agriculture Organization [FAO] of the UN) with SEWA.” , Valiben, a master trainer, also runs “Vali no Radio” a community broadcast from Ganeshpura Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh 27 Indiraben, tobacco worker Indiraben was an uneducated rural tobacco worker who made small cigarettes. When she moved to Ahmedabad, the only work to be found was in a factory, cleaning. “I had seven children and didn’t know how I would ever improve their lives,” she remembers. One day she met a SEWA woman who invited her to a meeting. After the meeting, Indiraben told the woman, “I can Photo Credit: SEWA Archives do nothing but cleaning, so give me a job.” Instead, SEWA put her to work helping organize contractual workers in the city. Indira never looked back. She enrolled in more training courses and has since returned to her native Anand district to organize “Whatever I am is because of SEWA,” says Indiraben tobacco workers. Indiraben has borrowed 15 times from SEWA Bank to pay for her children’s education. One of her children became a teacher. Basantiben did become more active and soon joined a spearhead Another is now a general secretary at SEWA. team responsible for 45 villages. She now earns enough money through her trades and with SEWA that she can send her children to school “Whatever I am is because of SEWA,” she says. “All my children are and buy clothes for them. “Working with SEWA, people now listen to educated because of SEWA. I never imagined I could have a job other me at village meetings,” she says. “And I have money in my hand!” than cleaning. Today I’m proud, and SEWA is like my parent.” Sheetalben, home-based worker Basantiben, construction worker Some SEWA staff take quickly to the IT side of center operations As a construction and agricultural laborer, Basantiben is familiar with (see chapter 4). Sheetalben loves working with SEWA’s customized hard physical labor. She knows what it’s like to go hungry: “I married into membership management system (MMS). She has collected data on a family of 17 members of which I was the youngest... that meant I often 150,000 members for entry into the system. She explains that: was the last to eat, and that could mean that nothing was left to eat.” With data from the MMS, we can see how many agricultural After Basanti joined SEWA, she took a number of trainings, which, or tobacco workers there are in a district, then compare she says, helped her to be more outspoken. “I learned how to talk numbers with other districts for analysis. Or, we can use the about needs outside the family, especially caste discrimination, which data to target all the young people in a district, then invite was strong in our area. My federation advised me to become more them to meetings so that we learn what second and third active as a leader.” generation SEWA members are thinking. 28 Before the new system, Sheetal says that centers had to maintain Ramilaben, tobacco worker about 15 different fields on members’ age, area of work, and so forth. Before she joined SEWA, Ramilaben stayed at home except to venture Now they feed all the information into the MMS and retrieve data from out as a tobacco worker. “I am from an orthodox family,” she says. whatever field they need to examine, for example, how many members “They believed that the women should stay in the household.” work in agriculture. All this changed when she became a SEWA member. Suddenly, her She reports that the system saves costs. “Earlier they had to spend comings and goings for training and other activities alarmed her family, around 10 rupees (US 17¢) per member to extract information. With especially her mother-in-law, who predicted dire outcomes. As Ramila the new system, that has been cut to two rupees per member.” explains: “My mother-in-law constantly warned me that my push to go outside the home and community would one day cause my name to be Sheetal is proud to work with this technology. “The MMS helps the all over the newspapers for doing something wrong or for some scandal.” membership process and, by keeping track of details about our members, it helps district leaders plan yearly activities.” She ignored the predictions, and now, as a master trainer, Ramilaben teaches community-based organization management to women in areas as far away as Nepal. “It has been a struggle to learn a lot of things. But I know that I’ve been able to bring about changes in my society.” She took special pleasure in being invited to a meeting in Mumbai, where she played a prominent role representing SEWA. Says Ramila: The Mumbai meeting was covered very favorably in the press, and I was mentioned as SEWA “president.” The news even reached my village, where people started calling my mother-in-law… She changed direction completely and now brags about the great achievements of her daughter-in-law. Photo Credit: SEWA Archives My mother-in-law constantly warned me that my name would one day be all over the newspapers for some scandal. 29 PLANS AND PRIORITIES When asked what the focus of the GVKs should be, many of the women stress the importance of organizing and training. “It’s how SEWA was founded,” said one. Others point to the critical role of the centers in building harmony while building capacity among women. They recall how members joined with others after the earthquake to work for employment and livelihood security. “We have struggled to overcome and rebuild after man-made and natural disasters,” said one coordinator. “We have to work together without class or caste discrimination.” It is clear that Gandhian principles still apply after a journey of 40 years and phenomenal growth and innovation. The women note that local members build and manage the centers and so should operate them democratically. “The centers should be demand-driven and issue-focused,” said one. Technological inputs are crucial. “Most of our members are rural, so technology to improve farming is very important,” says a district coordinator. Through the centers, the women look to technology for solutions to farm issues — for example, water scarcity, irrigation, and farming new crops. They plan to collaborate more with agricultural science institutions to promote tele-agriculture and interactive e-learning. Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh Through the centers, the women look to technology for solutions… Members participate in a training session at Visavadi CLBRC, Surendranagar 30 GENERATION NEXT The recent financial crisis of 2009 – 2010, which closed many Many of the women’s concerns about technical training focus on what factories, showed the importance of being ready to develop new younger people will need and want. skills. SEWA, they say, responded but still must be ready to supply more skills for the future. “When we started, many of the women were illiterate,” said one leader. “But now with second and third generation women gaining education Putting technology at the core of CLBRC activities, they believe, through SEWA, we have to think about introducing new services for will ensure that young people receive the training they need for youth — especially technical training.” future opportunities. One woman described how even simple Another center leader mentions salt workers as an example of where technological learning, such as how to issue bus tickets or work future priorities are headed: as toll-booth attendants, has brought employment for many young people. Others cite examples of how SEWA training helped We started by helping them with technical training to use farm technologies. But now the younger generations are students set up their own micro-enterprises, such as mobile phone looking to become computer literate and learn to use mobile and computer repair. phones. We are already linking young people up with new factories in the area to find jobs. CLBRCs train SEWA’s next generation of leaders in modern technology Photo Credit: Vinayak Ghatate 31 Putting technology at the core of CLBRC activities, they believe, will ensure that young people receive the training they need. Photo Credit: Vinayak Ghatate “With SEWA, we have our own URL — www.sewa.org,” says a center coordinator. “But Google has opened access for SEWA to use all their CLBRC training programs and activities are tailored applications through the SEWA address: Gmail, Chat, Google Drive, to benefit the next generation Google+, and Google Hangouts for teleconferences… This is very helpful One woman reminds us that technology doesn’t conflict with tradition; for center coordinators to talk, or for several managers to work on the in fact, one should complement the other: same document together.” We have helped train many of our young women in computers and computer software so that they can study fashion design online and create new clothing designs based on traditional dress… Our younger people feel comfortable with technology and are eager to learn to use it. The leaders emphasize that the purpose of training is jobs. So, SEWA must connect students with factories and companies. The SEWA Livelihood Portal (see chapter 4) has been a big step forward Photo Credit: Vinayak Ghatate in achieving this goal. With this platform, students find jobs and employers fill vacancies. The women point to some of the other improvements new technol- ogies have brought to the functions of the CLBRCs, such as Google Children learn software basics at SEWA’s CBLRCs Apps, digital money, and SEWA membership management and management information systems. 32 TECHNOLOGY FOR LIFE Finally, the SEWA leaders agree that the real value of technology Technology is aiding farmers and town councils to study land use is in its life-enhancing value. “Technology has helped us gain steady issues; and mobile technology is helping RUDI and Green Livelihood livelihoods,” concludes a trainer, “and that means we can do more for saleswomen enter and track sales. Technology also brings real time crop our families. That is most important. Better lives mean better families.” prices to farmers through mass text messaging. Chapter 4 shows how technology sparks organizational efficiency. But a trainer and RUDIben from Surendranagar district reveals that there’s more than one advantage to using technology: I started using the mobile application in my business last January, and it saves time and cost in processing and sending orders. Before the technology, there were often mistakes in the orders… But the mobile phone application makes everything accurate, and I can cover more territory. I was nervous using the phone at first. I thought: What if something goes wrong and the Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh wrong order is sent? But I learned how to use it easily — and I also learned that the phone is great for marketing: everyone wants A pictorial representation of the RUDI sales cart to see how the phone and the application work… And when they come, they buy. My sales have tripled! 33 Photo Credit: Anupam Joshi CHAPTER 4 Technology at the Core Systems that Connect Members, Create Opportunities, and Keep Cash Flowing “The first rule of any Creative thinking and creative partnerships define technology used in a the CLBRCs. And some of the most creative thinking business is that automation applied to an efficient begins with keeping the centers and SEWA networks operation will magnify the running smoothly and connected to member and efficiency. The second is organizational needs. that automation applied to an inefficient operation Some CLBRC technological innovations will magnify the inefficiency.” have overhauled the organizational framework and connected members – Bill Gates with better learning and livelihoods. The following sections look at a few of these initiatives. Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh Innovative use of technology multiplies effectiveness of CLBRC programs and creates new opportunities 35 THE MEMBERSHIP This freehand approach prevented SEWA central management from MANAGEMENT SYSTEM forging a consolidated view of membership data or individual profiles. Like SEWA’s signature banyan tree, which sprouts, spirals, and shapes Without organized data, there could be no group or individual analysis itself in ever-changing forms and directions, SEWA membership leafs and and assessment, knowledge sharing, or evaluation of interventions. grows organically into ever-greater numbers and roles. At this writing, SEWA desperately needed a system that could track membership online SEWA now counts more than 1.9 million women among its ranks, and in real time. this number is growing fast. Through their centers, these members act Features of the SEWA MMS on dozens of interventions across Gujarat and elsewhere, and countless The SEWA MMS is a decentralized Windows-based system that districts transactions must be recorded every day. can update both locally and centrally. Members are able to alter their personal information (see figure 4.1) through the center operators and center-in-charges. The system’s menu of features includes the following: • Members access the system in three languages: English, Hindi, and Gujarati. • Women view their consolidated profile and history with SEWA. Profiles contain demographic information, occupation, household income, and training. Profiles display which interventions the Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh member has used — microfinance, market linkages, etc. • The system has two versions, online and offline, with a tool to synchronize offline data with an online server database. SEWA’s Internet-based Membership Management System • The system uses a clear database model, with simple, intuitive manages records of over 1.9 million members forms for easy navigation that unschooled members can master. Most districts kept their own manual records or on legacy systems in • Managers can compare planned membership of a program with SEWA’s headquarters in Ahmedabad. SEWA’s diverse services and actual realization for any region or time period. programs maintained their own databases, which were manual, ad-hoc, • The integrated data allows the central management team to use or custom-built management information systems. data across regions and programs, monitor progress, assess impact, and plan for the future. The amount of membership data was often staggering. SEWA had to enroll new and renew old members every year. And each time, CLBRC staff had to specify the member’s trade, village, services used, income, and other details. 36 F I G U R E 4 .1 Jyotiban believes that the MMS will play a major role in influencing SEWA policies. “SEWA’s strength is in its numbers,” she says. “And the Membership Management MMS keeps us accurately informed about trade and other details of System Data Template our 1.7 million members.” THE SEWA LIVELIHOOD PORTAL Graduates of SEWA’s training programs now have a window into job opportunities — and employers have a preview of the talents and skills of prospective hires. This connection takes place through the SEWA Livelihood Portal. Completing the connection For years SEWA centers had been offering technical training across a number of sectors, trades, and geographical areas. But it became Source: SEWA. clear that training was only part of gaining livelihood — finding work completed the action. Thus, SEWA’s information technology staff had Log-in and go to find a way to connect its graduates with employers. The user logs in with a password. Each field is self-explanatory — date, member name, date of joining SEWA, village, trade, etc. With veteran members, their ID alone will automatically fill in all fields. New members enter primary data only once, and updates can be added any time. District centers can manage all rural memberships. SEWA’s general secretary, Jyotiben Macwan, says that ease of use is Photo Credit: SEWA Archives essential to the system’s design: Designing the MMS is an ongoing process. It has to be efficient but simple enough for our members to use. The executive committee and the aagewans will be able to track members and ensure membership renewals. Under SEWA’s integrated approach, linkages to livelihood opportunities go hand in hand with skill building 37 Launched in late 2012, the SEWA Livelihood Portal is an online platform Organizations do the same, providing information on the company for those who complete SEWA training to register their education, exper- and a contact person. A system administrator approves the company tise, personal profile, and other talents. Center staff then contact organi- registration and sets up access to the portal with a username and zations in their areas that might benefit from knowing what people and password. After login, the organization’s representative can browse skills are available, often giving employers live computer demonstrations registered trainee profiles or post company requirements or vacancies. of the portal’s benefits. Once registered, companies and organizations list If the company sees a qualified candidate, they coordinate selection their current openings or skills they need. Each can regularly cross-check with SEWA. the other to match skills with job descriptions and so fill vacancies. The portal follows up every activity with e-mails. This includes confirma- How it works tion of registration by a trainee or a company, the posting of a company’s The portal is a web-based application. After completing a registration vacancy, or a trainee’s targeting of an opening. form, the member receives a username and password to access the portal. So far, almost 26,000 trainees and 10 companies have registered with the If a trainee sees a related posted opportunity, she contacts the company. portal, with another 100 companies, at this writing, planning to sign on. Companies already registered have offered positive feedback about Training is only part of gaining livelihood — the service and about the candidates. In its short time of operation, the finding work completes the action. portal has already matched dozens of searchers with employers. Photo Credit: Anupam Joshi A CLBRC manager operates the web-based SEWA livelihood portal 38 The portal is available in three languages — English, The workshop not only taught women to use the Hindi and Gujarati — and has been designed to apps, but also asked them to think creatively about ensure security. practical uses for each — for example, in helping RUDI saleswomen to enter and track sales. As a web-based application, the Livelihood Portal can be accessed anywhere a connection is available. The Google team also introduced Google Hangouts Data entry is now done through all the CLBRCs in to the workshop. Participants saw the potential of Gujarat, but other states will soon be able to do videoconferencing to communicate with groups the same. SEWA tries to keep trainees linked to across the hundreds of kilometers and five states Source: SEWA Archives. their local areas for employment and believes that that separate the 14 CLBRCs. They saw that Google rural portals will be critical in directing members to Hangouts also allows communications with other future job openings. CSOs, private sector institutions, and academic centers. In addition, Google decided to relax some of its e-mail restrictions for GOOGLE APPS SEWA members with the sewa.org domain. Normally, Google permits SEWA invited a Google team to share its expertise on how technology other domains to migrate up to 10 e-mail users to their servers for free, could help power the CLBRCs. Google responded with an in-depth with a fee over that. But it relaxed these restrictions for SEWA. Now, workshop that introduced SEWA members to all the Google Apps and Google Apps hosts the entire SEWA domain — www.sewa.org — and products — Gmail, Drive, Calendar, Picasa, YouTube, Maps, and more. SEWA domain users have access to all of Google’s products. The teaming with Google shows how capacity building can be a two-way street. The CLBRCs improved their operational efficiency and their service delivery. Google, faced with a new challenge, created new solutions and enriched its own knowledge bank — and opened a new, developing market. For another example of how partnerships work, see box 4.1. Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh A member benefitted from collaboration between SEWA and Google 39 B O X 4 .1 SEWA–MASTERCARD DIGITAL MONEY PROJECT Microsoft Unlimited Potential After barter, coins and cash, the latest platform of exchange is here: electronic — or digital — money that works through your smart phone Working with another software giant, SEWA has brought the like a digital wallet; and SEWA women are already using it. Microsoft Unlimited Potential Program to its CLBRCs. The initiative from Microsoft teaches information technology (IT) skills across rural India, particularly among the disadvantaged and women. Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh Electronic money works through the smart phone… like a digital wallet. Within SEWA, the money trail starts with the aagewans, or grassroots leaders. The aagewans sit at the crossroads of SEWA interventions, linking the villages with the district associations and the CLBRCs. Under the program, Microsoft gave SEWA three free licenses for Windows and Office. The company also helped the centers The aagewans must visit every village within their district several times develop training modules in basic computer skills, including a month and call on multiple households within each village. They make Microsoft basics and desktop publishing. SEWA offers these these visits to collect membership fees, sell RUDI products, collect trainings to communities. installments on microloans or insurance policies, share new information, Those who complete Microsoft training receive a Microsoft and organize meetings. certificate. Others receive the GVK’s certificate. 40 The women have to keep track of any number of financial transactions. “electronification” of money and SEWA’s activities. I thought This includes gathering cash that has to be turned over to their district that the benefits of electronic money could be enormous for associations once a week. The district associations then transfer the them... I saw our interests overlapping. funds to the SEWA organization that manages the program — such as SEWA and Dr. Seshadri agreed to a partnership with MasterCard, and SEWA Bank for loans, VimoSEWA11 for insurance, RUDI Company for together piloted the digital money initiative. RUDI products, and others. The slow transfer process extends travel time, and the manual accounting costs time and money for everyone. Android technology Under the new program, the aagewan records and updates her daily But this all changed when SEWA invited Dr. T.V. Seshadri, who at village transactions through mobile applications on an Android the time worked for MasterCard, to the launch of the Bodeli CLBRC. smartphone. Once she enters the transaction, an account linked to As he remembers: her instantly transfers the amount to the bank account of the targeted MasterCard had already been involved with SEWA, and I program. The aagewan has a grace period of 15 to 30 days to deposit the came to the launching of the Bodeli center. As I observed the activities, I could see a synergy between our efforts at cash collected into her bank account — the same as using a credit card. Digital money at work: The SEWA-MasterCard partnership has reduced transactional costs of grassroots leaders and improved efficiency and outreach 41 BOX 4.2 Green Goes Digital SEWA’s Hariyali Green Livelihood Initiative shows how digital money works for one enterprise. The Hariyali initiative sells smokeless cook stoves and solar lights Photo Credit: SEWA Archives to members on installment. Members usually pay an equated monthly installment of 200 rupees (US $3.30) for solar lights and 300 rupees (US $5.00) for stoves over a pre-determined period, usually 10 months. To keep installments current, the aagewan normally treks to the SEWA sells the smartphones to the aagewans on installment. The women buyer’s home, collects the fee and, several days later, relays it to receive cash incentives based on the number of recorded transactions. the district association. The district association in turn deposits This encourages them to maintain and use the phone faithfully. the sum into the Hariyali bank account. SEWA expects this initiative to improve planning, efficiency, margins, Under the new system, the aagewan collects the installment then and outreach. keys the transaction’s details into her mobile phone, which instantly updates the database. The system automatically deducts the Dr. Seshadri believed that MasterCard’s efforts toward “electronification” amount from the aagewan’s MasterCard account and deposits it of money coincided with the principles and activities of organizations in the Hariyali account. The saleswoman has a certain grace period like SEWA. But, in SEWA’s case, he saw that the back and forth method to deposit the collected cash into her MasterCard account. of processing funds was inefficient. He was certain that MasterCard could help them change this: When I first had discussions with SEWA, I wanted to know MasterCard does not see this where the need was and how we could fit in. It was clear that collaboration as a temporary project, such an electronic money system could bring greater efficiency for the organization and more security, wealth creation, but rather a business model and a sense of dignity of participating in a wider economic to take worldwide. transference system for members. It was good for them and good for our strategy. 42 He also saw MasterCard’s collaboration with SEWA fulfilling another corporate goal: bringing broader segments of society into the formal financial system: There are many people who, while they may belong to small savings or credit groups, are excluded from formal banking and quasi-banking systems. We had been working with government to bring those excluded ones in. We needed partners to help us do this. SEWA, with all its members, fit that partner model. The use of digital money through the mobile phone allows SEWA to process real-time financial transactions. According to the women who use the MasterCard application, it makes processes clear and efficient. NOTES Are there fees? Yes. MasterCard doesn’t see this collaboration as a 11 VimoSEWA (www.sewainsurance.org) is a SEWA temporary corporate social responsibility project but rather a business sister organization that offers insurance products model to take worldwide. “It has to be financially viable,” says Dr. Seshadri. to members that help cover risks to life and health. The SEWA pilot shows that the savings from using the system far VimoSEWA does not provide the rainfall insurance exceed the small costs. For example, the trips an aagewan makes to discussed in Chapter 7. collect fees in villages and make deposits in banks each month drop off dramatically. “My dream is that the SEWA model will be the global model for MasterCard,” states Dr. Seshadri. “There is so much right with an organization like SEWA that deals with the marginal and the government… and there is so much opportunity.” 43 Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh CHAPTER 5 Space Age Technology for Ground-Level Planning The Sukhi Mahila SEWA Mandal GIS Initiative “A map tells you where Two-thirds of SEWA membership comes from rural you’ve been, where you are, areas. Of those, nearly 60 percent work in agriculture. and where you’re going.” In addition to small and marginal farmers, they include – Unattributed landless agricultural sharecroppers and informal laborers, who rank among the sector’s neediest and most vulnerable. Vadodara district spans an area of 7,794 square kilometers in eastern Gujarat. The state’s most populous district, Vadodora is home to significant tribal populations working in agriculture. The district CLBRC sits in the tribal blocks of Chotta Udaipur and Pavi Jetpur in the Bodeli village of Sankhedataluka.12 The GVK is managed by SEWA’s Sukhi Mahila SEWA Mandal women’s federation, which runs a range of local initiatives, including several programs on natural resource management and agricultural productivity. The region has long suffered water shortages for both drinking and irrigation. The lack of irrigation water hurts farm productivity, which reduces earnings and increases hardships. Local farmers looked to SEWA, through its agricultural campaign, for solutions (see box 5.1). 45 B O X 5 .1 SURVEYING FROM SPACE The GIS initiative began as a joint venture between the Sukhi Mahila The SEWA Agricultural Campaign SEWA Mandal GVK and the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO). The initiative aimed to plot land use across a cluster of five villages The GIS initiative demonstrates SEWA’s agricultural campaign in the Bodeli region, collecting imagery on farms, cropping patterns, in action. The program offers farmers an integrated package soil health, and water sources. The SEWA team also wanted to track of credit, technology, and other inputs, such as a tool-lending roads, rails, canals, land slope, and other factors to find solutions to library. It focuses on capacity building, financial and land use issues, particularly access to water. other support services, such as health and child care, and The team decided on five villages as potential pilots: Simaliya, Bodeli, creating links with seed companies, research institutes, and Muldhar, Chachak, and Alikherwa. The SEWA team met with villagers marketing organizations. to learn about their crop patterns and what water sources they used The agricultural campaign begins where most SEWA for drinking and irrigation. They also asked farmers about various campaigns do — organizing. SEWA helps members form agricultural issues, such as seeds, fertilizers, and other inputs. self-help groups for collective responsibility, which often SEWA discovered that water ranked among the most pressing concerns. clarifies which socioeconomic issues need attention. Water levels in wells had dropped because of over-drawing, and rivers The farmers then help design strategies to address these had receded because of sand mining. The scarcity of water affected issues and to organize for bargaining power. cropping patterns and farm production, which diminished incomes and SEWA builds capacity among small farmers by educating multiplied hardships. them about the latest technological developments and The team singled out Simaliya village. They collected statistical data then helping them acquire needed skills, including basic about cultivation areas and river, pasture, and forest land.13 The team methods of cash management and awareness about global also counted the number of water sources and studied soil and crop economic changes. types. ISRO provided satellite images, which were integrated with Most important, the campaign works to link farmers with cadastral and topographical maps. markets and to build alliances with the private sector through farmers markets and farmers associations. 46 Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh Mapping local water resources with a GPS device 47 BOX 5.2 WALKING POINTS With hand-held Global Positioning System (GPS) devices in tow, the SEWA in Vadodara District team walked the entire Simaliya area to mark every well, borehole, pump, and water tank, and noted whether each was functional. When they found a water source, they clicked the device, which recorded longitude and latitude coordinates of the spot. These would be registered as the ground control points (GCPs). From these Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh coordinates, the team created a map (see figure 5.1). F I G U R E 5 .1 GPS Point Collection: Water Sources SEWA has 45,000 members in Vadodara district, a number soon expected to grow to 60,000. The GVK in the Bodeli area earns 39 percent of its income from savings and credit, 0.83 percent from RUDI, and 60 percent from other activities, such as the sale of solar lights, of which it has sold over 6,200 across the district. The center has nearly 300 savings and credit groups, and, because of SEWA’s fair lending practices, many members have reclaimed land and belongings from pawn dealers and money lenders. Loan repayment is over 95 percent. Farmers grow mostly cotton, paddy rice, sweet corn, vegetables, legumes, and groundnuts. The center has helped them link their produce sales directly to buyers to avoid middlemen. This has turned pricing in favor of the farmers. The CLBRC often uses mass texting to update local farmers on Bore prices and trends. (Most farmers have one or more cellphones.) Handpump Water Tanks The text blasting helps farmers and increases the GVK’s efficiency. Well As one staff member said, “What used to take us all day by calling, we can now do in 15 minutes.” Thinking of future sustainability, the center in Bodeli has recently completed a three-year business plan. Source: ISRO, SEWA. 48 Then, using ArcGIS software, the Bodeli team overlaid the coordinate FIGURE 5.3 data on a village cadastral map before imposing the cadastral map on a satellite positioning of Similaya village (see figure 5.2), which Cadastral produced a cadastral map with GPS points (see figure 5.3). Map of Simaliya Finally, the team amended the map to reflect what the GCPs had with Water recorded. The software automatically made the changes. Most of Sources the previous data was collected in 2005, so the addition of the new GCPs required moving the positions of some landmarks, such as a canal that had to be remapped. Bore Handpump Water Tanks FIGURE 5.2 Well Cadastral Map of Simaliya Imposed on a Satellite Map Source: ISRO, SEWA. Source: ISRO, SEWA. 49 GIS mapping also helps villages with other land use issues — for example, The center plans to add other indicators to the GIS on demographics, soil types and cropping patterns. Figure 5.4 plots the soil type of landhold- health and child care centers, schools, and essential services. It will also ings in Simaliya and the current cropping pattern, followed by a suggested make GIS information available online. better cropping pattern based on soil health and other considerations. The SEWA women have shared the maps with the village council (panchayat), the block development officer, and villagers. By merging F I G U R E 5.4 cadastral maps with satellite imagery, village councils now have a Soil Type Across Land Holdings useful land-use planning tool. For example, panchayats can pinpoint SOIL TYPE CURRENT SUGGESTED CROPPING CROPPING PATTERN PATTERN Source: ISRO, SEWA. 50 who has access to water and who doesn’t. They can compare regions to see where most water shortages occur and identify households facing the worst conditions. Then, with the data analysis, village leaders can press ahead to address the water scarcities with local solutions. This may mean constructing check dams, de-silting existing check dams, farm ponding, or contour bunding.14 These projects create employment for local villagers. With the help of SEWA, leaders can tap into government programs like MGNREGA (see NOTES chapter 2) that fund local public works projects. 12 Bodeli is a census town — that is, it lacks a notified Cadastral maps, coupled with farm surveys, provide important municipal entity but still has a significant rural population. information on land holdings and on what farmers are growing. With the GIS and other center technology, farmers learn to find safe water 13 The Bodeli natural resource management database contains and measure soil composition and health. They then decide which crops 17 layers that includes geomorphology, lithology, structure, to grow in different areas and which fertilizer will increase production. slope, village, watershed, transportation, water bodies, settlement boundary, land use, cadastral, cluster boundary, In the next chapter, the CLBRCs take to the air again — but this time and pH, EC, N, P, K status. with radio frequencies. 14 Contour bunding is one of the simplest methods of soil and water conservation. It creates embankments of earth cut as long steps into a hillside. The technique slows the pace of runoff, reducing soil erosion and overall water loss. 51 Photo Credit: Vinayak Ghatate CHAPTER 6 Tuning in to Grassroots Needs SEWA’s Community Radio Initiative “Community radio is It was only natural that, under the JSDF program, 10 percent radio and the CLBRCs would champion an initiative for 90 percent community.” community radio. A locally managed radio service – Zane Ibrahim, Community Radio Advocate is the perfect dissemination tool for community news, and radio spreads the word about center activities in, for example, agriculture, health, education, and microenterprise. More important, community radio has proved to be a key agent of social change and empowerment for the grassroots. As Sajan Venniyoor, founder of the India Community Radio Forum, stated, “Community radio has the ability to bring about a revolution in society.” Source: SEWA Archives. 53 LISTENING TO THE LISTENERS Meanwhile, teams from the local GVKs drew up business and studio SEWA entered the broadcasting business by first surveying the local construction plans, trained staff, and stockpiled programming. A number populations. They asked about radio listening habits — that is, when and of local businesses committed to advertising with the stations, including how long members tune in and which programs they follow. The survey fertilizer companies, educational institutions, Ayurveda treatment also queried listeners on what community radio should offer once it was centers, and soap, dairy, and mining companies. The tourism industry up and running. This part of the survey was intended to spark interest will also reach out to the public through community radio. in the coming community radio, or Vali no Radio as it became known. SEWA teams have already drawn up In 2008, SEWA applied for a community radio license for the Ganeshpura business and studio construction plans, center in Mehsana district. In 2010 the Pij center in Anand district and trained staff, and stockpiled programming. Vivsavdi center in Surendranagar district also applied for licenses. Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh A recording session in progress 54 B O X 6 .1 SPORADIC FREQUENCIES Ganeshpura center reached the final stage of approval when Taking in Revenue the government allotted it a frequency. As of this writing, a formal declaration is imminent. Visavadi center’s process is Possibilities for local radio advertising abound. In addition to also nearing completion, and it hopes for formal notification of small and large local businesses airing their products and features, licensing soon after Ganeshpura. Other centers at earlier stages people want to sell things: animals, seeds, grains — anything. still wait for final approval. Government, too, needs local outlets to publicize workshops and In the meantime, preparation continues. Ganeshpura has drawn community service messages. They pay as much as four rupees up a design for the station (see figure 6.1). (US 2¢) a second for airtime. F I G U R E 6 .1 The station can also charge for wedding, birthday, or other announcements. And, when necessary, radio staff can rent Ganeshpura Station equipment to villagers — for example, to a local singer who needs a voice recording or to NGOs and local news media that have to use studio facilities. Source: SEWA. 55 The center has also trained the Teams broadcast two or more content and technical teams — times a week, announcing their 18 members in all. Team members airings in advance through a have learned content development community calendar. The teams and management, programming, have organized listening clubs editing, recording, and more. for children, young people, They’ve toured other community and the elderly. Children push stations to see firsthand the for afterschool programming live running of facilities. “We’ve with stories and news for kids. connected with Radio Mirchi, Older people want traditions India’s biggest FM radio station,” kept alive through music and says team member Mayaben Patel. religious programming. And “They’re helping to train us youth ask that the community through workshops and forums… radio cover popular culture they see it as part of their and technology. These sessions corporate social responsibility.” generate significant visibility for the Vali no Radio brand. Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh Teams have assembled a detailed program schedule so that, once Vali no Radio will be formally approval comes and broadcasting launched once all centers facilities become available, they receive final licensing approval. Vali no Radio’s members have been hit the ground running. Daily topics trained by India’s biggest network In the meantime, radio staff continue to record hundreds of hours of of FM radio stations, Radio Mirchi include agriculture and crop pricing, content on topics such as health, girls’ education, agriculture, taking women’s empowerment, education, health, environment, rural develop- advantage of MGNREGA and other government programs, traditional ment, community development, and programs for youth. and devotional songs (bhajan), games, and even somber but important subjects like female feticide. Content teams in all the centers have begun “narrowcasting.” This means that they find temporary facilities from which they can broadcast prerecorded material, such as traditional music, to a limited radius of village-level “listeners’ groups.” The groups then offer feedback on the programming. 56 COMMUNITY COHESION She tells us that it was one of the team members who, in the role of In Ganeshpura, as elsewhere, teams anticipate the final launch of reporter, broke a huge local story. Vali no Radio. Traditional musicians and singers record songs and dance A local Hindu couple who didn’t have children decided to adopt music for narrowcasting, while radio teams work at other activities, a child. But they deliberately adopted a Muslim child. This caused a sensation in the area… it had never been done before. But the such as selling RUDI products or clean stoves and solar lights. couple wanted to make a gesture for peace, so it was a big story. Mayaben Patel, who’s been with SEWA for 13 years, used to be a farm Radio has also played a vital part in local awareness campaigns, laborer. She now coordinates Ganeshpura’s community radio team. especially about diagnosis and treatment of illnesses, such as polio. “We are six members here. All are trained in every aspect of the Radio can transmit vaccination information and other campaigns station’s operation: reporting, recording, producing, editing announcing… quickly to the public. All six must be ready to pick up any function of the station’s work.” A post production session in progress under the trees Photo Credit: Vinayak Ghatate 57 BOX 6.2 Many local people, especially the older ones, believe TV has had a negative impact, driving out traditional values and replacing Radio vs. TV them with harmful programming. This explains why many groups of traditional singers come together to record for the radio. They Mayaben said that, when they first discussed radio with say it’s the best way to keep the culture alive for younger generations. villagers, most claimed they didn’t listen to radio at home — A senior member of the radio team, Valiben Parmar, recounts that they watched TV. “But as we explored, we realized that she’s been with SEWA for 25 years, working most of those years most did listen to radio on mobile… so now we asked them with the midwife cooperation. “My life changed drastically after what time and what kind of programming did they want to I joined SEWA… I’ve even been to an FAO conference in Rome. But listen to on their mobiles.” I now work only with the radio.” Many asked to hear traditional and religious programming, And why not? As she explains with a grin, “My name is Vali… so they and, most important, they wanted to hear about people named the radio station after me!” like themselves. “They told us that most TV programs are about rich people, not representing them,” said Mayaben. Chapter 7 looks at CLBRC interventions that target farmers. “They thought that radio was better for taking up issues that poor villagers care about.” The SEWA team also noted that TV is usually reserved for the home after a certain time of day. Radio can go everywhere — in the kitchen or in the field — at any time. “We know that, with radio, we can reach out to people like us,” says Mayaben. 58 59 Photo Credit: Somnath Bhatt CHAPTER 7 Help for Farmers Hedging Crop Prices and Mother Nature “We farmers never WHY DO INDIA’S FARMERS GO HUNGRY? had access to crucial Indian agriculture employs almost 60 percent of the information on price — we were always losers. population, and small and marginal farmers make up The CLBRC gives us over 80 percent of India’s farmers. The National daily market price Sample Survey Organization (NSSO) defines small information. It increases our bargaining position.” and marginal farmers as those earning less than 32,500 rupees (US $553.00) per year or holding – Sunitaben, Farmer less than five acres of land. Approximately 75 percent of India’s female work force now works in agriculture. The main source of income for these farmers is agriculture; but, with no control of their markets, most don’t earn enough from farming to meet even household needs. This forces them into borrowing or pushes them to look for other ways to make a living. Half of Indian farmers are trapped in debt, and most lack the resources to pay back loans, which drives many of them into the grasp of the high-interest informal money lenders. 61 Photo Credit: Vinayak Ghatate Marginal farmers face challenges at every stage of the agricultural cycle However, debt cycles are only the end result of why India’s farmers Most poor farmers know little about how to navigate formal borrowing stay locked in poverty. From the beginning and through the growing channels — or find it too intimidating. With some luck, they may turn to cycle, farmers face a web of obstacles that keep them from rising out family members; but most are forced to call on the local high-interest of poverty. This is what happens: money lender. A maze of decisions and barriers If these farmers do procure funds to begin growing, they then face a At the beginning of each growing season, farmers must decide which new set of hurdles. They must have the know-how to test and maintain crops to grow and which seeds to use. This process includes evaluations proper soil conditions and employ other technical inputs to prevent crop of everything from seeds, fertilizers, and pesticides to what machinery, diseases or low germination. A wrong decision could turn productive livestock, or irrigation facilities are needed and whether they will need soil infertile, destroying any hope of drawing a livelihood from the land. And there are always the hazards of too little or too much rain, which extra help to cultivate and harvest crops. can wipe farmers out. And, without precise information, they can only guess at soil conditions, If the farmers succeed in making everything work until harvest, they market demand, or crop prices at harvest time. must then find storage and suitable markets as well as ways to transport Next, inputs require cash, which, if the farmer has saved from last year, crops. After that, they should be ready to bargain for fair prices. Since he or she can invest. However, most haven’t made enough income to most farmers can’t store crops and know little about bargaining and cover even basic household expenses — such as education, medical pricing, he or she must sell at whatever price is offered; otherwise, crops costs, and other needs. So they turn to borrowing. will spoil and the year’s work is wasted. 62 SEWA, through the CLBRCs, is helping small farmers fight this debt and “The farmers, through the CLBRC, can now promote their poverty cycle with two singular initiatives: The Village Spot and Futures own produce — commodity, price, quality — so the buyer Prices Board and Farmers’ Rainfall Insurance. Both were simple concepts, knows exactly where to procure. Earlier, the farmers but applying them to small-scale Indian farmers was revolutionary. searched out the buyers; now it is the other way around.” – Lalitaben, SEWA organizer in Anand THE VILLAGE SPOT AND FUTURES PRICES Sit, sell or switch? Spot prices are the current The community commodities selling price of a commodity. board has removed much of that Futures prices are what traders uncertainty. Tapping into the real speculate the commodity will time prices of India’s National sell for at a future set date. Commodity & Derivatives Exchange Commodities sellers consider Limited (NCDEX), SEWA centers these prices when deciding when have begun posting weekly prices Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh to sell goods — now or later. for cotton, castor, gum, and other Commodities boards also list locally grown crops on a board in past prices. Sellers and buyers the village square. Farmers from the use these to detect trends. surrounding area gather to appraise The village spot and futures prices board is updated weekly market conditions: Should they sell now or sit on their crops based on better future guesses? Both concepts are simple... Or, comparing past and future trends, should Applying them to small-scale Indian they switch to growing other crops or not farmers was revolutionary. plant at all? Futures prices generally come closer to predicting crop prices than the Gujarat’s small farmers traditionally took their crops to markets and previous year’s data. accepted the best price offered. For most, it was speculation and luck. ve s. WA Archi Source: SE They knew last year’s prices but had no idea about this year’s crop values. They always ran the risk of arriving at the traders to find low prices. With no other choice, the farmers then had to “distress sell” their produce. 63 SEWA receives a feed from NCDEX, then bulk text-messages the prices B O X 7.1 to all the CLBRCS. The center “poster” then writes the commodities price information on the village central community board, takes a picture of The Warehouse Receipt System what she’s posted with her cell phone, and sends the picture back to the center to confirm accuracy. The local CLBRCs make this service available SEWA piloted the Warehouse Receipt System at Mehsana. to all farmers, SEWA members or not. The CLBRC encouraged its small and marginal castor-growing Farmers then gather and appraise the board prices to decide if they’ll members to store their produce in a warehouse made available sell or hold on to their crops in hopes of better prices later. They base by the Gujarat State Warehousing Corporation, a government part of their decision on the availability of storage facilities and access to service that provides scientific storage facilities to the agricultural working capital for the next season. To help farmers in both these areas, sector throughout the state of Gujarat. SEWA piloted the Warehouse Receipt System (see box 7.1). With this kind The stored produce became collateral against which the farmer of local information, farmers decide what to plant the following year. could borrow cash for up to 70 percent of its value. This amount The service saves the farmers’ time and transport money. Previously, was more than enough to provide the working capital needed for after arriving at markets, they found prices far below their expectations the next season. and so they let crops go at below fair value prices. One local farmer, Sunitaben, contrasts the difference between before and after: “We In the first year, 17 farmers took advantage of the facility, storing farmers never had access to crucial information on prices — we were produce worth 966,458 rupees (US $16,000). Against this amount, always losers. But the CLBRC gives us daily market price information. 655,360 rupees (US $10,900) in loans were disbursed. It greatly increases our bargaining position.” SEWA sampled a cross-section of the farmers and found that most farmers benefited from the facility. On average, farmers received RAINFALL INSURANCE 2.5 rupees more per kilogram as compared to harvest time Farmers invest time, money, and often just hope in the prospect of a (assuming they could have sold at market price at harvest time). good growing season. But if the weather turns against them and the More important, the data showed that farmers generated working harvest fails, the setback can ruin the farmer by way of time lost and capital for the planting phase of the upcoming season without cash spent on seeds, fertilizers, and other necessities. having to rely on unfair money lenders. The rainfall insurance plan for SEWA farmer members started with a simple premise: if there is life insurance, vehicle insurance, and health Farmers invest time, money, insurance, why not rainfall insurance that offers protection if crops failed because of too much or too little rain? In addition, SEWA and often just hope in the prospect proposed including member farm laborers in the plan because they of a good growing season. also lose wages when the weather turns harsh. 64 Paid by the millimeter Fair pricing and payoffs for the farmer SEWA developed the insurance plan for its members in conjunction At first, most farmers shied away from paying another fee, especially with several insurance companies, including ICICI Lombard GIC Ltd., since the concept of rainfall insurance was unfamiliar. SEWA brought IFFCO Tokio, and Agriculture Insurance Company (AIC) of India Ltd. agricultural insurance company representatives into the villages to SEWA piloted the program by selecting villages in blocks where weather conduct workshops that explained policies and answered questions. stations could record rainfall. SEWA farmers within 30 kilometers of the They calculated farmer annual incomes and their potential losses to weather stations were eligible to participate. assess the kind and number of policies needed. Finally, the insurance representatives and SEWA sat together and agreed on a fair pricing policy. Rainfall insurance differs from crop insurance, which only benefits farmers who own their land, leaving out marginal farmers who lease or work the farms. With rainfall insurance, anyone can pay the premium and receive the payout. First indications of the plan’s success show Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh that, over the last two years in just one area, 450 farmers have received compensation payments of more than 80,000 rupees (US $1,330). A SEWA agricultural insurance policy holder Chapter 8 examines how SEWA’s successful food company — RUDI — The terms of the insurance plan state that if rain falls below a certain level supports farmers and an entire rural distribution system. in that area, the farmer gets paid; if rainfall rises above a certain level, the farmer also gets paid. Insurance pays between two and three rupees per millimeter up or down, with a maximum payment set beforehand. Calculation of rates takes into account times of year, including monsoon season, and stages of planting. For example, heavy rains at harvest time pay higher. The plan assigns parameters based on the previous ten years’ rainfall. 65 Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh CHAPTER 8 RUDI A “Pure and Beautiful” Rural Distribution Network “The ultimate goal of farming Suryaba Vikramsingh Jadeja is a mother, community is not the growing of crops, organizer, and proud SEWA member. She works but the cultivation and perfection of human beings.” through the Visavadi GVK in Surendranagar district. – Masanobu Fukuoka, Suryababen first heard of SEWA through a meeting. “I joined in 2004,” she remembers, “mainly Agricultural Philosopher because I wanted a SEWA bank loan of 35,000 rupees (US $580) to de-mortgage my land.” She later borrowed again from SEWA, this time 30,000 rupees (US $500), to pay for one of her children’s education. In 2006, Suryababen decided to become a SEWA RUDIben — or RUDI saleswoman. As such, Surababen became an integral part of SEWA’s dynamic rural distribution network: the RUDI network. This chapter examines the workings of this unique system. It traces how its components function in an organic symmetry, beginning with the RUDI Company. The next section then visits some of the growers and suppliers at a SEWA food cooperative before, in the final segment, returning to Suryababen at work in her local village. 