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Dr. Vijayalakshmi Aluri

Doctor and Social Activist Managing Trustee

Dr. Vijayalakshmi Aluri is an Obstetrician and Gynaecologist who is a distinguished doctor with over 50 years of experience and a prolific writer. CEDOW was her brainchild. She has held many important positions in multiple organisations that work for women, child and youth improvement. She is deeply committed to bringing about change in society through women empowerment and entrepreneurship programs, social service and health education, for which CEDOW has been an effective platform. She currently focuses on health empowerment of women, vocational training for teens and needy women and wishes to sensitize the community against gender bias and gender violence. Dr. Aluri’s remarkable life journey will be an inspirational story for generations to come.

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Sri. R. Adinarayana Rao

Retired Govt. Officer from Ministry of Petroleum Trustee

An alumni of IISc, Bengaluru and the French Petroleum Institute in Paris, he has held various senior level positions in public sector institutions in the petroleum industry. He has been a social activist for the longest time and has worked with various voluntary organisations to help promote rural development, education for the disabled and health education for teens. Mr. Adinarayana Rao is an inspiration for us all!

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Smt. N. Usharani

Retired Lecturer in Govt. Polytechnic College, Kakinada Trustee

She has been a social activist and was the President of the Women’s Wing of Sri Satyasai Seva Samithi and has been a member of the Rotary Group of clubs. She is involved very closely with the Urban Health Centre- an organization that works on providing homes and care for aged women. She works with CEDOW very closely as her main areas of focus involve teaching young, impressionable children important values for life and to help older women live with dignity and safety.

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Mrs. N. Bhanumathi

Social Worker Trustee

The Secretary of Chaitanya Vanitha Mandali, Mrs. Bhanumathi has helped organise and run various programs in CEDOW - related to health education, empowerment and development of women. She is also a member of the Trust for Homes for Old Age Women and is involved in its maintenance. She focuses on organising vocational training for women and health education of adolescent girls.

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Ambedkar’s Legacy, Breaking Chains, Building Women’s Rights - CEDOW

Ambedkar’s Legacy: Breaking Chains, Building Women’s Rights

  • June 13, 2026

Dr.Vijayalakshmi Aluri, Winner of World Bank’s Projects competition, Author, Health Educator, Social worker, and Gynecologist, Sri Sri Holistic Multi-Specialty Hospitals, Hyderabad.

On a land weighed down by centuries of inequality, one voice rose with clarity and courage — not just for justice, but for dignity. B. R. Ambedkar did not merely speak about freedom; he defined it in a way that included those who had long been silenced — women.

At a time when women were suffocated by rigid customs, denied education, stripped of property rights, and forced into lives of submission, Ambedkar saw clearly that no society could progress if half of its population remained oppressed. For him, women’s emancipation was not a separate issue — it was central to the idea of true democracy and social justice.

Seeing the Reality Others Ignored

Ambedkar’s understanding of women’s struggles came from deep observation of society. He saw how caste, class, and gender intersected to create layers of discrimination. Women, especially those from marginalized communities, faced a double burden — oppression because of their caste and their gender.

He did not accept this as tradition. He questioned it. He challenged it. And more importantly, he worked to change it.

At a time when many reformers spoke about women’s welfare in limited ways, Ambedkar addressed the root causes. He understood that social customs, religious interpretations, and legal systems had all contributed to keeping women in a subordinate position. His approach was bold — change the system, not just the symptoms.

Education: The First Step to Freedom

Ambedkar firmly believed that education was the strongest tool for liberation.

His famous call — “Educate, Agitate, Organize” — was not limited to men.

He actively encouraged women to pursue education, to think independently, and to question injustice.

He urged families to educate their daughters, not as a favor, but as a right. He knew that an educated woman becomes aware of her dignity, her rights, and her potential. She becomes capable of making choices, raising aware families, and contributing meaningfully to society.

For Ambedkar, education was not just about literacy. It was about awakening the mind.

