Posted: 16/12/2010
Dr Kiran Martin recounts her life journey, work with NGO Asha on behalf of Delhi slum-dwellers, and what others can learn from Asha’s model of human rights in action, in conversation with the Nossal Institute for Global Health’s Elizabeth Morrow.
Twenty-two years ago, Kiran Martin, a medical graduate from Delhi University,
entered an Indian slum for the first time in an effort to stem a cholera
outbreak. Shocked by the sight that greeted her and moved by the plight of the
poor, Dr Martin founded Asha, meaning “hope” in Hindi.
Since its
inception, Asha has become an acclaimed non-governmental organisation that
provides health, legal, educational and financial services to 400,000
slum-dwellers in Delhi.
Dr Martin’s success in improving life chances,
livelihoods and equity led the Indian government to give her one of the
country’s top civilian awards, the Padma Shri.
Why did you start
Asha?
Well, I come from a middle-class family. When I was doing my
residency slum patients would come to public hospitals and I would observe that
they were desperately poor. I felt that it was a much better use of my life to
do something to address their health needs rather than just be one additional
doctor where there are so many for the middle-class. A lot of doctors leave
India because there are better opportunities, and there’s a lot of money to be
made in India if you’re a private doctor. But nobody ever goes to slums. I just
felt drawn and that’s why I went and how I started out.
Was it hard to
overcome your initial reactions to your first visit to the slums?
I was
horrified that people were living in such an environment, and that was much
greater than any personal distress I felt at being there. Obviously, it was
challenging because of the smells, and you have all the excrement and garbage
around. I was totally shocked that they should be living there day in and day
out.
What does Asha do and what are its goals?
Asha’s primary
mission is to help transform the lives of the urban poor, those living in slums.
There are over 100 million urban poor people in India. Urban development was not
something that was talked about much when I started. The focus was on rural
development. But nowadays people are recognising that urban poverty is really
important. Over our 22 years we have evolved a model that works and has been
able to demonstrate a major impact.
One of Asha’s goals is to share its
experiences with a global audience. What lessons are there for
Australia?
The face of poverty may be a bit different in Australia, but
the basic mindset of a poor person is not very different. I think the challenge
is to break hopelessness and passivity, and give people hope. Collective action
and community organisation are principles that are valid anywhere. Partnerships
are important so that poor communities understand they must be at the forefront
of change. Handouts are very disempowering.
Do you think being a
signatory to human rights treaties encourages India to take action to protect
the rights of slum-dwellers?
India is a signatory to many human rights
instruments, but if the human rights of the slum-dwellers had been recognised,
residents would have been given good quality housing, water and sanitation, and
their education and health needs would have been taken care of.
And what
about India’s proposed constitutional guarantee on the right to
food?
There are educational policies and state budgets to help
slum-dwellers, but there is corruption and a lack of interest. Interests are
focused on private enterprise and expansion of the economy. And many
constitutional guarantees are not put into practice. Eighty per cent of slum
children under five are malnourished. There’s enough food for the whole
population, but the poor can’t afford it. They have to spend about 80 per cent
of their income buying food.
What role does gender inequality play for
slum-dwellers?
Gender discrimination is an integral part of slum life.
Often girls are discarded before they have a chance to live, through foetal sex
determination, leading to sex ratios of around 750 girls to 1,000 boys in some
states. Having a girl means lots of expenditure on her dowry, so girls are seen
as burdens and boys as assets, because a boy’s wife will bring money with her.
Decisions are made by men or the extended family, not by girls. Even the health
of a girl is not as valuable as the health of a boy. The amount of food given to
her is not the same. The educational levels of boys are much higher. Domestic
violence is common and so is sexual abuse of girls, so there is a huge amount of
work to be done in empowerment of women and girls.
What are your current
dreams for Asha?
We’ve already got about 400 slum children going to
university. That can be scaled up; if there were a group of children in every
slum going to university they would be role models, and then that becomes an
aspiration for other children. I am very keen that thousands of children receive
the opportunity of higher education. This is actually their passport out of
poverty, because nothing short of this is going to help them get out of the
slums.
Dr Martin shared her practical approach to human rights at the
University of Melbourne’s 2010 Chancellor’s Human Rights Lecture in October.
Watch at:
http://live.unimelb.edu.au/

Thanks to Asha, we have been able to get land rights in our own names and so we don’t have to be afraid of being evicted. Most people in slums never own their own homes and so we feel very privileged.
Narayani, Ekta Vihar