67 THE RUDI COMPANY TRANSACTION OVERLOAD At first, RUDI faced some severe operational Formed soon after the first JSDF project, restraints. A typical RUDIben conducts several SEWA’s rural food distribution network transactions a day, which she must share with the known as the RUDI Company or, simply, Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh district level body, traditionally through a weekly RUDI, has become one of the CLBRC’s office visit. Multiplied across the entire team of most successful grassroots programs. RUDIbens in Gujarat and Rajasthan, this translates The RUDI rural distribution network links into tens of thousands of transactions every week. marginal farmers, food processing centers, rural saleswomen, and village RUDI lacked a system for tracking these transactions and for monitor- households to create income and furnish quality products to small-scale ing inventory, which often delayed and mixed orders. And there buyers. The RUDI chain gives work to thousands of women — from the was no way for women to share sales data with the RUDI Company. farmers who grow produce, to the processors who clean and package Without good sales data, the company couldn’t develop sound the products, to the RUDI saleswomen, known as “RUDIbens,” who supply operational strategies. the rural households (see figure 8.1). SEWA members run every stage of F I G U R E 8 .1 the chain through the centers. The chain reaches more than a million How RUDI Ties the Grassroots Chain Together households across 14 districts in Gujarat and other districts in Rajasthan. R GROUPS PRODUCER RUDI revenues also support the Farmers that MENT GROUPS PROCUREMENT grow raw CLBRCs, with RUDI being an active agricultural produce Women’s PANY RUDI COMPANY component of every center. At this groups that buy produce time, there are six RUDI processing from farmers SEWA body RUDIbens that buys and do agricultural centers in Gujarat: at Pij, Anand the initial produce, Saleswomen END CONSUMERS processing that buy district; Aniyor, Sabarkantha; Nandasan, usually stored packaged at a district Individual or goods from Mehsana; Bodeli, Vadodara; Radhanpur, association institutional RUDI Company office customers Patan; and Visavadi, Srendranagar. and sell to that buy from customers RUDIbens SEWA expects that all 14 GVKs will soon house RUDI processing centers. Source: SEWA. 68 Communication suffered, too. Important information that RUDIbens needed was slow to reach them, often delivered by car messengers, which added to transportation costs. In addition, RUDIbens managed most of their own data, some of it on paper by non-standard methods. This opened the door to human error and made systematic analysis impossible. Combined, these errors and costs suppressed RUDIben incomes. The centers went to work to overcome the obstacles through a customized RUDI Management Information System (MIS). RUDI mobile app and mini printer A SOUND AND SIMPLE SYSTEM But would the women use it? Especially, when many had never even SEWA wanted a straightforward system that RUDIbens could held a mobile phone before. access through their mobile phones. SEWA, in coordination with ekgaon technologies and supported by Vodafone and the Cherie In early 2013, SEWA held a four-day training on the RUDI MIS. A number Blaire Foundation for Women, designed and developed the RUDI of SEWA members attended, including 30 RUDIbens, 6 RUDI MIS master MIS, also known as RUDI Sandesha Vyavhar. trainers, 5 CLBRC master trainers, 10 district The MIS has three distinct interfaces: organizers, and 6 district coordinators. Attendees watched demonstrations on the web-based and RUDI MIS mobile applications. Twenty RUDIbens volunteered • A web-based interface for RUDI’s central to pilot it. management team that tracks sales, inventory, and overall data for analysis. After some early testing and refining, RUDIbens in • A web-based interface for the district Surendranagar and Anand districts are now smoothly associations (who are in direct weekly feeding data to the MIS through mobile phones and contact with RUDIbens) that monitors computers. Other districts will soon follow. Photo Credit: Somnath Bhatt stock, sales, payables and receivables, The mobile application is built on Java and functions and data for the RUDI Company. on the average lower-priced mobile phone. The • A mobile-based interface for RUDIbens text is in Gujarati, and the online forms are simple that enters sales details into the MIS to use. RUDIbens can buy a mini printer that works and shows personal details relating to A SEWA leader introducing RUDI mobile app to RUDIbens with the application via Bluetooth. This allows them to present their sales performance, inventory, and wages. rural clients with an instant receipt. 69 Saleswomen can now complete every transaction through their cell GROWING FOOD FOR RUDI: phones. They post and record orders and cost, and check and update THE GANESHPURA TREE inventory. Each product is logged by name, code, size, and quantity. GROWERS COOPERATIVE The saleswoman registers whether it is a cash or charge order. Entering the orchards at SEWA’s remote Ganeshpura Vanalakhsmi Women Tree Growers Cooperative Once the order information is entered, in the Mehsana district, the visitor the RUDIben sends details to the soon sheds the rough edges of a processing center, where the order pressurized life. The smell of lemon is prepared for delivery. drifts everywhere with the wind, The entire application was the while the calls of hidden parrots, brainchild of the GVKs in collaboration myna birds, and cuckoos trill, warble, with ekgaon technologies. As with Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh and whine across the surrounding all SEWA interventions, demand forest. Shimmering fruit trees and drove design. According to SEWA garden crops under a brazen blue sky General Secretary Jyotiben Macwan: complete the tableau, which can’t A RUDI sales van crowded help but conjure a spell of calm, At the start, we saw the RUDI system as a way to benefit by the local customers harmony, and purpose. the local farmers. But as we proceeded, we found that the women were not meeting their targets; so we did workshops But don’t be lulled by nature’s tranquility. There is serious business with the women to determine where they were having afoot. This ten-acre plot of land is home to a GVK that is hard at work problems. This inspired the development of the application. supporting and sustaining SEWA programs. The Ganeshpura women run a SEWA cooperative that grows strictly organic produce for RUDI The next sections bring us closer to the RUDI process customers and for buyers across Gujarat. at work, demonstrating the real end value of the The cooperative also hosts a greenhouse, technological innovation — namely, how it creates farmers’ field school, demonstration center, income for SEWA women. and a tools and equipment lending library We tour a CLBRC that hosts (see box 8.1). a RUDI supplier cooperative Sources: SEWA Arc hives and later meet again with our RUDIben seller. 70 B O X 8 .1 PLANTING AN IDEA SEWA became engaged in Mehsana district in the mid-1980s. Tools of the Trade It was responding to the pleas of landless workers laboring on some of the large farms. The owners restricted the workers’ eligibility for Marginal farmers must usually work with old, worn tools that work to only 10 – 15 days a month; and, as landless agricultural workers, restrict efficiency and thus productivity. To improve output, they only received 10 rupees a day or about US 20¢. This fell far short SEWA decided to create a tools and equipment lending of the income needed to feed a family. library where, for a small cost, poor farmers can access quality One older member remembers the workers’ first encounters with SEWA: farming equipment. When SEWA started coming we didn’t pay attention at first, Income from the rentals provides for the maintenance and but they kept coming. They started encouraging us to organize upkeep of the tools and even allows for the expansion of and to start thinking about what our “issues” were. At that time the tool-lending library. So far, the pilot phase of this initiative the issues were not getting a full month’s work or not getting has created 14 of these outlets that have furnished modern fuel for cooking. If we went to collect fuelwood we would then tools to over 2,000 farmers. lose one day’s labor. “We can raise children, we can raise families… we can raise saplings.” Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh SEWA’s Vanalaxmi Tree Growers Cooperative 71 SEWA began helping the workers to organize and strategize. FUTURE GROWTH The major issue was access to fodder and fuelwood. SEWA asked Since then, SEWA’s Vanlaxmi Tree Growers Cooperative at Ganeshpura, the women if the local area held any abandoned land that might as it was named, has expanded to grow fruit, grains, seeds, and be farmed. None knew of any, so SEWA approached the local vegetables. It now counts 55 cooperative members, 20 of whom work governing body, the panchayat. After a series of discussions, the on the farm. Each is responsible for a plot of land over a period of time panchayat, in 1987, agreed to turn over 10 acres of unused land. until responsibilities are rotated. Recently, one cooperative member, Niruben Senma, built a greenhouse for The women went to work on what most crops that need more humidity than heat. considered a bush-tangled wasteland. SEWA provided her technical training. Fifty-five members spent three years clearing the land of debris and snakes. The farm is totally organic and now To obtain water, they had to carry it in competes with other organic growers Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh pots from the village a kilometer and a at the annual state fair. The local district half down the road. Once ready, the administration promotes it as a demon- women decided to use the land first to stration center for farmers. raise saplings that could be grown and sold. Organic lunch served by members of the cooperative The Ganeshpura land is on a 30-year lease that expires in 2017. The Forestry Department supplied the saplings. Members fear that once the lease expires the panchayat may find Seven women began to raise and sell saplings, from which they gained new value in the once barren, now bountiful land. The cooperative an income of 4,500 rupees (US $75). They returned to the Forestry vows to fight any moves to disenfranchise them. Department for more, and soon all the members were raising saplings, In the meantime, life — and innovation — continues at the cooperative. a new skill for everyone. The revenues built their self-confidence and “We have a continuing problem with electricity,” says Neeruben. their trust in SEWA. After clearing several legal hurdles — and undergoing “So now the center is exploring the possibility of converting the whole trainings in planning, bookkeeping, and auditing — the women registered plot to solar power.” their group as a SEWA cooperative. The Ganeshpura center women also work with SEWA’s Hariyali Green “People laughed at us,” recalled Valiben Parmar. “They said, ‘How can Livelihood Initiative to sell the efficient cook stoves (see box 8.2). women run a cooperative?’ Our answer was: ‘We can raise children, we Their goal is to sell 200,000 of them. They market the stoves by can raise families… we can raise saplings.’” setting up centers where women can test between traditional ways of cooking and cooking with the new technology. SEWA sees the Hariyali initiative as a step toward lowering the carbon footprint. 72 BOX 8.2 The Hariyali Green Livelihood Initiative In Mehsana, as in other districts, SEWA’s Hariyali Green Livelihood During the week, the sellers Initiative sells clean, safe, efficient, environmentally sound technology send their orders by cell to rural women. The campaign’s roll-out products are the efficient cook phone to the SEWA district stove and the solar light. office, which buys from the manufacturers and The cook stove technology is simple and cuts fuelwood use in half while Source: SEWA Archives. keeps stock available. The generating the same heat. And, because it produces less smoke than tradi- saleswomen then pick up tional cook stoves, it makes the environment cleaner and breathing easier. their orders on Saturday and Solar lights save electricity and provide backup lighting when the usually deliver the same day. electricity goes out, which happens often in rural areas. The lamps are A typical user is Shataben, a tobacco farmer, who has bought both handy for finding the way through the fields at night and have a small cook stove and solar light. “The light is very useful,” she says. “I save attached harness that allows women to keep their hands free when electricity and bulbs.” working. The lights have another advantage: they can be used to recharge cell phones. She finds the light essential to her nighttime working hours. “It’s better to have the light to see scorpions and wild animals.” Staff at the centers tested over 32 stoves and 36 solar lights before deciding on which models SEWA members would sell. But, with Her young ones, she says, also find good uses for the light: “The children feedback from users, they continue to add improvements. For example, can now take the light and study anywhere.” installing a small pan at the bottom of the stove improved ease of The cook stove has cut her firewood use by 50 percent daily. It also cooking, while adding a regulator knob allowed women to control the saves her the hours spent collecting firewood and brings health benefits. size of the flame. Other additions from SEWA users have even helped “With the efficient cook stove we don’t have to blow, so we don’t inhale to lower the cost of manufacturing the stoves. the smoke from the fire as we did with the older cook stoves.” SEWA master trainers go from village to village to introduce the This is because of a fan inside the new stoves (gasification technology). technology. They demonstrate how the cook stoves use less wood and In addition, the stove gives the user three options for recharging it: how women breathe in less smoke using them. They also explain the electrical recharge, a solar panel recharge, or battery backup. Adds convenience and cost-savings of the solar lights. And, of course, they Shataben, “The stove is portable… I can move it and use it anywhere I like.” remind women of the environmental benefits of using the products. The women who sell the appliances are qualified to repair them if needed. 73 FUTURE INCOME TRANSFORMED BY TECHNOLOGY The SEWA cooperative at Ganeshpura is always looking for new sources Throughout the life of the farm, its survival and success have depended of income. For example, the cooperative used to buy seeds from the upon technology and training from the GVKs or from GVK-linked market and resell to members. But the quality was variable, causing institutions. This input might include help with making fertilizer, building many dissatisfied members to return the seeds. Instead of giving up greenhouses, digging wells and ponds, tilling fields, navigating through on selling, the center linked with Gujarat State Seed Corporation Ltd., legal processes, or filling out forms to access government programs. which now supplies the women with certified seeds. Currently, they But it’s not just a question of the cooperative’s success. Belonging to SEWA sell quality seeds to over 40,000 SEWA members across the district. and this particular part of the rural supply chain has altered many lives on a personal level. As Geetaben, another cooperative member, recalls: We were just laborers in the field. Now we frequently travel to Ahmedabad, and have even gone to Rome to participate in FAO sponsored seminars. The president of our co-op even visited the UN and China. I also travelled to China for a conference… I had to fly! (Before I was even afraid to look at an airplane.) Everything in China was so clean… with all patches of land used because vegetable Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh prices are very high. After we came back we learned that we should not leave any patch of land unused. My children are all part of this cooperative. One daughter has taken computer training through the GVK while still doing RUDI in Gujarati agricultural work. I’m very proud of them. The center often links with institutions that help improve the cooperative’s work. For example, the Anand Agricultural University (AAU) taught the group vermicomposting,15 which is now their A RUDIBEN AT WORK primary fertilizer; and Hindustan Petroleum Corporation Ltd. furnished Suryaba Vikramsingh Jadeja, whom we met at the beginning of the them with a much-needed power tiller. chapter, comes from a conservative community, where women were discouraged or even forbidden to leave their houses: Finally, the center is now in its fourth year of what has turned into its biggest income booster — ecotourism (www.sewaecotourism.org). When I first joined SEWA, I had to be out and about; people in my community talked and speculated about my comings and Says Neeruben, “We have many groups, especially students whom goings… When we went to meetings in Ahmedabad, I had to we talk to about growing and protecting the environment. We talk leave early and come back late. My family was very upset, and to them about traditional ways of growing, etc. We also have many I would always promise them that next time I would come back corporate people and government officials as visitors.” earlier. But I didn’t and still kept going. 74 In 2006, Suryababen decided to sell RUDI products. The first thing she Suryababen manages all the administrative and bookkeeping respon- did was to take out another SEWA loan, this time to buy a motorized sibilities for the sub-distributors, keeping track of reports, billing, and rickshaw. She knew she would have to travel as a RUDI worker so she other records. She does this through the mobile application, which, she prepared herself for her family’s concerns about her whereabouts, reminds us, was developed through consultations with RUDI women. especially at night. After some domestic distress, her husband finally In addition to selling to her neighbors, Suryababen calls on highway decided to accompany her. “When he saw how I was taking and fulfilling restaurants and hotels to market her products. She now reaps sales of orders, he understood,” remembers Suryababen. “By the time we 10 – 15,000 rupees (US $165 – $250) a month from each of ten different returned home it was midnight… he had seen what I did all day and now hotels, and has reached gross monthly amounts as high as 500,000 felt comfortable about my work.” rupees (US $8,000). She says that the new application will help her Suryababen started out selling in her own village but has since enlisted expand. “Out of 90,000 people in the area, already 28,000 are RUDI RUDIben sub-distributors in six villages (see box 8.3). She keeps 10 percent customers — but there is still lots of room to grow… The center is even commission on her own sales and 5 percent of the sub-distributors’ sales. helping me plan my drop-off route to save time and fuel costs.” Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh A RUDIben selling RUDI spices in the neighborhood 75 BOX 8.3 Suryaben is proud — and relieved — that she’s repaid all her loan installments from her own income. “Now I can concentrate on my A Loyal work without worrying about my family being worried about me.” Clientele She also takes pride that RUDI follows the Gandhian model of Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh growing and selling locally. Most products come from local farms RUDI sells mostly to poor and SEWA cooperatives (previous section), and by selling these people who have to buy products, RUDI supports the local growers, and at fair prices for in small quantities. Even everyone. Other products may come from other areas, but there though RUDI costs a little A RUDI monthly grocery kit more because of the quality standards, remains a network that buys, sells, and barters across the grassroots. customers are convinced of its value. Recalls Suryababen: Finally, when asked about the name “RUDI,” she smiles. “It’s a good I began showing people the superior attributes of our products name because the first SEWA member was named ‘Rudi,’ and in our by dissolving our spice powders and the competition’s spice language Rudi also means “pure and beautiful.’” powders in water. Those with artificial coloring or additives would turn the water a different color. Ours, which had the From the pure and beautiful, we turn next to the harsh and desolate: higher quality, kept the water pure. This is because all RUDI the Rann of Kutch and its salt farmers. products are organic, natural, and minimally processed. After my demonstrations, people began snubbing the local shops — who, in some cases, went house to house with free samples of their products to make people stop using RUDI. But customers stayed loyal. They preferred unadulterated RUDI products that, they believed, were healthier in the short and long run. RUDI recently began selling “kits” for special events or for the customer’s estimated monthly requirements. A typical monthly kit for an average family might contain 20 kilos of millet, 2 kilos of rice, 3 kilos of dahl, 500 grams of chili powder, 1 kilo of tea, and 100 grams of turmeric. Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh RUDI will expand its product line as it tracks what customers want and what is feasible to market. Recently, RUDI teamed with the Bajaj Lighting to sell bulbs under the RUDI brand. The RUDI Company will soon add other household items, such as teas and soaps. A RUDI sales van on its daily rounds to nearby villages 76 NOTES 15 Vermicomposting is the process of composting using various worms to create a mixture of worm humus or worm manure. These castings have been shown to contain reduced levels of contaminants and a high saturation of nutrients. 77 Photo Credit: Vinayak Ghatate CHAPTER 9 “Will the Rest of Me Go to God, if My Feet Can’t?” The Salt Workers of the Little Rann of Kutch “Access to the Internet It’s been said that salt works begin where civilization brings a whole new world ends — in coastal and desert areas under an indifferent to us. In today’s world, everything is online. The scorching sun. CLBRCs help us keep pace. And you would be hard pressed to find a lonelier place on earth than the Rann (desert) of Kutch I even learned how to get in western Gujarat state or a more forlorn way to scratch out a livelihood than do the people my daughter admitted who live and work for eight months of each year on the desert salt farms. to college online. It saved The Great and Little Ranns of Kutch together comprise about 30,000 square kilometers. The area so much time and money... may be the largest inland salt deposit in the world. Its austere landscape sweeps flat and bare it was unbelievable!” to the farthest horizons, and bakes under summer suns that can push temperatures as high as 50° Celsius (122° Fahrenheit). All signs of – Dinaben, Salt Pan Worker vegetation disappear long before arriving at the destination, and most fauna, with the good instinct that nature gave them, Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh seem to avoid the sterile landscape. In fact, it’s been said that the only creature that can live on the salt flats is the scorpion. The scorpion and the migrant salt worker. 79 A SEASONAL TREK Salt farmer families have been migrating to the Little Rann of Kutch for more than 55 years to live and work on the salt flats. Some 30,000 families now take up residence there from October to May. Most live in rag huts and, with little access to green vegetables, milk or other nutritious food, get by on a diet of onions, potatoes, and chili peppers or, if lucky, a little wheat and millet. Malnutrition, especially among children, is endemic, and almost everyone suffers some health issues, especially skin and eye maladies and high blood pressure. Children, tied to the desert life, lose any chance of structured education and grow up playing in salty water under blazing suns, sometimes helping their parents in the salt ponds. The Little Rann is a seasonal marsh, filling up with rain water during the monsoon season (June to September). When workers arrive in Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh October, the ground is either still flooded or too damp to set up camps. Thus, at the beginning of the season, families may have to walk in and out 14 kilometers each day before and after work. Until they became SEWA members, salt workers A one-way trip can take three hours. were victims of exploitative money lenders The work is grueling and time-intensive. The process requires digging, This last chore provokes some pious concern among workers. pumping, and raking — and to ensure faster evaporation to raise the Feet that have spent a lifetime being hardened from tramping down saline levels, the worker must pack down and contour the pans with his salty ground resist burning at the end of life with the rest of the or her bare feet (see box 9.1). body at Hindu cremation. As one salt worker asked, “Will the rest of me go to God if my feet can’t?” 80 B O X 9 .1 From Brine to Crystal — Making Salt Photo Credit: Martje van der Heide The salt workers of Little Rann of Kutch make salt by digging wells and evaporation ponds (patas) and transferring subsoil brine from the wells to the ponds. The brine is pumped into successive shallow patas where evaporation takes place until ready for crystallization. The last pata is where the salt is actually produced. The process translates into a series of chores that have remained mostly unchanged for years: selection of sites; well-digging; preparation of the land nearby for a series of evaporation ponds; and construction of ponds by securing the land to contain water. This hardening and evening out of the earth for the ponds is achieved by trampling it repeatedly with bare feet. The workers must also set up channels for moving the brine. Diesel pumps move the water to flood the evaporation ponds with brine from the wells. Then, in the last stage, workers must break clusters of salt into crystals with heavy wooden rakes before the crystals are heaped and loaded into trucks and transported to storage centers. At the end of each season, each salt farmer produces about 700 tonnes of salt, which he or she sells for approximately 110,000 rupees (US $1,800) to salt traders. But during the season, the farmer must also spend nearly 60,000 rupees (US $1,000) on diesel fuel for the water pumps and another 25,000 rupees (US $400) on maintenance, repair, lubricants, transportation, etc., leaving the farmer, almost nothing to survive on for the year. SEWA’s CLBRC took a strong stand against the unscrupulous practices of the local money lenders. Photo Credit: Anupam Joshi A salt pan worker at the Little Rann of Kutch 81 A CLBRC STEPS IN SEWA’s involvement began when, several years ago, salt workers approached the center at Surendranagar to complain about conditions Photo Credit: Martje van der Heide with the money lenders. Heenaben Indravadanbhai Dave, the SEWA district coordinator, remembers that: At first, SEWA didn’t have any technical expertise in salt farming, so we went to talk to a semi-government agency, the Central Salt & Marine Chemicals Research Institute, Exploitative money lenders keep salt farmers in perpetual debt which looks after the salt industry across the entire state. We approached them first with the issue of farmers not CYCLE OF SERVITUDE earning enough money. After harvesting the salt, workers face a bigger problem: unscrupulous money lenders who are also the same traders that collude through their unions to set the salt prices. Typically, when a salt farmer begins the season, he or she needs to borrow cash for start-up, especially diesel fuel to run the pumps that move the water. The lender might well grant the loan, but insist that the farmer first agree to a pre-set price for the salt that the lender/trader will pay at the end of the season. For example, the farmer must sell it back at 100 rupees (US $1.66) per kilogram even if the market price is 400–500 rupees per kilogram. If the farmer wants the loan, he has no choice but to accept. And so begins a cycle that keeps salt farmers in perpetual debt. The worker has to spend 70 – 75 percent of the family earnings on the diesel fuels that keep the pumps draining water from the patas 24 hours a day. Food, medicine, and other essentials quickly consume whatever is left of the original funds. Then, at the end of the season, the farmers Photo Credit: Martje van der Heide have little or no hope of recovery since they must sell their salt at the pre-determined lower price — and still repay the loan. If the farmer More than 60,000 can’t pay, then the dealer/lender rolls the balance into the next year. women salt workers are SEWA members today Either way, farmers are bonded to the lenders year after year. 82 BOX 9.2 Sun, Salt and Disease Photo Credit: Martje van der Heide High blood pressure, eye problems and skin diseases are rampant among salt workers. SEWA tried to convince them to wear protection from the salt and sun out on the Rann, but most of the workers shrugged it off, saying it wouldn’t make much difference. Salt farmers at a meeting to discuss the merits of producing industrial salt The SEWA center then decided to supply caps, dark glasses, and gum boots to 100 people and asked that they wear them while They suggested that, instead of producing edible salt, the farmers working for just 15 days. They then took another group of 100 and should turn to producing industrial salt, a different process that posed asked them to continue working in their normal unprotected dress a small risk and required a fee of 50,000 rupees (US $832) from the for the same period. Both groups were measured and monitored farmer to switch over. But, they said, the industrial salt sells at a much for eye, skin, and blood pressure conditions. higher price on the market than the edible variety. The chemists were certain that it was worth the risk of change-over and that the farmers could produce the industrial salt. SEWA now had to ramp up technical training in the new production methods. After two or three farmers learned the techniques, they Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh became SEWA master trainers to teach others. SEWA also provided revolving funds for farmer start-ups and sought out direct selling linkages with factories and government agencies who procured salt. This proved a boon for farmers as they cut out the middleman traders and sold SEWA has supplied gumboots and other directly to major agencies like Gujarat Alkalies & Chemicals Limited. protective apparel to salt workers After the 15 days, those in the control group saw their blood pressures Recently, the Surendranagar GVK began scheduling telemedicine drop significantly, and many of their eye and skin diseases subsided. sessions for the salt pan workers. Farmers can now listen to and consult with doctors through the center’s technology facilities. The center has SEWA called a meeting to share the results with the families. Once also arranged for health checkup camps in the settlements (see box 9.2). others saw the evidence, SEWA was besieged with requests for the protective clothing. SEWA turned to the District Industries Centre In addition, the GVK recently piloted a RUDI mobile application among (DIC), and together they were able to provide more than 7,000 the salt farmers of Little Rann. women with protective apparel. 83 NEW NEGOTIATING POWER BUSINESS EFFICIENCY Ultimately, SEWA did bring farmers together with salt buyers and The CLBRC has been crucial in inspiring business thinking and planning salt traders to discuss prices for products. These negotiations removed and in brainstorming ways to increase farmer incomes and cut costs. all guessing between parties and eliminated further exploitation of A few examples include: the farmers. • Seeing just one salt pan working, SEWA encouraged farmers to build a second that worked simultaneously. Production doubled. • Farmers spent extra time and money transporting salt to storage. SEWA convinced buyers and factories to come with their own trucks to pick up salt. • Farmers had to buy their diesel fuel on the open market, far away from the Rann. The cost of getting the diesel from there to the Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh farmers’ pumps added an extra 10 rupees per liter (US 17¢) over the cost of the diesel. SEWA lobbied the petroleum company supplying the fuel to build a pump near the farmers that supplied only diesel and only for the salt workers. The company agreed, SEWA has eliminated the middlemen and linked salt workers directly to companies and farmers began saving 10 rupees per liter on fuel costs. SEWA trained farmers to work out costing and devise their own • One diesel generator was using 200 liters of diesel to run one business plans. So now when they meet with traders, they know their water pump. After discussions with farmers, SEWA brought costs, their time, and the market prices. They also understand the in five pumps and configured the one generator to run all five, different grades of salt and the pricing of each, which used to be an using the same 200 liters of fuel. SEWA has provided funds to easy way for traders to exploit farmers. Usually, groups of five families 80 of its members to do the same. work together to negotiate prices. • After two successful seasons processing industrial salt, SEWA decided to employ its own laboratory to monitor magnesium According to Heenaben, “We have linked the buying companies with and calcium levels. The farmers could then target salt grade sales the SEWA members without a middleman. The company’s manager is to buyers according to their needs. now in our trade committee.” 84 BOX 9.3 GOING SOLAR Under the JSDF project, the CLBRCs have lately been focused on helping India’s Salt salt farmers switch from diesel-powered water pumps to solar-powered pumps. This technology, they conclude, could easily double farmer India’s salt industry is many centuries old. But during the incomes. Here’s how: colonial period the British crippled the industry with heavy • The switch from diesel to solar powered pumps will reduce diesel taxes as a way of forcing Indians to import salt from Britain. consumption by 1,000 liters per farmer per season. • It reduces harmful emissions by 2.650 tonnes per farmer per season. It was no accident then that Gandhi’s opening campaign • Switching also saves a subsidy of 10,000 rupees (US $66) per farmer against British rule began with his famous March to the per season on diesel. Sea from his ashram in Ahmedabad to protest this injustice. • Moving to solar increases livelihoods by 60,000 rupees (US $1,000) per farmer per season on a permanent basis. The life of each India is now the third largest producer of salt in the world. installation is normally over 20 years. A SEWA saltpan worker shows off her new solar panel Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh 85 “Before SEWA, we had to agree to whatever price the traders fixed. Now we come with knowledge — about the quality of our salt, about the market prices, about what we can negotiate. We decide the prices. We are now experts about salt quality.” Since 2012, SEWA has installed seven pilot solar-powered pumps to test For many of the salt workers, SEWA’s reputation was an incentive to the viability of switching to solar power. Results have been so positive trust them. “We knew SEWA because of SEWA outreach in villages,” that salt farmers are now lining up in large numbers to make the change. said Gauriben Oducha. “Then I attended a meeting where they talked about how SEWA was helping the salt farmers. After that I joined.” However, capital cost remains a barrier. Most farmers cannot afford to finance the cost of the pumps. The CLBRCs are now working with banks Another salt pan worker, Dinaben, comments on what access to and others to find permanent ways for more salt farmers to move to solar. CLBRC technology means for the lives of salt farmers: “Access to the Internet brings a whole new world to us,” she says. “In today’s world, DESERT VOICES everything is online. CLBRCs help us keep pace.” More than 60,000 of the women salt farmers now belong to SEWA. For Dinaben, this alone is a miracle. “I even learned how to get my We met only a relatively few of them during our visit, but these members daughter admitted to college online. It saved so much time and money… were happy to volunteer their thoughts on how SEWA and the CLBRCs it was unbelievable!” have changed their lives: Finally, Jashuben Patel summarizes the real significance of SEWA’s “Before SEWA, we had no information about anything — about prices, support — worker empowerment. “Before SEWA we had to agree to markets,” said Ghavnaben Oducha. “We didn’t know how to maintain, whatever price the traders fixed. Now we come with knowledge — monitor, or improve quality. SEWA training taught us how to do this.” about the quality of our salt, about the market prices, about what Another woman, Kuwarben Bhimani, recalls: “We used to use tires to we can negotiate. We decide the prices. We are now experts about catch water. We never got good prices, could hardly get a full meal for salt quality… we are empowered.” the entire family.” Adds Rajuban Vithiya, “Now, instead of the traders keeping track of the money we spend, we keep track of our own diesel fuel costs, machinery, spare parts, and outside labor costs.” 86 Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh Empowered members now keep track of their costs, work out business plans and negotiate better with buyers 87 Photo Credit: SEWA Archives CHAPTER 10 The Fresh Beauty of Age-Old Tradition The SEWA Hansiba Museum “There is no creation without Expanding technology — and putting it in the hands tradition; the ‘new’ is an inflection of poor women to improve their livelihoods — may on a preceding form; novelty is always a variation on the past.” seem to be first on the CLBRC agenda. But preserving and passing on tradition ranks just as high among – Carlos Fuentes, Writer SEWA values and CLBRC aims. And when the former can kindle the latter, beautiful things occur. Such is the case for SEWA’s Hansiba Museum at the CLBRC in Radhanpur, Patan district. At this two-acre park, regional embroidery skills that have been passed down for centuries are displayed, celebrated, and taught to new generations. It is Gujarat state’s first community-led museum — set up, supplied, and maintained by the local women artisans to exhibit their ancestral crafts and tools. Women artisans in Patan district have always been known for their embroidery skills and tradi- tional crafts. The museum honors those practices in showcasing 19 different styles of traditional embroidery as well as early artifacts of indigenous farming and household tools. Along with the handicrafts and heirlooms, the museum displays many of their associated stories and legends. Curious visitors can find books on handicrafts and local culture. 