Bahwanti's parents allowed him to go back to the school by insisting on the volunteer of the Aguadet Girls System.
A young girl from Rajasthan can not understand how much work should be done before going to school.
Some of the jobs are more important than going to school. But an Indian educator who encourages more than three million girls to go to school to make a permanent change in their lives.
The daily work of Bahwandi Lassi Ram begins with breakfast. Heat the buns on the sleeve and do not turn the bread away.
After feeding the chickens, he cleans the vessels. Her father remembers the next job.
"Sheep should go to grazing," he says, "they will not wait."
Finally, she completes her hair and tears the hair and puts it in the form of a "V" formula. She gets a bag and goes to school at 4 km (2.4 miles).
"Many girls in our village do not go because the school is very far away," he says.
If the school for under 15 years is in our village, many more girls will read. "
"Go through the highway and go to school, and the girls are dreading to pass through the highway with the drunken driving."
Disappearing schoolchildren
The volunteers of the 'AGGATED Girls' charity go home to the villages and do not go to school for girls. They speak to the family about the importance of sending girls to school and they plan to work with the community to include them in school.
Meena, a member of the Elugate Girls' Club, is forced to go home in Rajasthan and send women back to school.
Volunteers who make sure to have bathrooms in schools. They teach lessons to girls. They teach English, mathematics and Hindi.
They have helped millions of children so far, and 150,000 women are attending school.
Meena Badi of the 'Eugate Girls' organization takes me to a family of four women who are married to a younger age.
Now fifth in the family, another girl is married at age 14 and has been housed from school.
"Parents think that there is no benefit from a woman's education," says Meena.
"When parents go to work or care for their parents, they want to be at home to do housework, care for livestock, and care for small children.
Sébina Hussein, the founder of 'Eugate Girls', believes that education can do everything he wants in life.
It is estimated that three million women under 10-14 years do not attend school.
Child bride
Child marriage is one of the key issues that women retreat from getting education.
"In Rajasthan, 50-60% of women are married at the age of 18, and 10-15% girls are getting married by 10 years," says Sapena.
UNICEF says that India is more childless than any other country. Almost half of the current Indian women have already married before the age of 18.
Neelam Vaishnav is witness to the compulsory marriage of girls. He was married to his sister's brother-in-law, aged 14, and is a member of the Esquitad Girls' Organization.
With the promise of going to school, the traditional way of marriage went to the husband's family after marriage. When they refused to give up the promise, the blue decided to break the marriage.
"When I decided to divorce, I encountered a lot of problems and troubled everybody in the village and put the titles, and it still continues." Husbands, who blamed the behavior, said they were shy and shy.
Best assets
Meanwhile, Bahady is looking forward to the future in school: "I want to be a teacher of education for women after graduating because we have the courage to read if we are studying."
"If I stand on my own feet and get a job, I can help my family economically."
These words are a pleasurable satisfaction to Sfina. Suffinaa believes that women who care about the health of the family and nutrition will be able to solve many of India's stressful problems.
UNESCO claims that with a mother who has been studying for one year, 5% to 1% of baby deaths, and a 20% increase in her lifetime.
"If you take any growth, it can improve by educating women, so women are really our greatest asset," he says.
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