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REKhA DEVI
YADAV

COMMUNITY-BASED JUSTICE LEADER

“Rekha Didi is careful, she is intelligent. In the village, everyone in the society respects her. Everyone looks up to Rekha Didi, everyone says she is a very supportive woman. She protects the village, she protects the Tol (community).”
– Chinta Devi Paswanneighbour 

Rekha is a member of the local Judicial Committee of Brahmapuri Rural Municipality of Sarlahi district, one of the most deprived districts in Nepal. Gender-discriminatory norms such as child marriage, son preference, dowry and veil traditions are prevalent in the district. Rekha has been working as a women human rights defender for 10 years, and received training through UN Women’s project titled Enhancing Access to Justice for Women.

As a result of the learnings from training, she has supported the establishment of shelters in her community, and provided support to women during the COVID-19 pandemic through household visits and campaigning for gender-responsive justice.

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“Rekha Didi is careful, she is intelligent. In the village, everyone in the society respects her. Everyone looks up to Rekha Didi, everyone says she is a very supportive woman. She protects the village, she protects the Tol  (community).”
– Chinta Devi Paswan (Neighbour)

“My husband works. I respect him as well. Till now, the two of us haven’t fought. He doesn’t do anything untowards to me, he doesn’t beat me, he hasn’t until now, we live well together.”

“I do not have greed for anything.”

“As long as I live, I will continue, I will help a lot as long as I can breathe. What is there to help I am ready to help them.”

“The men haven’t given us women any identity of our own. If there is money, it’s theirs. The guardians of the house are the men. Regardless of how the womenfolk gather fodder for the goats, cows, buffaloes or clean them, it is the men who receive the money from the cattle.

No matter how far ahead women move, we are seen as inferior. The men do this to us.
The perspective of the men do us ill. They think if you are the daughter, you have to take care of the home; if you are the daughter-in-law, you have to take care of the home.

I fell down when I covered my face with the ghughat (veil)
Make work the rule, not the ghughat.
We have to end the practice of ghughat.

Whether it is a training or a seminar, the women’s association comes forward. The women work well with schools, in NGOs. We work in every sector. If there is violence against women, we file complaints against it. Courage has become strong in the women.

I stay ready to help in whatever way I can. I am not afraid. I haven’t done anything wrong. I don’t allow any wrongdoings, nor do I do them myself.”

“I work in service of others. I am working as a female volunteer. I took trainings. I go there, not for the money. But to learn something. I do this so the villagers can learn something. So the village learns and does things, that’s why I go!”

‘’Go for it, I can be a leader in my own village now!’’

Rekha Devi Yadav: A journey to reflect on, 2021
Media: Mixed media; photo collage with pen, paint, scratches, and text (above)
Size: Variable

*Hover over the images in the gallery above for quotes and captions

स्वर | Voice , 2021
Media: Multimedia video in three parts (below)
Size: Variable

Daughter by Subima Shrestha
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Our Lives Our Journey | Rekha 2021
Media: Photography (below)
Size: Variable