Pari* has been through a lot in her 17 years. To start, she was born into India’s lowest class or caste. Then her father — who drank heavily — died and her mother’s wages as a daily labourer left the family destitute.
So, Pari dropped out of school to help. She took a job at a textile factory where she worked long hours, was reprimanded for taking long bathroom breaks and suffered with stomachaches and headaches after inhaling fumes caused by the facility’s cotton-processing operation.
She found hope at a local Child Protection Network meeting where the group was submitting a petition with her Panchayat (local governing body) to stop child labour. She eagerly backed it, noting she was a victim of child labour. Thankfully, support received through our local program staff gave her the courage to speak up.
It didn’t end there. The teen took her concerns to a community meeting, telling those gathered that many girls were working in dangerous conditions and some were sexually abused.
Pari called for an end to child labour again, further highlighting the importance of the petition originally submitted for consideration.