The day felt like any other day, except it wasn’t.
I was casually flipping through the Himalayan Times
on the 13th of October, 2018, Saturday when I came across this news.
And it seemed like any other news too, except it wasn’t. Apparently, there was
on open water competition held at Fewa Taal, Pokhara last Friday, the 12th
of October, 2018. Sounds adventurous, right? I thought so too. A shout out to
all the winners too. Coming from someone who does not even know how to swim and
gets scared when thinking of diving head first into a mass of water, with god
knows what down there, you guys have my respect, you really do. But this is not
about that. Something in this article caught my eye, something in this article
stood out for me from everything else.
The article proudly displayed the winners of the
boys and the winners of the girls, with only a measly difference of 1 minute between
the first positions: well done! But the article also proudly announced that
while the winning boys got Rs. 25000, Rs. 15000, and Rs. 10000 for the first,
second and the third positions respectively, I was taken aback to read that the
winning girls got Rs. 10000, Rs. 8000 and Rs. 5000 for the same respective
positions. Correct me if I am wrong, but this is not right.
Why are the rewards different here? Just because
they were girls? It was the same premises of competition; the same sport; the
same techniques used. Why then? Are girls less passionate? Do girls not work as
hard as boys? Did the girls not seem as determined? No, what is it? I would
really like to know. What stands different? Perhaps this is one example that we
see here and perhaps there are others going around in our country. It is not
only about the reward money, but it is about equal appreciation and equal
treatment. We take pride in saying that Gaurika Singh, a girl of Nepali origin
competed in the Olympian level, and then we go around and see such differences.
At a stage where we should be encouraging girls to be more passionate about
sports, what sort of example do you think this would be for budding sports
enthusiasts?
Let us start with changing our thinking and
appreciating both the genders in regards of their contribution, be it in terms
of financial rewards or others. Change can start small.
I think organizers didn't want to get attention on that detail and so did not print the big checks for women's competition winners. Glad that you blogged about it!
ReplyDeleteUnfortunately, US being developed world is actually not much different in unequal treatment of women.
Indeed, thank you sundeep dai.
Deleteyes, unfortunately!