89 Photo Credit: Vinayak Ghatate A skilled embroiderer at Radhanpur CLBRC, Patan The Hansiba Museum team uses natural and locally available material like jute rope and bamboo to set up displays, which also include local Working master artisans also sell their recent pieces, often based mud mirror work, kothi. on new techniques, designs, and color combinations. Some of the artisans offer public sessions to explain the techniques of embroidery The artifacts and crafts spring from the tradition of the local communities: and other craftworks. They also train SEWA women who want to Aahirs, Rabaris, Chowdhary Patels, and Mochis. The SEWA district associ- learn the craft. Over the years, the museum embroidery center has ation spent two decades collecting hundreds of items, which the museum provided livelihoods for up to 15,000 artisans who sell their products displays on rotation. Some of the clothing has been so lovingly preserved under the Hansiba brand (see box 10.1). that it appears as fresh now as when made 60, 70, even 150 years ago. 90 B O X 1 0 .1 Hansiba Design: Empowering Women through Traditional Embroidery SEWA’s Hansiba brand fuses indigenous embroidery techniques with Photo Credit: Michael Riley contemporary designs. Every hansiba creation is hand-fashioned by artisans whose roots in the craft go back generations or even centuries. Over 15,000 rural women artisans have found sustainable livelihoods contributing their skills to the fashion brand. Sixty-five percent of all sales go directly to the artisans, who are the suppliers, shareholders, With the museum as their inspiration, and managers of the company. young designers can view the The brand is inspired by Hansibaben, the first rural artisan of SEWA, colors, styles, and embroidery work who was a model for thousands of rural women in how to rise from of their great-grandmothers. poverty to self-reliance. www.hansiba.in Many of the SEWA craftswomen also take advantage of the center’s “sample banking” system, which allows artisans to deposit their work and secure a loan against it. Women artisans needing quick funds aren’t forced to sell their work at give-away prices. With the museum as their inspiration, young designers can view the colors, styles, and embroidery work of their great-grandmothers. Then, merging this with their knowledge of modern fashions, which they’ve gained through access to technology at the GVK, they create new fashion lines based on the old. The results can be exquisite, Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh and SEWA’s Trade Facilitation Centre (STFC)16 maintains many of the Radhanpur designs in their resource center. 91 The Radhanpur center helps local artisans, young and old, to hone their But lately we were disappointed to see that women were dressing embroidery skills to match international standards. Training from the in factory-made clothes, which meant that all profits went to the GVK gives women the chance to research new trends and new markets, mill owner. and employ computer software to design their creations. Artisans then We decided to create an awareness campaign in the villages about how mill-made fabrics took employment away from village women learn to market their creations on e-commerce platforms. and why they were bad for the body. We were so successful that, The embroidery work gives many home-based artisans a much-needed in one village, they gathered at the main market and every sister livelihood. As one explained, “My life hangs by the thread I embroider.” offered up her mill sari or fabric to be burned in front of everyone. And as a master craftswoman, she feels the pride of knowing her skills As one woman told us, “We do not like wearing these synthetic factory-made fabrics. But where is the alternative?” are valued, even in the global fashion context. We later invited many of our younger women to come to the Rashida Ibhrahimbhai Ghanchi manages production for Hansiba. CLBRC with the cloth they like to wear. We then played a game She tells a story of how SEWA women made a profound point to where we placed all the cloths in the center, blindfolded the some of their sisters about using mill-made saris and fabrics rather women, and then asked them to come and feel for the cloths and than traditionally made ones. textures that were most appealing to them. They did, and we told them that we would train our sisters to create what they like — In our community, there is one day that all marriages take place. and that’s how we started this whole collection. In past years, when we went to the marriages we saw that all the women dressed in what was traditional, hand-made clothing. Next: Watching the CLBRCs at work. Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh The SEWA Trade Facilitation Center (STFC) houses the tailoring, market research, and marketing units of the operation 92 NOTES 16 The STFC links SEWA artisans in the informal sector with the global market by helping coordinate standards in the design, production, and marketing of traditional embroidery. STFC also works to build business enterprise skills among the rural craftswomen to gain economic security and full employment. 93 Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh CHAPTER 11 Life at the Center A CLBRC Journal “In the past, very few people This chapter stops at two diverse centers to feel in the villages were aware of the pulse of day-to-day activities of a GVK. We visit what programs were available for them. But now, through Pij CLBRC in Anand district and Visavadi CLBRC in the centers, each and every Surendranagar district. We also look in on a GVK-run household is aware, so we school program in Patan district. are able to access and avail ourselves to so many programs. As a result, the community PIJ GVK, ANAND sees this as their center.” Visitors to the center in Pij feel the activity as soon as they enter. A RUDI processing center (Pij – Chandrikaben, is one of six such centers) hums with activity as masked, gloved, and aproned women sit in groups Spearhead Team Leader sifting, cleaning, weighing, and processing the food items that will fulfill RUDI customer orders. Behind them a young women works in front of a large computer screen, where she enters and tracks RUDI transactions through an intricate online fill-in form. This is the sales processing system that receives orders that RUDIbens in the field have relayed through their mobile phone applications. SEWA women keep the tracking and ordering system working flawlessly. 95 The women are proud to be RUDI workers. RUDI buys directly from the small and marginal farmers at a fair price, they say, which gives the farmer a living wage. This cuts out the middlemen, who often cheat farmers. In addition to buying from small farmers, the agricultural groups within Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh SEWA buy and trade among themselves. “We are procuring from small local farmers during season,” says Jahshodaben, “for example, wheat, rice, mustard seeds, and fennel. But we also try to buy from farmers in other areas, such as salt from Surendranagar and chili peppers from Radhanpur.” A community mobilizer at Pij GVK, Anand The center supports two shops in Anand district, where the RUDI goods One of the women packaging the goods, Jahshodaben Manubhai Rohit, are displayed. Over 200 RUDIben work throughout the district. pauses to tell us when approached that she used to be an agricultural Focused technology training worker, but now she’s happy to find steady income as a processor. In another room of the center, a class of ICT trainees of different ages “I’ve worked here for almost six years… I’m paid by how much I process. and gender focus intently on their computer screens. They accept our I’m a landless worker, so there would be no other opportunities for me interruption with cordial resignation. We ask about the courses. without the center.” Lataben Raymonbhai Kristi, today’s trainer, who gained her training Another processor joins the conversation: “Some of us are saleswomen, from SEWA, tells us that the most popular courses are in basic Microsoft too. When we don’t have orders we come to work as processors until Windows, Word, PowerPoint, Excel, and Tally (an accounting software). the season picks up; so we can always earn some money.” And there’s a fast-growing interest for training in web design, desktop The center staff know that a machine could do much if not all of their publishing, and using the Internet. “But,” she adds, “if someone comes processing and packaging. But they choose to process manually to keep with a particular course need that we don’t have, we try to link them to more women employed. a local technical institute.” One of the students, a soft-spoken young man, tells us that he’s trained with SEWA in Word, Pagemaker, Photoshop, and CorelDRAW. “I’ve now started my own graphics business,” he says proudly. “I do posters, brochures, and other print designs.” Another young woman, Dharmistaben Vikrambhai Parmar, says she Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh received training through SEWA and has just passed the 12th placement (grade). “I’m now a master trainer and working for SEWA, entering member profiles into the MMS.” She next plans to learn the Internet. “Before joining SEWA I could never have imagined doing so much.” SEWA members at the Pij RUDI processing unit 96 We also meet Jyotiben Dipakbhai Makvana, in the 10th placement, She also tells a story of how a soldier from Chikhodra came home who’s learning Excel. She wants a career in accounting. Next to her from the army with an injury. He decided to take computer training sits her friend, Priyankaben Maheshbhai Makvana, who’s working on with SEWA because he didn’t know what else to do after the army. PowerPoint. She wants to be able to draw and make presentations. He finished the course and started looking for work. To his surprise, the army contacted him. They had learned of his new computer skills When asked why they chose to take their training at the SEWA center, the answer comes back quickly: they would have to pay more for this and now wanted him back to teach them to other soldiers. training elsewhere. SEWA only charges between 250 to 1,000 rupees (US $4.15 to $16.60) per course, depending on the length. Course duration varies from 15 days to 3 months. But, they add, SEWA Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh teachers are more patient and understanding than institute teachers. This, they agree, helps A SEWA grassroots leader helps a member them learn better. complete a form for a government pension scheme Finally, we hear from Lataben Parmer, a woman who came to the Another young girl, Jyoti Parmar, tells us that the locality of the class is center to train in accounting. After she completed the training, she said, a critical factor. “My mother wouldn’t let me go far to learn computers — her husband asked that she teach him the software (Tally). She obliged, but because this center is close to home I am allowed to take courses. and to her surprise he immediately put the training to good use: Otherwise I wouldn’t be able to attend.” “He took the new skill that I had taught him and found a job with a big company in the city!” Many of the people who train at the center start their own businesses or turn to teaching others. One male graduate set up a computer lab in Lataben Raymonbhai Kristi says that the center wants to provide a Ahmedabad. Others are teaching in the local schools. Lataben tells us wider range of technology training. “We don’t want to send anyone that doctors, lawyers, teachers, school principals, and other professionals to outside institutes.” come to this center for basic computer training. 97 A connected curriculum More services The center also reaches out with e-education and teleconferencing. The Pij center doesn’t forget the trades, offering courses in household The Pij GVK has teleconferencing capabilities, from which it conducts wiring, hardware repair, and other practical skills. Trades people often training in four sectors: come for demonstrations of tools and appliances. The center has also • Natural resource management (agriculture, animal husbandry, water, arranged for the Water Supply Board to show village women how to and forestry) repair the water hand pumps. Now they maintain the hand pumps in the • Medical (training in eye and skin diseases, pediatrics, and nutrition) village and train others to do the same. So far, 16 women have become • Education in English, math, and science for the fifth, sixth, and pump experts. seventh school standards • E-governance that informs people about available government A partial list of other Pij CLBRC activities and services includes: programs and how to access them. • Printing and web design services • Disaster preparedness training in conjunction with the India Disaster Mitigation Institute (AIDMI) • Internet telephone service to speak with relatives abroad • Technical and management training for starting businesses; and • A savings group to encourage saving and good money management. Photo Credit: SEWA Archives In addition, the center acquired 100,000 saplings from the Forestry Department to raise and sell. Each year, the Forestry Department targets and pays a set number of nurseries to receive trees and other flora, A doctor at Apollo Hospitals tele-conferences with a patient at SEWA’s CLBRC including decorative and medicinal plants. The e-education and teleconferencing link the center to prestigious The Pij center also linked 18 young girls with outside training in eye care. institutions and experts, such as Anand Agriculture University, Apollo They’ve all since found technical jobs in hospitals. Hospitals, a school principal in Ahmedabad for e-education, and local government officials to lecture on government programs. Members Meanwhile, as part of SEWA’s Green Livelihood Initiative, district gather at the center to listen and learn, and then teach others. members sold more than 1,500 solar lights. The saleswomen are also qualified to repair the lights. Being visually connected also means that doctors, for example, can see patients with skin or eye problems (see below), while agriculturalists can Like other centers, Pij has developed its own management information discuss and often assess crop damage. Sunitaben, a small-scale farmer, system. praises the technology: “Now, if our crops have any disease, we immediately have tele-agriculture sessions. Our queries get addressed then and there.” 98 B O X 1 1 .1 Lataben is in jail! Because SEWA is known and trusted widely for skill training, the GVKs sometimes get requests from unexpected corners. Photo Credit: Vinayak Ghatate This was the case when the superintendent of the district women’s prison contacted the Pij center to ask if SEWA might want to provide IT training for some of the inmates. “They have nothing to do but watch TV all the time,” he explained. “It’s boring and not helping them develop any skills for when they get out.” He asked if SEWA Parting conversations would come and teach basic computer skills to 26 women. During our visit, we heard from many women about how SEWA support and training have transformed their lives and, through them, the lives With some trepidation, Lataben volunteered: of others. For example, Mudaben Ravjibhai Kristi, a master trainer of Of course, on the first day I was very scared. I only saw paramedical treatment who received her training from SEWA, practices prisons on TV and worried that someone would hurt me. and now trains women in the surrounding villages in pediatrics. She And I didn’t know who I was dealing with… perhaps even murderers. Would I be able to build the right relationships measures the children’s height and weight and provides nutritional with the women? advice. In critical cases, she refers patients to Ahmedabad. “I can provide knowledge and medicines for the community families, even Her first week was tense, mainly because of her own anxiety. help with skin diseases.” But one incident really did shake her up: I didn’t realize that a white sari is the prison uniform. An older woman, Chandaben Punambhai Jadav, tells us: “I am illiterate So, not thinking, I came to the prison in a white sari… but I wanted to do something for my society. So, SEWA taught me to A guard grabbed me, assuming that I was trying to help others who need to fill out long forms to apply for government escape. It took a lot of explaining before he believed me. programs… Just yesterday I helped two old women apply. They will After that I wore a dress to prison. now get money from a government program.” Lataben finally settled into her work, dropped most of her fears, Other women refer to the sense of dignity they gain from being self- and successfully completed the training with the women. But back reliant. All agree that SEWA gives them a sense of security, even physical at the GVK a new joke made the rounds: security. As one woman voiced it, “We are safe among our sisters… “Has anyone seen Lataben?” in the streets or in the fields... we are together.” “Lataben? Oh, Lataben is in jail.” 99 Visavadi GVK The Visavadi center has set up a program that helps farmers stay apprised of daily buying prices. The way this works is that the companies At the CLBRC in Visavadi, Heenaben Indravadanbhai Dave, the in the area announce early each morning what they will pay for specific district coordinator, acts as guide and teacher. She first tells us that crops. The district association then calls farmers who have signed up for Surendranagar district has 45,000 SEWA members, 16,000 of whom the program to relay these numbers. By the end of the day, the district work in agriculture. It comes as no surprise then that the local CLBRC promotes agricultural services. Heenaben explains their focus: association and the farmers who want to sell at the announced price contact the companies. This way companies know who will sell, say, We try to help our members with services in, first, technical aspects of growing more and better crops; second, fertilizer castor, and farmers have buyers. input; third, linking farmers with banking institutions; and In the first year of the program, 600 farmers sold 300 metric tonnes fourth, linking farmers to markets, mainly castor and cumin, of castor. By the second year, 1,000 farmers had joined the service and where farmers can sell directly to companies. sold 800 tonnes. By the third year, 2,500 farmers sold 1,500 tonnes of We’ve also set up an agricultural tools library and rental for farmers. They always pay less to rent our tools than if they castor. And in the fourth year of the program 8,500 farmers had signed rented in the market. up with SEWA to sell 3,000 tonnes of castor. Heenaben says that the CLBRC also provides an electronic weighing machine for the farmers’ use. “At first they didn’t trust it; they were used to filling sacks of 25 kilograms each and weighing all the sacks together. But we showed them that doing that made it easier for the middlemen to shave product off the top.” Now, most farmers trust and use the electronic scale. SEWA also shows the farmers how to process and bag the product for delivery. Because SEWA arranged this chain of service, it negotiated a 2 percent commission from the Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh companies for each delivery. This can add up. Says Heenaben, “Half the cost of this center is supported by this initiative!” 100 BOX 11.2 The center uses the mass texting of mobile numbers to market its other initiatives and services. “Every day we have something to convey to Plugging the Bucket: farmers and others,” says Heenaben. A GVK Economics Lesson She also reports that SEWA women are using their mobiles wisely in other ways. If, for example, a solar light saleswoman in the field can’t A CLBRC doesn’t just provide training for income — it can answer a question about the product, she tells the customer to wait while change community thinking on economic paradigms. she calls her supervisor. When the supervisor comes on the phone, the At the Visavadi CLBRC, a trainer shows a poster of a bucket saleswoman puts her on speaker so everyone can hear the answer. to a group of villagers. The graphic shows sources of village Heenaben refers to a recent example of a SEWA trainer who was intro- income — farming, animal husbandry, etc. — going into ducing a government pension scheme to a group of people, encouraging the bucket. them to sign up. But, remembers Heenaben, people had doubts — so the trainer called her and put her on speakerphone. “I was able to explain the The trainer then asks the villagers what they spend outside entire scheme to a room full of people,” she says. “After my presentation, the village on things like water, electricity, education, 1,000 people signed up because they trusted SEWA.” transportation… even weddings and funerals. Centers, she insists, should always work around needs of the members The trainer then demonstrates that all these costs are leaks and their households. “We always look for ways to link technology to draining the village bucket, going into the pockets of outsiders. family needs.” So, she asks, what are ways we can stop the leaks and keep According to Heenaben, this center, like others, offers training based income within our own village? on the available expertise and what the community demands. Here in Lights come on in the eyes of the listeners. One woman Surendranager, agriculture is strong. But they also offer courses in other suggests using solar lights to save on electricity; another areas, such as basic computer, tailoring, and medical technology. proposes starting a local rickshaw business. More suggestions Lalitaben Dahyabhai Chavda, another trainer at the Visavadi GVK, tells us come, and an idea is infused: Innovate to buy and sell locally, that the CLBRC often helps people connect with government schemes and stop the leaking bucket. such as MGNREGA. “SEWA informs people about the programs and then helps them connect. We then charge a small fee for the service.” Thus, the CLBRC demystifies an economic model. She said they also help people, many of whom are illiterate, complete vital forms of all sorts. “We show people how to fill out papers for drivers’ licenses, insurance, passports… almost everything. If papers are missing, people can take care of it right here at the center.” 101 Bringing doctors and patients closer Today, we’re lucky to see one of the participating doctors, a local One of the more significant breakthroughs that technology brings to physician named Dr. Bharatbhai Patel, at work at in the training room of centers like Pij and Visavadi is the use of video conferencing for various the Visavadi GVK. kinds of screen-to-screen learning. Members can gather in centers and An intense, high-energy young man, Dr. Patel sits at one of a line of connect live with agricultural and animal husbandry specialists, or follow computer stations on a teleconference link-up. His animation and online training modules. Children who need extra school help can even passionate delivery to his on-screen listeners, who sit in several other receive tele-tutoring. SEWA CLBRCs as far as 70 kilometers away, confirm that he’s trying to Perhaps the most significant impact for rural communities is the GVK convey something important. use of telemedicine. As Kokilaben, a grassroots leader in Pij explains: Although Dr. Patel has regular office hours to treat patients, he volunteers The CLBRC has telemedicine, so community members come, for at least a few hours each week at the local GVK to connect with patients discuss with doctors, get examined and also get medicine. who can’t reach a doctor’s office or clinic. Today, Dr. Patel is dealing So it is doorstep treatment — specialized treatment, no with a possible outbreak of chikungunya17 in several remote villages. queues, no documents. The community values the service. Within the short time he has, he tries to diagnose and explain symptoms, Also we can impart health education trainings as well when they come for telemedicine sessions. treatments, and whether further tests or even hospital visits are needed. Photo Credit: SEWA Archives A member in Visavadi CLBRC, Surendranagar teleconferences with a doctor sitting several kilometers away 102 In addition to advising on tests and medicines, physicians like Dr. Patel “Everything comes back to the may also refer telemedicine patients directly to specialists, saving local centers… Services have to be steps and doctor fees — as well as wrong diagnoses — in the treatment decentralized and stay that way.” process. Sometimes SEWA arranges with the doctors to open the CLBRCs for blood screening or vaccination services. The telemedicine sessions save rural villagers time and money in transport costs. Doctors and villagers are linked to India’s respected Apollo Hospitals chain, the largest provider of telemedicine in India. The hospital in Ahmedabad schedules twice-weekly sessions to connect with different SEWA centers, where members and villagers gather. Everyone Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh is invited to come and ask questions or listen to medical information. SEWA decided on this idea when it discovered that many of its members could not connect with medical professionals. They began contacting local doctors to see if they would make themselves available and, Members of the Pij CLBRC, Gujarat and Sagwara CLBRC, Rajasthan teleconference with each other especially, if Apollo would take part. At first VSAT satellite equipment connected the centers during the sessions; but that stopped when the Dr. Patel signed on to the center program when several of his patients, satellite came out of orbit and crashed. The centers have more success who happened to be SEWA women, began telling him about the program now using Skype or Google Hangout. and asked him if he was interested in participating. Doctor Patel has consulted with 25 people during this session. He says As he learned more, the doctor says that he couldn’t help but admire he’s happy to assist: these women’s use of technology at the center, especially in the use of Now people can come to one of the centers and take part in a medicine. He realized that by helping these women he was helping the pre-scheduled medical session with a doctor instead of trying larger community, and himself: to treat themselves. At the same time, patients in other villages I can be a better doctor with telemedicine because I can gather at centers, either in a group if it’s a large community be more effective in treating a greater number of patients. issue, or sometimes for personal counseling. We advise on It’s important, too, for stopping epidemics, such as with medicines they should take and medicines they shouldn’t chikungunya, before they start. I not only give diagnosis and take. Often pharmacists are handing out medicines that aren’t treatment, but also can advise on prevention of disease. And needed or that could be harmful. This way we know what now people who might not have received proper medical medicines and tests will be needed before we visit a village. attention do — and we all save time and money. 103 Dr. Patel is just one of the doctors that SEWA women have recruited In another room, a young male science teacher leads a demonstration among private practices, family clinics, government hospitals, specialists, on the workings of a vacuum to a group of ten- and eleven-year old boys. and generalists. He believes firmly in the value of the SEWA program. His students gather intently around the table at the front of the room where he uses water and tube props to validate the science lesson. With these and other initiatives, the GVKs show that impact is strongest when intervention is administered locally. “The SEWA organization is Finally, we encounter a class of older girls who dropped out after the huge,” says Heenaben. “But everything seventh standard. They’ve returned comes back to the local centers… to take advantage of the SEWA- Services have to be decentralized and run program. Lataben, a girl of stay that way.” around 16, is typical. She recounts, “I’m just now starting to learn computers so that I can study PATAN: SEWA outside fashion designs for GOES TO SCHOOL clothing.” Some in the class The CLBRCs often work with or echo her goals, while others supplement government school express hopes to be teachers. curricula, on a fee basis, to teach The SEWA classes offer a diverse SEWA members’ children who curriculum that may include either can’t attend regular classes basic reading or tailoring, or or who had dropped out of school. even mobile phone and solar Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh SEWA especially wants to instill light repair. Many students attend a strong desire for education in regular morning school classes young girls because of the societal then return later in the day to pressure on them to skip formal take SEWA-run classes. SEWA has strived to bring children learning and marry early. back to schools, especially girls The village school committee not only approves, but encourages SEWA In the desert area of western Patan district, we visit a local school where to supplement the government school, and community support is strong. SEWA is offering classes. Bright-eyed, active children from elementary to Tutors from the village pitch in to help teachers, and many of the tutors, upper levels are engaged either in front of computers or in front of like Jayantibhai Vankar, a young man from the local area, are qualified teachers. In the first room, elementary- and middle-school-aged children teachers who can’t yet find positions in the government schools. are learning Word, PowerPoint, and Paint. Their faces glow with excitement. 104 Photo Credit: Vinayak Ghatate NOTES 17 Chikungunya is a virus transmitted to humans by virus-carrying Aedes mosquitoes. The virus can bring with it severe illness with symptoms similar to dengue But his mother was a SEWA member, so he’s very happy to be part of fever. The fever stage of the illness lasts two to five the SEWA initiative: days, followed by prolonged pain of the joints of the I grew up with SEWA and when I heard about this program extremities. The pain may persist for weeks, months, I was keen to participate. I have received lots of additional or even years. training from SEWA, including teaching methodologies and how to get children back to school. I try to convince parents that children, especially girls, need education, even if they have to work in the house. Some of the school committee members are visiting today, and the senior member, a grand-fatherly mustached man, expresses his approval: “I know how education gives confidence, and I know SEWA’s good work… I have seen these young girls, who were so shy, but now can speak out about their educational needs and what they want from life. They will be strong.” 105 Photo Credit: Vinayak Ghatate CHAPTER 12 Future Traditions Next Generations of SEWA and the CLBRCs “If you have planted a tree, Shobhnaben Kanakbhai, age 40, from Gajanvav village you must water it, too.” in Surendranagar district enjoys a special relationship – Indian Proverb with her daughter — a relationship enriched by their shared SEWA experience: When I joined SEWA, I took training at the Visavadi CLBRC to learn how to use computers and the Internet. I then encouraged my daughter, who was in 10th placement class, to do the same. After her training, we then taught a local paralyzed child what we had learned. Before we knew it, many people from the neighborhood began asking my daughter to teach them computer skills. So, now many of our children know how to use computers and the Internet, and my daughter earns extra income. Meanwhile, I have become a master trainer and trained over 60 SEWA members at the Visavadi CLBRC in computer basics and Internet. SEWA celebrates these relationships and feels a special obligation to the daughters of members like Shobhnaben as well as all daughters. It’s only natural that girls look to the work and values of their mothers as models for their own aspirations. So as more and more young women join SEWA, training, skill building, and guidance for the new generations become part of a sacred trust. Dynamic, young minds need the formation and encouragement that open livelihood opportunities and implant the pride of self-reliance. 107 NEW SKILLS FOR A NEW GENERATION Younger SEWA members are generally more educated and aware than their mothers and grandmothers. In addition to traditional Photo Credit: Vinayak Ghatate skills — such as agriculture, salt panning, and animal husbandry — girls look for new kinds of training from the centers, including health, microcredit, and, especially, new technologies. The interests of the new generation is a key factor With this demographic in mind, SEWA has set its sights on establishing in the design of skill building programs programs geared to girls’ education and skill development. The CLBRCs For example, SEWA is organizing product development workshops will reach out with a full range of income-generating programs that for embroidery artisans, their daughters, and their daughters-in-law. include training for both the new and the traditional, with programs that The workshops teach traditional skills while introducing contemporary bring income and professional dignity to younger members as well as designs based on market demand and commercial viability. The meeting community needs. innovative workshops imbue traditional embroidery techniques in young women, but also teach them to work with newer tools and technologies to earn a stable income. Younger generations thus enter the mainstream markets with confidence. Or, SEWA, through the CLBRCs, has been providing certificate courses in the electrical trades for youths aged 18 to 25 years. These courses have furnished graduates with much-needed incomes and the local industry with a much-needed workforce. With the success of these programs, the CLBRCs have been expanding their vocational trainings to prepare more youth for diverse trade careers in computers and programming, architectural drafting, desktop publishing, and plumbing. Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh And the CLBRCs have linked many of their programs with large corpora- tions like General Electric, Nokia, Idea Cellular, Apollo Hospitals, Kanoria Hospital and Research Centre, Sankara Eye Care, National Institute of A SEWA member makes sanitary napkins using cotton procured from SEWA’s marginal farmer members 108 Fashion Technology, JK Lakshmi Cement, Tata Motors Limited, PepsiCo, poor women has been real. The GVKs have transformed and uplifted the Coca-Cola, Reliance Industries Limited, Café Coffee Day, and others. lives of members — first, second and even third generations — and changed whole communities. They’ve worked with and influenced partner organi- CLBRCs AFTER THE PROJECT zations, local businesses, and local, state, and national governments. The Community Business Learning Resource Centers — or Gyan Vigran Three years into the project, the CLBRC model shows that it has universal Kendras — sprang from the mind of SEWA and the confidence of the and lasting significance. As project manager Vinayak Ghatate states: Japan Social Development Fund. The JSDF’s support for the project that The GVK has been tried, tested and honed to the extent that launched the business learning centers, the Economic Empowerment it has now spread from the established zones of Gujarat Project for Women, coincided with SEWA’s next great step in finding to remote rural locations in Assam, Bihar, Meghalaya, and ways to serve its members: through technology and business solutions. Rajasthan. The project has established a framework for These pages have recounted some of the far-reaching actions and impacts innovation, where modern technology is made user-friendly, of the GVKs since their introduction over the past three years. The GVKs mapped to local requirements, and applied to interventions opened their doors with high hopes and big ideas, and their impact on that create livelihoods and raise living standards. Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh SEWA’s CLBRCs have demonstrated a replicable and scalable model of technology and innovation driven grassroots development 109 But projects expire and funding ends. How will the JSDF-supported, Most members support this assessment. Chandrikaben, an agricultural SEWA-run GVKs subsist and evolve after the current project closes worker and spearhead team member speaks for many of her SEWA in 2015? Will the CLBRC momentum carry the centers into the future sisters, insisting that, as a sustainable, vibrant force for community growth and individual The Gyan Vigyan Kendras open doors to important and transformation? relevant information. For educated people, access to information is easy, but not for rural, poor, and illiterate “We at SEWA always see the project as a tool — a tool to enhance what women. Lack of information used to deprive us of the community needs and wants,” says Reemaben Nanavaty, emphasizing opportunities… But the GVKs have now given us access a basic point about SEWA. to information and opportunities. “The project isn’t central,” she says. “The community is central, and they The CLBRCs have also strengthened and tightened the SEWA member will drive the project, not the other way around.” network. Ramilaben, a grassroots leader and master trainer explains: In other words, if the CLBRCs and their programs are showing real value “Through the CLBRCs, we have faster communication with our members. to community development and well-being, then SEWA doesn’t fear We know their issues and needs, which, as a leader, I can address sooner. for their weakening with the close of the project. Members will ensure This builds our confidence and helps us win trust from our members.” the CLBRCs continue as community- inspired and community-driven enterprises. “That,” says Reemaben, “is our real Center.” “The community is central, and they will drive the project, not the other Photo Credit: Somnath Bhatt way around.” Empowered members ensure the CLBRCs’ continuity as community inspired and community driven institutions 110 B O X 1 2 .1 SEWA’s 11 Questions One place the CLBRCs might find answers is in asking themselves another set of questions — namely, SEWA’s 11 questions, which the organization has traditionally used to monitor member progress and organizational accountability. They are: 1. Have more members obtained more employment? 2. Has their income increased? 3. Have they obtained food and nutrition? Photo Credit: Anupam Joshi 4. Has their health been safeguarded? 5. Have they obtained child care? 6. Have they obtained or improved their housing? 7. Have their assets increased? That is, their own savings, land, house, work space, tools or work, licenses, identity SEWA’s CLBRCs will continue to evolve and adapt to the needs of the next generation cards, cattle, and their share in their cooperatives. 8. Have the workers’ organizational strength increased? Lingering questions 9. Have the workers’ leadership abilities increased? The advent of the centers has inspired many solutions, while their very 10. Have workers become self-reliant both individually newness raises several questions, starting with: What exactly is a CLBRC and collectively? supposed to be? Centers face different issues in different areas and must 11. Have they become literate? tailor services and priorities to meet specific needs of diverse demands. They must be both innovative and adaptable. Another question: How does a private sector partnership really work for the CLBRC? Several partnerships have been tested through the centers, with encouraging results. But how do the centers expand the private sector partnerships to reach more of the grassroots? Finally, there is the question of CLBRCs and the scaling up of SEWA. “We don’t want it to take another 40 years to reach 3 million SEWA members,” says Reemaben. “Will technology help? Will partnerships with the private sector help? That’s what we are trying to learn from these centers.” 