The Washington Post has an encouraging story (Thanks, Deepa) about female mechanics in India that are successfully overcoming caste and gender restrictions:
In taking on such an important role, the female mechanics have challenged feudal notions of gender roles in village society, after centuries of prejudice and discrimination by members of upper castes.
“For a long time people taunted us when we arrived with our tools,” Kabirdas said. “They shooed us away. The upper castes would say, ‘You untouchable women, stay away from our hand pump. What do you know other than making bread and collecting cow dung?’”
But when the women began repairing the broken pumps promptly, they carved themselves an important niche in the hierarchy of the water-scarce village.
The Washington Post: Low-caste Indians carve a niche (free registration required)
My favorite parts of the article:
This is hard work:
It wasn’t easy to learn how to do this:
They play an important role in monitoring violence against women:
The social implications are profound for caste: