Education and Skills

These Nepali ‘Big Sisters’ are pushing back against child marriage

Kathmandu, Nepal

Hundreds of Big Sisters - many of them former child brides themselves - have volunteered to counsel teenage girls Image: Unsplash/Terry Boynton

Annie Banjeri

If it wasn't for her self-annointed "Big Sister", Punam Pun Magar would have quit school at 14 to marry a man nearly twice her age, bear him babies and tend house.

Now she's hoping to become a lawyer.

Two in five Nepalese girls just like Magar marry before they turn 18: one of the highest rates in the world, despite child marriage being illegal in the impoverished Himalayan country.

The bad times for Magar began when both her parents died and her aunt's family felt burdened, saying she must pay her way.

Have you read?

"They told me not to go to school and do household chores. After a point, they wanted to get rid of me ... so they started planning my marriage to a 26-year-old man," Magar said as tears welled up.

That's when Big Sister Krishna Paudel rode to her rescue, snatching her from a potential life of illiteracy, poverty and ill health: common fallout of so many child marriages in Nepal.

Hundreds of Big Sisters - many of them former child brides themselves - have volunteered to counsel teenage girls like Magar, as well as their families and communities, on the impact of marrying young, using their own stories as cautionary tales.

"When I met her, I told her about child marriage - the legal consequences, the social fallout, everything. Since then, I've seen phenomenal change in her. That knowledge empowered her and now she's headed towards a bright future," said Paudel.

Older Image: Thomson Reuters Foundation/Annie Banerji

The legal age of marriage in Nepal is 20 for men and women alike. Yet child marriage remains deeply rooted in conservative, mainly Hindu Nepal, where many parents marry off their teenaged daughters to boost the wider family finances.

This drives a vicious cycle of ill health, malnutrition and ignorance, since a child bride is more likely to leave school and experience problems in pregnancy or birth, say campaigners.

Some also face domestic and sexual abuse.

Nepal has the third highest child marriage prevalence in South Asia, according to the United Nations.

The 'Sisters for Sisters' programme was introduced as part of a government drive to end child marriages in Nepal by 2030.

The Sisters' top job - to keep girls in school.

Activists say dropout rates rise when girls are co-opted into household chores, pushed into early marriage or held back by discrimination and deep-seated taboos over periods.

So when 25-year-old Paudel noticed Magar's attendance dipping, she tracked her down and weighed in with advice - and kept dishing out the same message over many months.

The wedding was called off; Magar went back to school.

"Had it not been for my Big Sister, I would have had three or four children by now, and they would be studying here instead of me," said Magar, 17, at her government-run school in western Nepal's Surkhet district.

"Little Sisters" learn about menstrual hygiene and myths around periods during a group meeting with their "Big Sister" in Surkhet, Nepal on September 12, 2019. Thomson Reuters Foundation/Annie Banerji

A class about menstrual hygiene and myths covering periods Image: Thomson Reuters Foundation/Annie Banerji

SAVING LIVES

A wife at 15 then a mother at 17, Big Sister Rachana Bantha said she had grappled with poor health and poverty since her forced marriage a decade ago.

"I felt like killing myself. I remember how horrible it all was - but that is what motivates me every day to help these girls. They should not have to go through what I did," Bantha told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

"I can save their lives," she said, wearing the Big Sisters' uniform of pink tunic and black pleated trousers.

Bantha said she had stopped at least a dozen child marriages in the past four years.

But the crime remains widespread, said Khagendra Bahadur Ruchal, an administrative official at Surkhet district.

He blamed poverty and illiteracy, as well as parents hoping to stop the taboo of unmarried sex and pregnancy.

The main enemy, however, is custom.

"It is ingrained in our society's fabric. It is considered the norm. Even politicians and teachers are marrying their children off in some places. If they don't practice what they preach, how can we expect any change?" he said.

Teenagers are also eloping more often, a trend campaigners attribute to better access to mobile phones and the internet. As for the cause, they said some girls are fleeing poverty or forced marriage, others chase independence and sexual freedom.

Ruchal the official said it was important to normalise live-in relationships so teenagers did not feel compelled to marry.

Nepal should also give girls some sort of incentive to stay in school so they aspire to a career of their own, said Sumnima Tuladhar of the Kathmandu-based child rights group CWIN Nepal.

"They need to be excited about education. They don't see a future after finishing school. We have to create a society where young people have something more than marriage to look forward to," she said.

"Big Sister" Durga Budha discusses menstrual hygiene and myths around periods during a group meeting with her "Little Sisters" in Surkhet, Nepal on September 12, 2019. Thomson Reuters Foundation/Annie Banerji

Image: Thomson Reuters Foundation/Annie Banerji

STIGMA

Poverty is the main problem with girls routinely pushed into domestic work in a country where one in five survives on less than $1.25 a day, said Ananda Paudel of development charity VSO, which is behind the Sisters for Sister project.

The programme began in 2017 and has boosted girls' confidence along with their school attendance, said Paudel.

"They are so empowered. Had it not been for this, we cannot imagine where they would have been right now. How many would have disappeared from the system, the society," he said.

And the results already show.

Magar - alert in her blue school uniform - seems worlds away from the 14-year-old orphan who came so close to dropping out.

"I'm going to study to become a lawyer so that I can help women. They face so much discrimination and do not find legal assistance," she said. "I want to help them give a voice."

Don't miss any update on this topic

Create a free account and access your personalized content collection with our latest publications and analyses.

Sign up for free

License and Republishing

World Economic Forum articles may be republished in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International Public License, and in accordance with our Terms of Use.

The views expressed in this article are those of the author alone and not the World Economic Forum.

Stay up to date:

Education, Gender and Work

Share:
The Big Picture
Explore and monitor how Education, Gender and Work is affecting economies, industries and global issues
A hand holding a looking glass by a lake
Crowdsource Innovation
Get involved with our crowdsourced digital platform to deliver impact at scale
World Economic Forum logo
Global Agenda

The Agenda Weekly

A weekly update of the most important issues driving the global agenda

Subscribe today

You can unsubscribe at any time using the link in our emails. For more details, review our privacy policy.

Why younger generations need critical thinking, fact-checking and media verification to stay safe online

Agustina Callegari and Adeline Hulin

October 31, 2024

Skills for the future: 4 ways to help workers transition to the digital economy

About us

Engage with us

  • Sign in
  • Partner with us
  • Become a member
  • Sign up for our press releases
  • Subscribe to our newsletters
  • Contact us

Quick links

Language editions

Privacy Policy & Terms of Service

Sitemap

© 2024 World Economic Forum