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Rajshree Gungoo, a chatty 27-year-old with a quick smile, speaks up at a gathering of about 40 women discussing the challenges facing single women in Maharashtra.
She breaks off, using the end of her saree to wipe her tears. Around her, others nod and mutter.
In drought-hit Marathwada, the state’s poorest region, there is an unusually high number of single women. Some were widowed after their farmer husbands committed suicide because of debt; others were abandoned because they didn’t produce a son, while some were left behind when their husbands left to search for work.
Alone and without financial support, the women and their children are usually thrown out of home by their in-laws, denied ownership of the land they worked on and any compensation from the government. They are also taunted and harassed by communities who believe a woman is nothing without a man.
Paryay is a charity that works with marginalised communities.
In India, only 13 percent of farmland is owned by women. The figure is even lower when it comes to lower caste Dalit women who are single. About 12 percent of India’s female population is classified as single, including women who are widowed, divorced, separated, and older unmarried women, according to the 2011 census.
While widows receive a monthly pension of about Rs 500 in most Indian states, divorced women and those who are unmarried or abandoned are ineligible for most welfare benefits.
In addition, most religious laws favour men when it comes to the inheritance of family property and agricultural land.
In Osmanabad district, Paryay works with single women in about 30 villages. The charity estimates that almost half the women in these villages are single and that most are Dalits.
Single women in villages bear the brunt of entrenched customs and superstitions, including a bias against girls from birth, limited education, early marriage and financial dependence on the husband or father.
For older women who are unmarried or those who have been abandoned by their husbands, ownership of land or property can mean the difference between life and death, said Lata Bandgar, a programme coordinator at Paryay.
Bandgar was thrown out of her home after her husband left her years before.
About 41 percent of households headed by women in India do not own land, and make a living through casual manual labour, according to the 2011 socio-economic and caste census. In Maharashtra, it is more than 45 percent.
In Marathwada, many single women get duped into marriage or are trafficked as sex workers because they have no means of earning a livelihood, Bandgar said.
A new draft policy for women unveiled in May acknowledges the challenges single women face, including finding safe and affordable housing.
The policy aims to strengthen the social infrastructure for single women, as well as create a “comprehensive social protection mechanism” and improve their overall condition.
In Osmanabad, charities are helping single women to get government-issued identity cards that entitle them to subsidised food rations, to apply for bank loans, and to lay claim to property and land.
Last year, Paryay convinced the Osmanabad district council to set aside Rs 20 lakh for loans of up to Rs 20,000 a year for eligible single women to purchase poultry or goats.
That is also the aim of the gathering of single women who filled in application forms for loans from Paryay’s self-help group.
“What are you crying for?” Nirja Bhatnagar, regional manager at ActionAid, which partners Paryay, asked Gungoo.
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