Girls Seize Independence With Scooters in Kashmir
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SRINAGAR, KASHMIR, INDIA – Priya Mahajan, 25, has been riding a Scooty – a gearless, motorized two-wheeler – for the last nine years. A project assistant at the Regional Research Laboratory, she received the vehicle as a gift from her uncle to get to tutoring sessions during high school.
“When I was in 11th standard, my uncle who lives in U.S. gifted me this Scooty,” Mahajan says. “He sensed I needed it the most, as I had to go to multiple tuitions and coaching for different subjects. It was convenient, and I was no longer dependent on anyone.”
Mahajan say that riding a scooter in Jammu, the winter capital of Indian-administered Jammu and Kashmir state, was already widely accepted when she was a teenager. But the same acceptance did not extend to the summer capital of Srinagar, which lies in the relatively conservative Muslim-dominated Kashmir Valley.
But today, scooters are becoming an essential requirement for commuting there too, especially for working women, Mahajan says. It is easier to drive when navigating narrow roads, and because Mahajan lives alone, she says that it is no longer a problem if she has to stay late at her office because she doesn’t need a ride home.
“Scooty sets me free,” Mahajan says. “I no longer depend on anyone.” With her Scooty, she says she can help her family too. “I can even help my family,” she says. “I take my mother out to the market.”
Things are changing in the Kashmir Valley, with a sudden increase in the number of girls and women using scooters as their main form of transportation. Independence, the ease of getting to tutoring sessions and the ability to help their families has made scooters popular with schoolgirls and even working women. Scooters also enable girls to avoid overcrowding and sexual harassment on public transportation. Sociologists link the trend to expanding gender roles for women here.
Scooty is an Indian brand of scooters manufactured by TVS Motor Company. Designed for girls and women, it’s the best-selling scooter brand and has come to represent a generic name for any female's two-wheeler in India.
Other motorcycle manufacturers have also unveiled scooter models marketed at young Indian women, such as Yamaha with its Ray model in 2012.
“We sell around 10 to 15 Scootys every month to female customers,” says a sales officer at a TVS Scooty sales outlet in Srinagar, who declined to be named. “The price of a Scooty ranges from 42,000 [$8,000] to 50,000 [$1,000] rupees.”
The rising number of applicants for motorbike licenses also shows the popularity of scooters.
The first woman to obtain a license for a gearless motorcycle like a scooter in Kashmir did so in 2009, according to the Regional Transport Office of Srinagar. In 2009, 50 women obtained licenses under this category, while in 2011 the number rose to 488.
Sana Yaqoob, 18, obtained her Scooty in March 2011. The student says that it saves her a lot of time. “I live in a residential colony in interiors of Srinagar, which means a lot of time lost in commuting,” she says. “But now I can go anywhere.” Yaqoob says she feels lucky that her family supports her scootering.
“They feel nice about it and want me to be independent,” she says. “My parents are supporting me to stand by my own and do not want me to be dependent.”
Nida-ul-Islam, 20, received a scooter as a gift from her parents when she qualified for her higher secondary examination. She says the scooter has boosted her confidence and that her parental support means everything when it comes to encouraging independence. “Scooty has made my life comfortable, easy and has reduced my workload,” she says.
Nayrah Nisar, 17, got a Scooty after finishing high school, and her brother helped her to learn how to drive it. “Traveling is no longer a boring and tiring experience as earlier,” Nisar says. Nisar says her scooter also makes her more helpful. “I can help my friends and family to reach a destination,” Nisar says.
Sajad Sadaf, 12, says she and her best friend got Scootys together last year. They now occasionally drive to school together. “Why should boys have all the fun?” Sajad quips, quoting the punch line of a TV commercial of the popular Scooty brand.
She is aware that she is well below the legal driving age of 18, but she says her mother is encouraging. Still, her father is apprehensive, as driving by a minor is an offense. “Whenever I go out on Scooty, my father says no, but I manage to get permission,” Sajad says, giggling. “I tell my daddy this is the last time, but the last time never comes.”
Others say that scooters are a solution to complaints of overcrowding and sexual harassment of girls on public transportation.
Sajad uses the school bus when she doesn’t drive her Scooty, but she says she is afraid of public transportation. “There are strangers all around you in a local bus, and there is so much overcrowding,” she says. “Traveling by a Scooty is so much easier and convenient.”
Ruhi Jan, a computer engineer, agrees that scooters are safer for girls than public transportation. “In buses, there is harassment in some way, touching, intentional or unintentional especially of school girls,” Jan says. “Then there are boys following girls, even teasing. Scooty helps in avoiding all this. Moreover, girls can go anywhere, especially to tuitions, where there is specific timing easily and comfortably.”
Mahajan agrees. “The buses are always overcrowded, and there is so much pushing and touching,” she says. “And it is really difficult for girls to raise a voice, especially against the older men.”