Legal Reforms: Giving Women Their Rights

Ambedkar’s most powerful contributions to women’s emancipation came through law. As the chief architect of the Indian Constitution, he ensured that the principles of equality, liberty, and dignity were not just ideals, but enforceable rights.

The Constitution guaranteed:

  • Equality before the law
  • Prohibition of discrimination based on gender
  • Equal opportunity in public employment
  • Protection of life and personal liberty

These were not small steps. They laid the foundation for women to stand as equal citizens.

But Ambedkar did not stop there.

The Hindu Code Bill: A Revolutionary Step

One of his most courageous efforts was the Hindu Code Bill. At a time when society was deeply conservative, Ambedkar proposed reforms that would fundamentally change the status of women in Hindu society.

The bill aimed to:

  • Give women equal rights to property
  • Allow women the right to divorce
  • Recognize women as independent individuals, not just dependents
  • Provide rights in inheritance

These ideas were revolutionary. They challenged centuries-old norms that treated women as secondary to men.

The resistance was fierce. Many opposed these changes, unwilling to give up traditional privileges. But Ambedkar stood firm. For him, justice was not negotiable.

Although the bill was not passed in its original form during his tenure, it later became the basis for several laws that improved women’s rights in India. His vision, though delayed, was not defeated.

Economic Independence: The Real Empowerment

Ambedkar understood that true empowerment comes with economic independence. A woman who depends entirely on others for survival often has little control over her life.

He supported women’s participation in the workforce and advocated for fair wages, maternity benefits, and safe working conditions. As a labor leader, he introduced policies that benefited women workers, including:

  • Maternity leave provisions
  • Equal pay considerations
  • Better working conditions in factories

These were not just policy decisions — they were steps toward giving women control over their own lives.

Challenging Social Norms

Ambedkar did not shy away from confronting harmful traditions. He openly criticized practices that degraded women, including child marriage, enforced widowhood, and denial of basic freedoms.

He encouraged women to break free from oppressive customs and take charge of their own lives. He spoke directly to women, urging them to stand up, to organize, and to demand their rights.

He believed that change would not come only from laws — it had to come from within society, and women themselves had to be active participants in that change.

Women as Agents of Change

Ambedkar saw women not as passive recipients of reform, but as powerful agents of transformation. He encouraged them to participate in movements, attend meetings, and raise their voices.

Many women joined his movements, stepping out of their homes and into public life for the first time. They found in him not just a leader, but an ally who respected their strength and potential.

He understood something that remains relevant even today: when women rise, society rises.

A Vision That Still Guides Us

Ambedkar’s vision for women was far ahead of his time. He imagined a society where women would:

  • Live with dignity
  • Have equal opportunities
  • Make their own choices
  • Be free from fear and discrimination

While much progress has been made, his vision is still not fully realized. Gender inequality, violence, and discrimination continue to exist in different forms.

This makes his legacy not just historical but deeply relevant.

Carrying the Legacy Forward

Remembering Ambedkar is not enough. His ideas must be practiced.

Every time a girl is educated, his vision moves forward.

Every time a woman asserts her rights, his struggle continues.

Every time society questions injustice, his voice echoes again.

His legacy calls for action:

  • To ensure equal education for girls
  • To support women’s economic independence
  • To challenge harmful traditions
  • To create safe and respectful environments

This responsibility does not belong to one group alone — it belongs to all of us.

Ambedkar’s legacy

Ambedkar did not simply break chains; he showed how to build a future without them. His work gave women the tools to rise, the rights to stand as equals, and the confidence to claim their place in society.

He believed that the progress of its women is the measure of the progress of a community. This idea remains as powerful today as it was then.

As we remember him, the question is not what he did — but what we will do with what he gave us.

His legacy lives on in every woman who refuses to be silenced, every voice that demands equality, and every step taken toward a just and humane society.

Ambedkar’s work was not just about changing laws — it was about changing lives. And that change continues, one woman, one voice, one act of courage at a time.

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