Venkat Reddy, MV foundation

Venkat Reddy, National Convenor at MV Foundation

”Children are very important; they are the future. So, mobilisers do the work for the future. ‎Mobilisers have a lot of energy and passion to help children in their communities and to make their ‎communities thrive. We channel this energy to achieve the best possible results in the ‎communities.

‎It is essential that our mobilisers reach every household in the community for the area-‎based approach to work. A child who is not in school is a child labourer, but also a potential learner. ‎And vice versa, a student is a potential dropout who goes into child labour. So, our work has to ‎reach every family and every child in the community. To build trust and good relationships with ‎parents, relatives, children and others in the community, we need to visit them again and again. It ‎is essential that the mobilisers are constantly in the process of building relationships and ‎partnerships within the communities.

‎Our ‎mobilisers can work magic in communities. They have the ability to change social norms in ‎communities and the lives of many people within them. For example, in the communities in which we work, there are a lot of families in which not a single ‎person has ever been to school. Many of these people are Dalits – the lowest caste. If a child from ‎such a family goes to school, they are the first child in that family to go. They are a first-generation ‎student. That is a big deal! They lack role models in their families to show them what getting an ‎education can mean for their lives and their communities. Likewise, parents, grandparents and ‎others in these communities have no example of the value of education for children. Getting a ‎child to go to school as a first-generation learner is a huge achievement. But it is not without ‎failures along the way. Bringing about such big changes in communities, real changes in the social ‎norms of communities, is a difficult and non-linear process. Mobilisers face resistance, opposition ‎and disappointment along the way, but they never give up.

Community mobilisers must constantly negotiate with people and other stakeholders in the ‎community. Community mobilisers are conflict resolution practitioners. They negotiate with ‎schools, community leaders, caste leaders and many others. They have different strategies ‎depending on the context in which they are working. This context is constantly changing ‎depending on the situation in the community. For example, they adapt their timing to suit the ‎times when people in the community are available to talk. This is usually outside normal work ‎hours. But they take many other factors into account to ensure fruitful discussions and ‎negotiations.”

Search