Monday, April 29, 2024
ADVT 
Cover Story

Celebrating Womanhood: Harsha Walia

By Petrina D'Souza, 27 Mar, 2020
  • Celebrating Womanhood: Harsha Walia

Harsha Walia is an Activist, Author & Executive Director of British Columbia Civil Liberties Association 

What does being a woman mean to you?

To me being a woman means a few different things. As South Asian women, we continue to face the incorrect assumptions that there are certain things we can and can’t do, whether that is in our personal lives or professional lives — and this overarching idea that women can only be in acceptable professions and have to get married and have children, and there is a set kind of pathway that we have to follow. So for me, being a woman is really defined by actually the limitations and assumptions that are put on womanhood, much more so than any universal experience of being a woman. For me being a woman is really a construct and an idea that is put on us by society and history more so than any reality.

 

What has been your biggest achievement professionally?

To be able to really define womanhood as entirely outside of the box, particularly for a Punjabi woman. I have pursued a very unconventional career; I am an activist, which is something very few people in our community do, even less for women to do. I’m also trained as a lawyer and I have worked in the Downtown Eastside and with communities that are very marginalized, which is also often frowned upon. My biggest achievements have been to really not feel boxed in by what I am told I should or shouldn’t do, and I have tried to be true to what I think, what I should be doing and most importantly what it means to be in alliance with other women. For me, it’s not about me as a woman; I am interested in contributing to how I can make all women have a better life. So my biggest achievement is to refuse an individualistic narrative; it’s not about me as a woman, it’s about how we can lift each other up.

Tell me about a milestone that defines your journey.

One milestone is that I am the Executive Director of the B.C. Civil Liberties Association, which is the oldest human rights and civil liberties organization in the country. It is the foremost legal organization that is working on these issues, and I am the first woman, first Punjabi woman, and first ethnic minority to hold that position. In terms of that, it is a milestone for what it means for other women in our community to think about the possibilities of that role.

What’s your advice for women who wish to follow your path?

I think for young girls interested in advancing social change, whatever that looks like for you, you will be told that it is a challenge and it is, but if we don’t do anything, nothing will change. But if we try changing, there is a big chance that together we can change things, whatever feels unequal or unjust in our worlds. I would say don’t listen to people who say that the world will not change because it has.

And if people like you are committed to changing it, then it will change. If you care about issues that have to do with social justice, human rights and equality for all people, then absolutely pursue that path and there is room and place for you. 

Brought To You By: Teja Foods

MORE Cover Story ARTICLES

DARPAN Magazine's Newmakers 2016

DARPAN Magazine's Newmakers 2016
2016 was a great year for the South Asian community. It was filled with promising initiatives taken up by most of our members and great achievements/honours received by many. It was only ideal to start 2017 by remembering these personalities and applauding them for making the community proud. This is how the idea of DARPAN’s 2016 Newsmakers came into being.

Holiday Feasting with Master Chef Sanjeev Kapoor

With his easy demeanour, cheerful commentary, and simple instructions, Chef extraordinaire Sanjeev Kapoor can make anyone fall in love with food and the art of cooking. 

Vidya Balan: Diwali is about brightness

Diwali is a festival of lights, of positivity and of family bonding – and actress Vidya Balan agrees. “It is about brightness, about letting go of the darkness, of the fear within,” says the charming lady, who has captured hearts with her beautiful smile, electric personality, and brilliant acting skills.

Pranav Mistry : Changing the face of technology

The computer genius has created some of the most thought-provoking interfaces till date – namely Quickies, sticky notes that can be searched and can send reminders; a pen that draws in 3D; TaPuMa, a tangible public map for the physical world; Mouseless – an invisible computer mouse; SPARSH – a novel way to copy-paste data between digital devices; and Blinkbot – a gaze and blink controlled robot. Through all these experiments, Mistry “was trying to bring a part of the physical world to the digital world.”

Dr. Shimi Kang: Taking the road less travelled

Dr. Kang has always taken the unconventional path, and the many roles she plays in the community and through her work is proof of her journey.

Enchanting Goddess: Aishwarya Rai Bachchan

Enchanting Goddess: Aishwarya Rai Bachchan

Gorgeous, mesmerizing, ethereal – one can fall short of words when describing Aishwarya Rai Bachchan.