Seeing the growing demand of scooters among college girls and working women, J&K Bank introduced a finance program – the J&K Bank Scooty Finance for Girls/Ladies – to make the vehicles more accessible.
“Introduction of this product was driven by business objectives as well as our obligations under social responsibility,” says Layek Ahmad Jan, a strategy and business development executive at J&K Bank. He says the scheme aims to tap the specific market of working women and young female students, which has been growing rapidly across the country.
“From a social aspect, we desired to facilitate the purchase of the Scootys by females to free them from the innumerable troubles associated with public transport system,” he says. Since the launch of the program, J&K Bank has financed 202 scooters for 202 women at a fixed interest rate of 13 percent.
Bashir Ahmad Dabla, a sociology professor at the University of Kashmir, links the growing trend of women using scooters to expanding gender roles in society.
“With increased education, employment, better economic conditions, women are adopting new roles, different from the traditional ones,” he says. “They are venturing into new fields, unconventional areas. Women in Kashmir are working as sales girls, airport staff or with music, areas they didn’t venture into earlier.”
In the process, Dabla says they are adopting innovative things like scooters in response to the changes in environment around them.
“They are realizing their strengths and abilities,” he says.
http://www.globalpressinstitute.org/asia/indian-administered-kashmir/gir...









Comments
Independence is key
When we talk about independence, you do not easily think of transport. It is good to know that women and girls can choose to go out and drive themselves whether on Scootys or other means. It also shows what demand for a product can make service providers innovate and find solutions to problems. I was happy to learn from this post that even banks are willing to finance scooters for women. Although I wish the loan rate was lower but it is a start.
Thanks Nusrat for sharing.
Best regards,
Osai
Follow Osai on twitter: @livingtruely
Even small things can
Even small things can contribute towards the bigger change we are seeking. Thanks for the kind words.
Love
Nusrat
Free to ride
Wonderful article Nusrat, insightful and unexpected coverage. I love thinking about these young women's newly found independence and freedom through two-wheeled transportation. As demand continues to rise, I hope the prices (and interest rates) can come down and enable more women to embrace new opportunities.
Thanks so much,
Scott Beck
World Pulse Online Community Manager
Thanks Scott. Love
Thanks Scott.
Love
Nusrat
Thank you Nusrat
Nusrat,
Your article took me back to my schooling days, when i rode a scooty too.It was fun, exhilarating and yes gave me a sense of independence. So good to know that girls in Jammu and Kashmir, are learning to be less dependent on public transport ( which can be a nuisance sometimes !) and using their own mode of transport to commute.
Thank you so much for sharing this lovely article which brought back fond memories.
Much love,
Mukut Ray
Good to hear that you rode
Good to hear that you rode one too. Scooty has come late to Kashmir like so many other things because of conflict.
Thanks for reading.
Love
Nusrat
Great Change!
A wonderful coverage Nusrat!
I am glad to feel how a scooty can give the independence the girls needed for so long. It should mean a lot to them now. And i like this "Scooty sets me free" from Mahajan. I can see the picture of two levels of change in different regions of the country where in the south they are at an advanced stage with a decade ahead where every school going or office going woman uses a two wheeler. Its also painful to think how conflicts can affect the positive changes and independence in Kashmir. I wish the crown of India shines with all our scooty girls breathing the fresh air of freedom.
Stay blessed.
Sharontina
Thanks.
Thanks.
Nusrat
Taking Control...
So great to see that women are taking control in this area of their lives! Let us hope this movement continues, and that this one step is just the first of many for these girls and women!
Love!
Peace and Hope-
Michelle
Thanks :)
Thanks :)
Nusrat
Uplifting and wonderful :-)
Thanks for posting this article. It is nice to read an uplifting article. It also produce hope and create positive attitudes. Increase hope and a good example. Well done.
Have fun girls on scooty's. Sending loads of love
With love,
Amei
Thank you so much Amei. Love
Thank you so much Amei.
Love
Nusrat
Thank you, Nusrat Ara
Dear Nusrat Ara,
Thank you for manifesting this post to the rest of us !
It is through unity and solidarity that we can rise beyond the barricades that shackle our growth. It is a significant piece, one that deserves much readership !
In solidarity,
Shaheen
Thank you so much for the
Thank you so much for the appreciation.
Love
Nusrat
Promising story of independence!
Nusrat,
Thank you for this coverage. It is a beautiful image to think of girls in Kashmir riding around freely on scootys. This makes me so incredibly hopeful. I wish the scooters were more attainable. Are there any funding programs besides the bank loans?
Thank you for your work.
Best,
Sarah
Thank You Sarah. No there
Thank You Sarah. No there aren't any funding programmes.
Love
Nusrat