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Twenty-four-year-old Jiya was once forced to dance at gunpoint. Today, the plucky transwoman from West Bengal is a blazing trail of success as a trainee in an operation theatre (OT) technician's course.
Thanks to a collective effort by queer activists, social workers and healthcare experts, along with Jiya, transwoman Debdutta is also being trained to become an OT technician, not only empowering her community but also bridging the deficit in India's paramedical personnel sector.
At the School for Skills: Allied Health Sciences located in the Sirona Hospital Group premises, in East Midnapore district's Panskura, Jiya and Debdutta are studying hard with a batch of 50 paramedical course trainees to equip themselves with the right set of skills for a stable career.
“The idea was to have freedom of choice. Just because they are transgender, it doesn't mean they are not educated and can only beg for a livelihood. They now have an option to be a part of the technical staff of a hospital,” said Mimo Koushik, who identifies himself as queer and is a social entrepreneur with the NGO Prantakatha.
“If we can give them access to opportunity then they can be skilled and trained to work in the healthcare sector. The sector needs people in large numbers and the working conditions are dignified for women,” said Satadal Saha, general surgeon & CEO of the hospital.
The course fee of Rs 25,000 for a year has been waived for Jiya and Debdutta.
Upon completion, they will be placed with the hospital, said Saha, who is spearheading the training programme along with his team as part of JSV Innovations, that works towards livelihood creation among rural youth with low formal education through training and skill development of a large number of allied health professionals.
They are learning about anatomy, infection control, how OTs function and things needed to run an OT among others, said Saha. The course is affiliated with the National Skill Development Corporation. The hospital takes care of boarding and lodging.
According to Bappaditya Mukherjee of Prantakatha, their training also ensures creation of infrastructure for the community.
As for Jiya, there is no looking back now.
“I find the training interesting. If I don't do this I will have to go back to my life of dancing. I have resolved to show my family and community that we can do this and we are like anyone else,” she said.
(This article has been published in arrangement with IANS. The author Sahana Ghosh can be contacted at sahana.g@ians.in)
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