“We have brought over two million girls back into school”: Safeena Husain on her Ramon Magsaysay Award-winning organisation Educate Girls

Kaumi GazetteLife & Style4 September, 20258.2K Views

Safeena Husain, 54, was with a bunch of youngsters celebrating a studying milestone in a small village exterior Udaipur, Rajasthan, when she requested one in all them why her training had been interrupted. The lady had handed her Class X with Pragati, a second likelihood programme provided by Husain’s award-winning non-profit Educate Girls. Pragati was designed for older girls who’re ineligible for formal education. “I’m 18,” she instructed Husain. “I left education 10 years ago when I was married.”

Husain simply gained the celebrated Ramon Magsaysay Award (the primary for an Indian organisation) for her practically two decade outdated labour of affection. She nearly didn’t reply the frantic messages she acquired from an unknown Philippines quantity on a latest Sunday, asking for “some data and information”, as a result of “I thought it was a fraud”.

Husain empathises with the youthful girl’s battle as a result of immediately she is a kind of uncommon people who find themselves capable of channel their childhood trauma to rework society. Now in celebration mode, she would slightly not speak in regards to the troublesome days, saying solely that it was a “very turbulent” childhood in Delhi. School was all the time her “place of happiness” and the place she felt protected. “Walking home from the bus stop was always the toughest time of day for me,” she says.

Paradigm shift

Husain’s training was interrupted for 3 years after Class XII. “Everybody gives up on you, they say ‘marry her off’, there’s a divorcee with four kids…” She grappled with that traditional triumvirate of guilt, disgrace, failure till an aunt, a buddy from Lucknow University the place her interfaith dad and mom met and fell in love, took her house to stay with her and adjusted her life. “She gave me a lot of love, affection and the motivation to go back to education.” Husain finally graduated with a level in economics historical past from the London School of Economics. “I still remember standing on Houghton Street,” she says, referring to the varsity’s location. “The way I saw myself shifted that day and how the world saw me shifted that day.” Education remodeled her life and he or she desires all girls to know that feeling.

Most girls know training is the one option to get forward, Husain says. Like the girl who accomplished her education practically two many years after she left faculty — and in the identical 12 months as her son, scoring greater than him. Or the Bhil girls who’re the primary of their households to get a proper training. And the younger girl who left a nasty marriage and doesn’t wish to unload greens at 3 a.m. for the remainder of her life.

Husain got here back to India in 2005 and began Educate Girls two years later. The non-profit works in about 30,000 villages (primarily in Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh). “We have brought over two million girls back into school,” she says. “An equal number have gone through our learning programme, which is the foundational literacy and numeracy programme.”

Safeena Husain with schoolchildren

Safeena Husain with schoolchildren

Push for second possibilities

Some 30,000 girls have graduated from the Pragati programme. “Right now a lot of energy is going into expanding the second chance programme and also taking it to other states,” Husain says. “Because that’s a huge problem, much more rampant than elementary school issues for out-of-school girls.”

Societal and systemic points can weave an impenetrable wall round girls, forcing them to drop out after the eighth grade. Marriage, family duties and mobility restrictions all change into limitations to additional training. “For every 100 primary schools, you have 40 middle schools, and 24 secondary schools, which means the distance to school increases and access drops off,” Husain provides.

Those who do keep, face a number of strain. “I see a lot of girls approach secondary school with an enormous amount of fear. They have this sword hanging over the head with their parents saying. ‘I’m sending you but if you fail, I’m going to make you sit at home or get you married off’,” she says. “It leads to a lot of anxiety.”

Husain works with state governments and says she’s seen massive modifications in two many years — from separate bogs for girls to even a marketing campaign equivalent to ‘Beti Bachao’ that acknowledges there’s a downside. “You know, the right to education came after we started work,” she says. “So I have seen the struggle, but I have also seen how rapidly progress has happened. I think one must acknowledge that as well because that’s the only thing that gives you hope to continue.” Rajasthan’s complete free secondary training programme for girls has additionally been a sport changer.

Husain’s additionally seen attitudes come full circle. One father who, a few years in the past, was towards sending his daughter to high school just lately instructed her: “You have to educate girls. The world is built for the educated and if we are not educated, we will be exploited like animals.”

Safeena Husain in Udaipur, Rajasthan

Safeena Husain in Udaipur, Rajasthan

Family issues

Like her dad and mom, Husain had an interfaith marriage. She met director Hansal Mehta when she organised a Bollywood dinner for creator and Booker Prize winner Daisy Rockwell in Berkeley University. Her father Yusuf, who ran a journey firm, was by then an actor in Hindi cinema, and related her to her favorite director whose 2000 movie Dil Pe Mat Le Yaar she had cherished.

“We’ve just been together since,” she says. “It was one of those things, you meet and you know it’s meant to be.” The couple lived collectively for years and have two daughters, finally solely marrying in 2022. “Losing my father during COVID was a big moment,” she says. “It made us feel like we needed to do something more affirmative for ourselves and for our children.”

Her daughters navigate their dad and mom’ very totally different worlds adroitly. When she was driving by means of Uttar Pradesh a few years in the past with one in all her daughters, they noticed a line of girls carrying firewood and strolling in a single file on the freeway. Her daughter instantly piped up: “Why isn’t Educate Girls helping them?”

The author is a Bengaluru-based journalist and the co-founder of India Love Project on Instagram.

Published – September 03, 2025 07:35 pm IST

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