The other day I watched a group of women before a meeting, planning the events. It was strategic. It was, if you ask me, better organised and dramatically executed than most cabinet meetings.
And as I stood there, pretending to check my phone while actually listening with great national interest, I wondered why on earth we think women need “reservation” to prove their worth.
Now before you raise your eyebrows and stop listening to me, hear me out.
Reservation, in its purest form, is meant to uplift those who have been denied opportunity. It is a crutch for the disadvantaged. But when you offer that same crutch to someone who has the ability to run faster, think sharper, and manage three crises’ while we men manage one, it begins to look less like support and more like our ruling party’s polite insult.
It is like telling a marathon runner, “Here, take this walking stick, you might need it.”
Women today are not waiting at the starting line. They are already halfway down the track, dragging along families, careers, and sometimes husbands who are still looking for their socks.
In my own home, I have noticed something rather interesting. When something goes wrong, we call it a “problem.” When my wife handles it, it becomes part of a new system.
Electricity bill unpaid? She has a system.
Guests arriving unannounced? She has a system.
Me forgetting her birthday or our wedding anniversary? Well, for that she has something far more powerful than a system.
Today, we stand in Parliament and say, “Let us reserve seats for women.” This, when I have seen better speeches from lady members than the jeers, sneers and insults that the men give.
Hey Parliamentarians, why not instead remove the invisible barriers that we men have formed that stop capable women from entering politics in the first place?
Why not ensure safety, equal opportunity, and fair representation based on merit rather than mathematics?
Why not stop projecting to our women that they are weak and immature, by passing ‘love-jihad’ and other laws?
Because let us be honest. The moment you reserve a seat you also plant a doubt. Was she chosen because she is capable, or because she fits the category?
That question quietly undermines the very women we claim to empower.
I have seen women lead schools, companies, hospitals, and yes, even countries with a firmness that would make seasoned politicians sit up and take notes. They do not need a reserved chair. They need the chair to stop being reserved for the wrong people.
True empowerment is not about giving space. It is about removing the walls.
If a woman walks into Parliament, let it be because she knocked the door down, not because someone politely held it open.
Because the day we stop reserving seats for women in Parliament, in buses or elsewhere, will be the day we truly respect them…!
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Robert Clements is a newspaper columnist and writes a daily column, which has graced the pages of over 60 newspapers and magazines, from a daily column in the Khaleej Times, Dubai, the Morning Star, London, and in nearly every state in India, from The Statesman in Kolkata, to the Kashmir Times in Kashmir to the Trinity Mirror in Chennai.
The reservation is because we can’t remove barriers and walls voluntarily.Even today women are treated as slaves.Of course that is sad.
Absolutely right!! Let her storm the house down on her own merit and fire-power.
Yes indeed. Thank you Zinnia!
No matter how many of us men think positively there multitudes who are patriarchal and dislike an independent woman.
Very true. Thank you Mr Krishnan!
Old habits die hard…..that is if they die at all!
In our beloved motherland the very Mindset is an issue. Families treat boys differently from girls almost from the time they’re born.
Sorry but I disagree with your views.
Since 1979, when the last increase in MPs in parliament was implemented our population has doubled. How can a single representative look after and service the needs of such an increased number of constituents? Does it not make sense that with an increase in the population , representatives’ numbers are also increased ?
Coming to women. Yes of course you are right, women have made huge advances in every field, and yet we see that there is a predominance of men in Politics, perhaps because it is such a dirty game? But with reserved seats, where only women contest against women it will be a leval playing field, and may the best woman win. More importantly, like the author says, women can multitask, have a more compassionate approach to issues and are less likely to be criminals or history sheeters – which many of our current MLAs and MPs are. So over all the QUALITY of Parliamentary and assembly debates will go up and more practical and down to earth solutions to India’s woes may be found.
As far as the financial burden is concerned, the govt. is making plenty of money through taxation. The GST collection per month has now exceeded 2 lakh crores. But I do agree with the author that all the perks and pensions are a bit too much and need to be trimmed down. But any govt. that tries to do that will be out on it’s A.. in no time at all. So for that to happen we will need to wait for a really strong govt. and a strong and sensible leader, or a huge recession where cuts become imperative, or a mass movement ..none of which are anywhere on the horizon.