• Español (Spanish)
Lok Manch: a collaboration initiative in India to struggle for civil rightsLok Manch: a collaboration initiative in India to struggle for civil rightsLok Manch: a collaboration initiative in India to struggle for civil rightsLok Manch: a collaboration initiative in India to struggle for civil rights
  • Project
    • Mission & Vision
    • Background – Our Story
    • Our Partners
  • Stories
  • Network Map
    • My networks
  • Documents
  • Collaboration Hub
    • My proposals
  • Get Involved
English
  • Español

People's Forum "Lok Manch"

Lok Manch: a collaboration initiative in India to struggle for civil rights

Published by Guest Author at November 10, 2017
  • Collaboration

Assessing the social delivery system of the Jesuit Conference of South Asia (JCSA) and assisted by Jesuits in Social Action (JESA) and the Jesuit-managed Indian Social Institutes of Delhi and Bengaluru, launched a programme under the banner of LOK MANCH (LM; in Gujarati means, “People’s Platform”) on 2 November 2015, after a sixteen-month long preparation. Right now, LM is directed by the National Secretariat headed by the JESA Secretary.

It is a people’s movement for the development of leadership among dalits, adivasis, women, minorities, urban as well as rural poor, and other marginalized communities of various regions, religions, and cultures. It works on the principle of collaboration with like-minded Organizations or persons or agencies, all of whom having a similar ideology or spirituality, and all aiming at social change not bolsters but promotes human dignity.  This interactive network is necessary to succeed in attaining the common objective.  This network consists of a hundred likeminded organizations covering 12 states of India. What makes it special is that it has been owned up by people. “LM is a platform for marginalized people like us to come together to claim our rights, to fight for our rights, to live with dignity,” recalls 27-year-old Kanchan Devi, a beneficiary of the National Food Security Act (NFSA).  She comes from the Musahar community, one of the most deprived communities in Bihar. She has no land or livestock, nor does she have any income other than what she gets as a manual daily worker.  NFSA empowers her and her family not with but through campaign – the right to food.

Vision and Mission 

LM envisions India an egalitarian, just, inclusive, democratic, and secular nation. Its mission is to create a strong national platform for ensuring people’s improved access to Government schemes, and improving the qualities of policies and their proper implementation. That mission is carried out by discovering and training local leaders who will then lobby for the necessary changes with the present Government legal provisions and social schemes, and for the better access of impoverished households to entitlement schemes like the National Food Security Act (NFSA), Schedule Caste Sub Plan (SCSP), Tribal Sub Plan (TSP), Water, Sanitation, Hygiene (WASH) and other Governments Schemes.  These schemes are used as resources and tools to enlighten and empower the grassroots leaders. Grassroots democracy is pivotal to the Nation Building. The people at grassroots should be empowered to develop themselves and their communities.

LM is guided by 11 core values: liberty, justice, equality, fraternity, love, peace, commitment, gender justice, credibility, forgiveness, and excellence. These become operational under certain core principles: decentralization, participative decision making, transparent in accountability, team work, and shared responsibility.

Composition and Administration

The entire country is divided into 4 zones, each consisting of 23 units, each unit having 4 organizations. Out of 100 Organizations that act in partnership, only 44 are Jesuit run.  Each unit reaches out to about 12,000 households, in about 80 villages, with approximately 160 community leaders, and around 80 monitoring persons who can take up their own issues. Altogether a total of 5,520 such leaders will be empowered by the end of three years. They are chosen from among their own communities by the communities themselves, and they are trained to respond to the issues of yesterday, today, and tomorrow.  Their praxis is “action- reflection- action” that was articulated by Paulo Freire in his Pedagogy of the Oppressed.

LM is true to its motto: ‘’together we make a difference!’’ Today, LM covers countless households and enables them to keep from starvation, which is the “unfinished task of the freedom struggle,” according to Fr George Pattery, the President of the JCSA (the Provincials conference of South Asia), who has shown great interest in LM, and encourages fellow Jesuits to implement it on war footing in every village of India.

Thanks to LM, people are organized to represent their concerns and grievances to their elected representatives and to Government bureaucracy.  The dream of LM is to translate into a national movement with people’s leadership being exerted from the bottom of the pyramid.  As the leadership of LM will be taken up by the people, the Jesuits and other collaborators will play accompaniment /complementary role as days go by and be willing to take orders from the leaders! Through LM, gram sabhas (village assemblies) are getting so activated and strengthened so as to work and to rebuild a new home based on human values. LM has shown Jesuits and others a new way of engaging in social action in the country and spreading the theme of GC 36.

For more details and reports: www.hamaralokmanch.net

Share
mm
Guest Author
Our blog is open to the participation of guest authors who are interested in contributing content that is aligned with the overall goals of the project. Jesuit Networking is a platform to promote networking related to the Jesuit mission. If you have a proposal for content, please feel free to send us a message at [email protected].

Related posts

February 18, 2024

Networks and Synodality


Read more
February 18, 2024

First Steps of Fe y Alegría in Asia


Read more
February 18, 2024

Ecojesuit in 2024


Read more
February 15, 2024

Lent 2024: it’s time to refresh


Read more

Comments are closed.

Mission

Jesuit Networking is an international initiative to support the emergence of collaborative bottom-up innovation for the universal Mission within the Jesuit apostolic body. Learn more

Contact us: [email protected]

Get Involved

Many from all over the world are contributing to this project through different groups with specific tasks.
Explora

Follow us

© 2018 Jesuit networking. All Rights Reserved. SJDigital
Legal notice - Cookies Policy - Privacy policy
  • Add post
  • Add network
  • Add collaboration
  • Login
  • FAQ

We are using cookies to give you the best experience on our website.

You can find out more about which cookies we are using or switch them off in .

Jesuit networking
Resumen de privacidad

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.

More information

Strictly Necessary Cookies

Strictly Necessary Cookie should be enabled at all times so that we can save your preferences for cookie settings.

If you disable this cookie, we will not be able to save your preferences. This means that every time you visit this website you will need to enable or disable cookies again.

Política de cookies

More information about our Cookie Policy