“Educate Girls” , says Safeena  Husain
          
      Safeena Husain is the founder and Executive Director  at Educate Girls – a non-profit organization that aims at tackling issues at  the root cause of gender inequality in India’s education system.
          After graduating from the London School of Economics,  Safeena wanted to do something meaningful and impactful. She found herself  drawn to the social development sector, working extensively with both rural and  urban  underserved communities around the  world. After 15 years of experience working with grassroots projects in Ecuador,  Mexico, Bolivia and South Africa, Safeena returned to India to drive the agenda  closest to her heart – girls’ education.
          With practical, first-hand experience in working with  communities and understanding how educating women can impact some of the most  pressing root cause of poverty, particularly health and employment, Safeena  together with a local team conducted a 50-school project in Pali district,  Rajasthan. This was launched under the umbrella of the Rajasthan Education  Initiative and following its successful test phase, Safeena established Educate  Girls as an NGO in 2007. A year later, the organization won government approval  to start a pilot project in 500 school in Pali disctrict. Safeena has steered  the growth of Educate Girls, scaling the organization from 50 school to over  8,000 schools across 4,500 villages, serving over a million children.
          Safeena’s dedication to the cause of girls’ education  and her tireless efforts to reach an ever growing number of communities  throughout India is pivotal in Educate Girls’ success. Aside from occupying the  Executive Director’s seat at the organization, she perseveres to increase  awareness about gender equity and girls’ education by speaking at international  forums.
    
          
                  Safeena’s efforts to bridge the gender gap in education  in India have been widely recognized. Under her leadership, Educate Girls has  received the 2014’s WISE Awards, the 2014 USAID Millennium Alliance Award and  the 2014 Stars Impact Awards and the India Development marketplace Award in  2011 from the World Bank. Moreover, in 2013 she received the British Asian  Trust’s Special Recognition Award from HRH Prince Charles for outstanding  contribution in education.   
  
    
  
                         |    Seema is a 16 year old girl from Pali,    Rajasthan. She lost her father at the age of 11, a tragedy that people in her    village blamed her for, saying she was cursed. Seema was miserable. To add to    her despair, she was married off to an abusive alcoholic who was twice her    age. Eventually, he threw her out onto the street. Seema’s situation, though    heart-breaking, is not unique. 68% of girls in Rajasthan are married before    the legal age of 18. These girls often drop out of school and begin to work    in homes where they are susceptible to abuse, adolescent pregnancy and often    have no decision making power. 9 out of 26 “gender gap” districts in India    are in Rajasthan, where 40% of girls drop out of school before they reach 5th    grade.   
   
   Seema was alone, living on the street when our Team    Balika member, Sharda, found her. Our Team Balika are the champions of our    cause with over 1500 volunteers working towards rejuvenating government    schools and improving learning outcomes. Sharda counseled Seema to help her    learn to face her struggles with confidence. With Sharda’s help, Seema gained    the courage to re-enroll in school, where, after studying for two years, she    passed her 10th grade exams with flying colors. Today, Seema herself is a    proud member of Team Balika. She works with Sharda to enroll out-of-school    girls, support school teachers, and conduct life skills education    sessions. Seema’s ability to overcome her situation is an inspiration.   
   Our Team Balika members are crucial elements of the    Educate Girls model. They go door to door to convince families to prioritize    girls’ education. They mobilize communities to form School Management    Committees, giving community members a platform to assess schools and    influence the local education system. Furthermore, Team Balika helps to    increase learning outcomes by working directly with teachers and headmasters    to introduce creative learning techniques in classrooms. Their efforts on the    ground are not only essential to our success as an organization, but create    lasting impact on the lives of people in the communities they serve.   
   Through the efforts of Team Balika, Educate Girls    has enrolled over 59,000 girls. Our goal is to improve access and quality of    education for around 4 million children living in underserved communities in    India by 2018.    
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                   |    Educate Girls Showed The Right Path   
            I am Navli Kumari  from Abu Road Block in Sirohi district, Rajasthan. I was fortunate to have been  able to live with my father in Abu Road, a relatively developed area that  facilitated my studies. Sadly, after my father passed away, I had to move back  to my native village which is an ‘Adivasi’ area where girls do not have  any access to education. In fact, there wasn’t a single school there. I was the  only girl in the village who had studied till the 12th grade. It was  very disheartening for me to see that most girls were deprived of even primary  education. Seeing them, I often wondered how I could use my education for the  betterment of my community but saw no existing avenue. I desperately wanted to  see a school building in my village.   One day, an Educate  Girls Field Coordinator came looking for me. He mentioned that he was in search  of an educated person in my village who could volunteer to bring back girls to  school and handhold them through their learning process. He told me that I  would fit the role perfectly and then gave me deeper insight into the  organization and its interventions – this was my first formal introduction to  Educate Girls.    I was highly  motivated by Educate Girls’ methodology, but I realized that this was a  challenging proposition. Educate Girls’ model is based on partnership with the  government and revolves around a core element – Team Balika or community youth  leaders who volunteer with the organisation. I chose to become a Team Balika  because I genuinely wanted to make a difference in my village. When I first  went door-to-door trying to convince parents to send their daughters to school,  many doors were slammed in my face and many abuses were hurled at me. But I  knew I had to be patient and persistent. Gradually parents allowed their  daughters to step out in uniform. I have been a Team Balika for 4 years now and  take pride in saying that with help from Educate Girls I have enrolled 46 girls  in school and stopped 2 child marriages. After many years of unsuccessful  attempts, a school has finally been set-up in my village. The support and  creative training offered by Educate Girls has achieved dual purpose in my  life. Not only has there been an increase in the confidence & learning  levels of the girls who are being enrolled, I too have been empowered. I’ve  been trained in essential skills and taught a solution-finding and constructive  approach to dealing with every situation. From a place where achieving my dreams  seemed impossible, to where I am today – contesting as a candidate in the local  elections and being viewed as a leader with potential –Educate Girls has been  the wind in my sails. 
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