- Location : Haryana, India
- Community Served: Poor female children in rural public schools
- Focus: Education (Fund the running of buses to take female children safely to and from school)
Organization background
Lotus Outreach International (LO) is a US based charitable organization dedicated to ensuring the
education, health and safety of at-risk and exploited women and children in India and Cambodia.
Its activites in India are implemented through its sister organization in India (White Lotus Charitable
Trust) and its partners (Spirit in Life) .
Project background
As a nation, India is a land of bright promise but also extremely poor. The
ramifications of this poverty are high child mortality rates, malnutrition rates
and a high rate of illiteracy.
A significant reason for the high illiteracy, especially in rural areas
is that children are encouraged not to go to school, as they can be
put to work either in a laborer setting, or in taking care of the home.
Approximately 70 rural million children receive no schooling whatsoever.
India's Haryana state is relatively wealthy but houses one of the most regressive
districts in terms of education in all of India. Although it is close
to Delhi, India's capital, Haryana's Mewat district,
lags behind the rest of the state on most development indices: there are few
paved roads, electricity is only available three hours a day and medical
facilities are dilapidated at best. The population comprises of about
a million people from the Muslim Meo tribe. The community relies on agriculture for
subsistence, and the lack of development has extracted a disproportionate toll
on Mewat's female population, who bear the burden of maintaining the household,
working in the fields and child rearing. Consequently, very few of these women
study beyond the primary level, and female literacy rates linger at an
abominable 2.13 percent.
Lotus Outreach has developed the Lotus Education as a Right Network (LEARN)
to enroll school-aged children who are currently left out of the education system, and
to bring substandard schools up to par through Right to Education advocacy.
The belief is that providing girls with basic education is one of the most
powerful catalysts for remedying poverty and its tragic consequences.
The greatest obstacle to female education in Mewat is a prevailing conservative
attitude towards women. The scarcity of secondary schools prevents girls from continuing
their education in their own village; while boys travel to neighbouring villages, girls are strictly
forbidden from leaving their own villages without an escort. For the Meos,
allowing a woman to travel unprotected invites temptation and moral
transgression.
Project description
To overcome the societal objections to female schooling, Lotus Outreach runs a chaperoned bus
service, the Blossom Bus, which picks up girls from their villages, takes them to
school and brings them back. The buses are actually small vans that are rented from
private companies at a negotiated cost to transport per girl.
GKF will pick up the cost of transporting 86 girls to and from school for a period of
11 months.
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