111 STEPS TO SUSTAINABILITY Thus, if the community centers remain community-owned and SEWA will seek more lateral linkages and peer mentoring to keep CLBRCs community-run, they will endure after the project. And by providing as vital hubs of learning and innovation and components in a larger fee-based services that their communities need, the CLBRCs will dynamic network of learning centers. Technology will lead the way in become self-sustaining. building links and strengthening the network. For example, the CLBRCs This is especially relevant since, as SEWA the organization fills its are already looking to the expected growth of solar power as a new technology and a new source of employment, especially in Gujarat state. ranks with new and younger members, it will have to decentralize even more, thus increasing the importance of the centers in determining The GVKs will create more community-based masters: artisans, agricul- grassroots needs and dissemination of services. turalists, and fashion designers. The centers have already shown that innovation takes place best with community involvement; and the So, project or no project, it seems ever more likely that the CLBRCs CLBRCs are designed and positioned to foster more innovations — in must and will provide a nexus for SEWA’s abiding push toward full- management, in technology, in every aspect of development — to channel employment and self-reliance for its members. the community’s energy, drive, and creativity. Reemaben states it clearly: “This project… these centers have ignited It can work no other way. As Reemaben states, “SEWA is its members, a spark — a passion to test new technologies, new paradigms, and and the members are SEWA… the needs and priorities of the members new models. They will go on…” drive the organization.” Photo Credit: Vinayak Ghatate SEWA’s CLBRCs have shown that community ownership is key to sustainability 112 “This project… these centers have ignited a spark — a passion to test new technologies, new paradigms, and new models.” 113 APPENDIX 1 SEWA Timeline YEAR PARTICULAR 1955 • Shree Elaben Bhatt joins Textile Labour Association (TLA) as junior lawyer. 1968 • Shree Elaben Bhatt becomes head of the Women’s Wing of the TLA. 1972 • Self-Employed Women’s Association (SEWA) is founded by Shree Elaben Bhatt as a separate functioning unit within TLA. 1974 • Shri Mahila SEWA Sahakari Bank Ltd., also known as SEWA Women’s Cooperative Bank, is registered. 1979 • SEWA starts organizing in the rural areas of Ahmedabad district; registers Ahmedabad district Women’s Saving and Credit Association. 1981 • SEWA organizes in the rural areas of Gandhinagar district; registers Gandhinagar district Women’s Saving and Credit Association. 1982 • SEWA’s membership reaches 6,000. 1984 • SEWA begins operations in the rural areas of Anand/Kheda district. 1985 • SEWA begins operations in the rural areas of Patan district. • SEWA begins operations in the rural areas of Mehsana district. 1986 • SEWA devotes entire year to the minimum wage campaign. • President of India nominates Shree Elaben Bhatt as a member of Upper House of Parliament, the Rajya Sabha. 1991 • SEWA forms Shri Vanlaxmi Ganeshpura Mahila SEWA Vruksh Utpadak Sahkari Mandli Ltd. 1992 • SEWA forms Gujarat State Women’s Cooperative Federation Ltd. • SEWA begins operations in the rural areas of Sabarkatha district. • SEWA begins operations in the rural areas of Surendranagar district. • Banaskatha DWCRA Mahila SEWA Association is registered in Patan district. 1993 • SEWA begins operations in the rural areas of Vadodara district. 115 YEAR PARTICULAR 1994 • Gujarat Mahila SEWA Housing Trust, a sister organization catering to housing requirements of marginalized households, is formed. • SEWA begins operations in the rural areas of Kutch district. 1995 • Kheda District Women’s Saving and Credit Association is registered. • Vadodara District Sukhi Women’s SEWA Association is founded. • Kutch Craft Association is registered. 1997 • Sabarkantha District Gujarat Women Farmers’ Association is established. • Shri Mahila SEWA Sahakari Bank Ltd moves to new premises. 1998 • Surendranagar Mahila SEWA Bal Vikas Mandal (Association) is registered. 1999 • SEWA Gram Mahila Haat, a sister organization dedicated to market linkages is established. 2001 • A massive earthquake in Kutch leaves close to 60,000 of SEWA’s members homeless. 2002 • Hindu–Muslim riots leave 40,000 of SEWA’s urban members homeless. • Converting disaster to opportunity: 50 Community Learning Centers (CLCs) are established in Gujarat to build capacities towards better livelihoods and resilience to disasters. These would eventually lead to the development of the Community Learning Business Resource Centers. • Mehsana district Self-Employed Women’s Farmers Association created. 2003 • SEWA establishes its first non-profit company, SEWA Trade Facilitation Centre (STFC), in May 2003 to revive Gujarat’s craft tradition and contemporize and market traditional skills. Fifteen thousand women artisans become shareholders. 2004 • SEWA becomes the largest primary union in the country with over 700,000 members. 2005 • First Japan Social Development Fund/World Bank/SEWA Capacity Building project creates SEWA Manager ni School (SMS) to begin training “barefoot managers and leaders on management topics.” • SEWA partners with Indian Institute of Management (IIM), Ahmedabad to develop training modules and train the first batch of master trainers through SMS. 2006 • SEWA works with Indian Space Research Organisation to provide trainings through satellite at six Community Learning Centers. 2007 • RUDI Multi Trading Company, SEWA’s rural network for marketing and distribution of agri-produce and essential goods, formed. 2008 • Use of Geographic Information System in Vadodara district explored at a conceptual level. This is expanded under the 2011 CLBRC initiative. • SEWA applies for Community Radio licenses for Shri Swashrayee Mahila SEWA Khetmajur Association, Nandasan, Mehsana district. 2009 • Two Community Learning Centers identified for piloting business planning, systematic managerial training, and ICT. Another step towards the CLBRC concept. • New course “Rural Journalism” introduced. Twenty members trained. • SEWA initiates discussion and outline of a partnership with Microsoft for advanced computer trainings for rural community members, to help them access livelihood opportunities. • Based on feedback from users and SEWA management, SEWA’s legacy information systems are upgraded to an early form of the SEWA Membership Management System that allows multi-user access and data synchronization. • SEWA and Google draw the outline of a partnership to shift SEWA’s domain (sewa.org) onto Google Apps, which would provide every CLC access to email services. • SEWA and Google initiate discussion on a voice-based e-mail system for semi-literate or non-literate rural women members, which was eventually developed as the ‘Notice Board’ in 2011. 116 YEAR PARTICULAR 2010 • SEWA explores possibility of taking its Membership Management System online. • SEWA initiates discussion with Anand Agriculture University to train master trainers in scientific agricultural practices. • SEWA members conduct field survey in Mehsana district for Community Radio in Nandasan and submit data to Ministry of Information and Broadcasting. Audio recordings of community members begin. 2011 • JSDF/World Bank project SEWA Economic Empowerment Project for Women launches activities in Gujarat, with the upgrading of seven Community Learning Centers to Community Learning Business Resource Centers. 2012 • SEWA team conducts detailed land and water resource mapping using cadastral maps and builds GIS for Vadodara. • SEWA partners with Google: The GVKs provide training to rural organizers and women entrepreneurs to use Google Apps for their micro enterprises and trades. • Three CLBRCs in Gujarat and four outside Gujarat are formally inaugurated for a total of 14 centers. • SEWA launches partnership with Vodafone: SEWA teams with Vodafone Foundation India and Cherie Blair Foundation for Women to develop the mobile-based “RUDI Sandesha Vyavhar” for RUDI sales women to manage purchase, sales, and inventory of RUDI products. • SEWA partners with MasterCard to implement a mobile-based payment system called “Digital Money” that allows SEWA members to conduct in-the-field financial transactions more efficiently. • SEWA partners with goorulearning.org to provide education to children through online content. • SEWA Launches the Livelihood Portal: Members are registered on the SEWA Livelihood Portal, where they share their profiles with local/ external organizations/companies for linkages and livelihood opportunities. • SEWA launches its first e-learning training module, thereby greatly increasing its outreach via distance education. • SEWA applies for two more Community Radio licenses for Pij CLBRC (Anand/Kheda district) and for Visavadi CLBRC (Surendranager district). • Mehsana Community Radio begins narrowcasting in regional villages. • Hansiba Museum is inaugurated at Kamla Sadan CLBRC. 2013 • SEWA launches tele-medicine: Partners with doctors to provide medical counseling to members in remote locations, particularly saltpan workers. • SEWA partners with Indians for Collective Action to upgrade the SEWA MMS to Drupal platform, with rich features of member profiles and analysis. • SEWA conducts workshops to “crowd source” name, logo, and signature tune of SEWA’s Vali no Radio. • Radio teams begin archiving programs while expecting a 2013 license for Vali no Radio. • SEWA launches RUDI web mobile application to upgrade ordering and inventory of RUDI products. A pilot is tested in Surendranagar with saltpan workers. • SEWA pilots solar-powered water pumps for salt farmers. 117 Photo Credit: Arghya Ghosh APPENDIX 2 SEWA Sister Organizations NAME CATEGORY OF ORGANIZATION Self-Employed Women’s Association Union Self-Employed Women’s Union Union Women’s Milk Producers Cooperatives Production/Trade Based Cooperative Shree Karyasidhi Paper Pickers Women’s Cooperative Production/Trade Based Cooperative Shree Matsyagandha Women’s SEWA Cooperative Ltd. (Fish Vendors) Production/Trade Based Cooperative Shree Trupati Snacks Women’s SEWA Cooperative Ltd. Production/Trade Based Cooperative SEWA Gram Mahila Haat Market Facilitation and Service Providers SEWA Nirman Construction Workers’ Company Ltd. Market Facilitation and Service Providers Gujarat State Women’s SEWA Cooperative Federation Ltd. Market Facilitation and Service Providers RUDI Multi Trading Company Market Facilitation and Service Providers SEWA Trade Facilitation Center Market Facilitation and Service Providers Ansooya Trust Communication Based Shree Gujarat Women Video SEWA Information and Communication Cooperative Ltd. Communication Based Shree Mahila SEWA Sahakari Bank Ltd. Service Provider/Cooperative Organization 119 NAME CATEGORY OF ORGANIZATION Gujarat Mahila SEWA Housing Trust Service Provider/Cooperative Organization Shree Lok Swasthya Women’s SEWA Cooperative Ltd. (Health Care) Service Provider/Cooperative Organization Shree Sangini Women Child Care SEWA Cooperative Ltd. Service Provider/Cooperative Organization National Insurance Vimo SEWA Cooperative Ltd. Service Provider/Cooperative Organization Krishna Dai Cooperative Ltd. Service Provider/Cooperative Organization Shree Saundarya Cleaners Women’s SEWA Cooperative Ltd. Service Provider/Cooperative Organization Ahmedabad District Women’s Saving and Credit Association Community Based Organization Banaskantha DWCRA Mahila SEWA Association (BDMSA) Community Based Organization Kutch Craft Association (KCA) Community Based Organization Vadodara District Sukhi Women’s SEWA Association Community Based Organization Sabarkantha District Gujarat Women Farmers’Association Community Based Organization Surendranagar Mahila SEWA Bal Vikas Mandal (Association) Community Based Organization Kheda District Women’s Saving and Credit Association Community Based Organization Mehsana District Self Employed Women’s Farmers Association Community Based Organization Gandhinagar District Women’s Saving and Credit Association Community Based Organization Shree Vanlakshmi Mahila SEWA Tree Growers Cooperative Ltd. Community Based Organization 120 Photo Credit: SEWA Archives 121 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS In Washington, DC, the first acknowledgment goes to Roberto Tarallo, Also, many thanks to Veena Sharma for her enlightening explanations manager of Global Partnerships and Trust Fund Operations at the World of much of the history and issues around SEWA and the CLBRCs; and Bank at this writing, who cleared the way for this book to be written. to Rushi Laheri for making technical issues understandable even to an untrained scribe. Next, sincere thanks to Yolaine Joseph, Japan Social Development Fund program manager at the Bank, who pushed, encouraged, guided, Many others were critical in helping to clarify the complexities and richness of the subject matter. To those who go unnamed here, please and helped to fine-tune at every stage of the research and writing. accept my apologies and profound gratitude. I extend this especially to Her colleagues Eka Putra and Mohammed Diaw also provided useful all the wonderful women met along the way in towns, villages, and fields, feedback and valuable insights on the text. who shared so much of their lives and their joys. Kathryn Johns Swartz, a fine editor, furnished a much-needed precise, Finally, I wish to thank Reema Nanavaty for sharing her vast knowledge objective editorial eye on the content and form of this book. and keen wisdom about SEWA’s past, present, and future, and the role of In India, many warm thanks are due to World Bank project team leader the CLBRCs in that future. Her commanding yet warm presence reflects Vinayak Ghatate, whose dedication to the JSDF Economic Empowerment both the strength and humanity that is SEWA. I can only hope that this Project for Women and the success of the CLBRCs is infectious and book captures at least a glimpse of those qualities. inspiring. Vinayak’s leadership and good humor ensured a productive – LCM, April 2014 mission and an exhilarating visit as he pointed us in the right direction every step of the way. About the Author In addition, team member and World Bank consultant Karthik Laxman Lawrence Mastri worked for over 20 years as an editorial consultant with the World Bank before turning to freelance commercial writing. He has proved himself a steady, reliable, and clear source of knowledge. written two books, several major reports, and numerous articles, case Karthik was essential in helping to fill in the gaps in what sometimes studies, white papers, and marketing and public relations material. He seemed like a mountain of new information also blogs and occasionally writes fiction under a highly assumed name. Among SEWA staff, first thanks go to Smita Bhatnagar, who provided www.lawrencemastri.com the welcoming presentation of SEWA and its activities. Smitaben was unfailingly good-natured and helpful from the first visit to the last Graphic Designs/Publications stages of book production. Caruso Designs | tony@carusodesigns.com | +1 443 994 7171 122 123 When a leading, innovative development fund decided to partner with India’s largest and most dynamic women’s development organization, bold new ideas were bound to shake known development patterns. Barefoot Technicians This is just what happened when the Japanese Social Development Fund (JSDF) teamed with India’s Self-Employed Women’s Association and Grassroots CEOs (SEWA) — under the Economic Empowerment for Women Project — to envision and implement the extraordinary outcomes known as Community Learning Business Resource Centers (CLBRCs). How India’s Self-Employed Women’s The CLBRCs are holistic, community-based enterprises that use business Association (SEWA) is unleashing principles and communication technology (ICT) to design and implement pioneering services that bring financial, legal, and social empowerment technology to spark innovation and to some of India’s most vulnerable groups: poor, sometimes illiterate, enterprise among the rural poor women and young people. Through the CLBRCS, these groups and others are learning and gaining in ways never thought possible — which is why we can now speak of “barefoot technicians and grassroots CEOs.” This book reveals the entrepreneurial zest inspired by the CLBRCs and Empowering women, especially young achieving its goals of self-reliance and sustainable income details the vast array of technological skill put into practice by the SEWA women and girls, to participate in the for India’s poor women while offering a model that can be women. These include community radio stations, geographic information systems (GIS) to record land use data, membership management and job economy is one of the best investments replicated worldwide. portal systems, and much more. we can make. This is one reason why Through its partnership with SEWA and its support for The chapters also offer real-time glimpses into the day-to-day operations the Japan Social Development Fund of these community-run enterprises, where we feel the pulse, vitality, and the CLBRCs, JSDF is fulfilling its founding principle to eagerly supports such organizations as SEWA and such projects shared purpose within and beyond the walls of the CLBRCs. fund innovative projects and offer original approaches to as the one discussed here — the Economic Empowerment But this book doesn’t just hail innovation; it celebrates the lives of the development assistance. women transformed by the initiatives. Thus, we see their faces, hear their Project for Women and its unique contribution to the voices, and learn their remarkable stories of change and empowerment. Finally, it is noteworthy that SEWA helps hundreds of women development assistance toolbox, the Community Learning This begins with the riveting story of SEWA itself — from its birth in the to gain access to microfinance. I commend its significant Business Resource Centers (CLBRCs). Through these centers, rough struggles of India’s labor movement to its growth through political contributions in the area of microfinance. crises and natural disasters, leading to its current network of partnerships SEWA is turning marginalized women into grassroots CEO and, for a new generation of SEWA members, its future aspirations. and creative users of technology. In the process, SEWA is – Mr. Masahiro Kan, Executive Director for Japan The World Bank Group and the JSDF will seek out more projects like the Economic Empowerment Project for Women and more results like the CLBRCs. This JSDF–SEWA collaboration illustrates the concept of transformational engagement — that is, fueling the homegrown engines of innovation to unleash the technological spark and entrepreneurial fire that transform every margin of society. This is how to end world poverty. And SEWA women are showing the way.