Geeta Dangol Maharjan

Nepal

Nepal is a strictly patriarchal country in which daughters are valued less. My father wanted my mother to give birth to a son. Although she had always wanted a small family with only two children, my father insisted on trying until the first son was born. Thus, she was blessed with seven daughters, and I am one of them.

Listening to my mother’s stories and observing my parents’ relationship, I feel sad about her being ill-treated and marginalized by her entire family. As a child, I often watched incidents of violent attacks, and I felt helpless. Once, my father threw an entire bowl of hot food at my mother, just because the vegetable was not salty enough. There was a silence that built up between my parents due to financial dependency.

During my childhood, I never felt that my father was there for us. He never took responsibility for paying fees or visiting teachers. My mother used to send money with us to pay the fees ourselves. We were terrified of him. Yes, I could see he was working hard. But due to his violent character, we never had that father-daughter relationship, even when he became calm later in life.

One fine day, my mother’s sister-in-law suggested a business idea to my mother, and she advised her to move out. Finally, after four children, my mother spoke up and got us separated from the joint family. She had no education. However, she empowered herself to start a small retail business in a new locality. Slowly but steadily, the business took off. I could feel and see a change in the relationship between my parents.

Suddenly, there were bombs everywhere; Nepal was not safe anymore. The Nepalese civil war (1996 to 2006) started due to political conflicts. I was born in Kirtipur (City of Glory), an ancient city of Kathmandu Valley located in the southeast region, which used to be the safest place before the civil war. My parents sent my sisters and me to India for further studies. People across Nepal were moving to the capital city for safety.

I came back to my own country in 2017, only to learn that the issue had worsened and almost 500,000 people were moving out of the country every year to foreign lands for low-paying  jobs due to lack of skill and education. Many women were left behind with household responsibilities, without any secure source of income.

This made me wonder: Why can’t we create jobs within our country? I have witnessed how my mother’s life changed after she secured her financial independence. She could decide everything for her children and family. She even became bold and taught us to become bold. I pondered over my mother’s story and could see that there were still many women facing the same issue: silence born of financial dependence.

Since 2017, I have been working with marginalized women to help them achieve financial independence.

I could see the impact from my own story after I was able to secure a job and fend for myself, doing way better than the male cousins in our family. My father concluded that I was as able as a boy.  He slowly stopped being violent. Today, I am running my own business and a non-profit organization for women in our community. Furthermore, I am taking care of my parents as the Woman of the House.

Now my dad is the proud father of seven daughters who are no less than any men in our community. In fact, he is now supporting the cause I am working for.