This Woman Left Her Job & Family To Establish An Institute To Empower Women And Promote Sustainable Living

This Woman Left Her Job & Family To Establish An Institute To Empower Women And Promote Sustainable Living

She survived an open heart surgery as a teenager at a time when its survival rate was low in India. She was 16 years old when she underwent the surgery that changed her perspective on life forever. She then chose a path less travelled.

This is a story about Janak Palta McGilligan, a woman working for sustainable living and empowerment of women.

People call her ‘Didi’, and her late husband Jimmy McGilligan ‘jijaji’ (brother-in-law). She has empowered thousands of rural, tribal and urban poor girls, women and men of all ages over the last 33 years. Janak Palta along with her late husband also pioneered solar cooking to achieve sustainable living.


The journey towards a green hero

Speaking about her journey, Janak Palta told The Logical Indian: “It was difficult, but not impossible”. Janak had undergone an open heart surgery at the age of 16. Her own survival opened her eyes. “I started searching for a path to thank God. I wanted to do something for the society”, she said.

Establishment of Barli Institute

Speaking about her journey Janak Palta told The Logical Indian: “It was difficult, but not impossible”. SHer own survival opened her eyes. “I started searching for a path to thank God”.

She wanted to do something for society as a common person. It took her 16 years to discover herself and to decide to follow Baha’i path for Service.

She worked as a translator in a Punjab and Haryana High Court in Chandigarh court and later worked at the Centre for Research in Rural and Industrial Development in Chandigarh. She served as a Research fellow in various research projects including one on communal violence which took her around the nation and to Indore. During her stay, she was invited to establish Barli Development For Rural Women by the National Assembly of Baha’is of India. Janak left her profession, home, and family and moved to Indore on June 1, 1985, to start an Institute for rural and tribal women on 6 acres of land with no buildings or even boundary wall. Janak lived on her own as a Director, a single person army and started bit by bit.

It was three years later that she met an Irishman late Jimmy McGilligan OBE. Both of them together served rural and tribal women from disadvantaged backgrounds. The institute organizes various training programmes for rural, village and tribal women. Scheduled caste, scheduled tribes, backward classes, orphans, widows, and physically challenged women are given priority here.

The Institute enables women to become agents of positive social change. Barli is a common female name among Bhilala tribes that means Central Pillar that holds the house. Janak named it because she believes that Woman is the Central Pillar of society if empowered can sustain development.

She handed over the Barli Institute to Mrs Tahera Jadhav who was trained by her in a systematic succession plan as Deputy Director for more than 6 months. Tahera is the director of the institute since April 17, 2011. She still serves in the Board of Directors that manages the activities of the Institute.


Jimmy McGillian Centre and efforts for sustainable living

She founded Jimmy McGillian Centre in 2011 to work for social causes.

A Padma Shri awardee, Janak trained women to start solar cooking. She is an active advocate of solar cooking. Electricity to the Sanawadiya village is also supplied from the centre through solar cells and windmills. “Even waste papers are turned into briquettes,” Janak told The Logical Indian.

Jimmy McGillian passed away in a tragic accident in 2011. Even after his demise, she worked for environment and women empowerment with sheer perseverance and willpower. “Now I am seventy. I don’t believe in celebrations. On my 70th birthday, I planted 70 trees,” she said.




The eco-friendly home

After Jimmy’s demise, Janak moved to Giridarshan, their personal abode in Sanawadiya village. She has a huge solar panel on top of her home. “The entire meal is cooked using solar cookers,” she said. She grows vegetables and herbs and gives the excess power to neighbouring people. There are 160 trees and 13 crops in her half an acre land. She has 2 cows whom she looks after.

Janak also trains people to make natural colours that can be used in Holi celebrations. She is open to having visitors in her home and to share the tips for sustainable living.


Relief for cancer patients

Being a breast cancer survivor, Janak also works for creating awareness among cancer patients. She set up an organisation called ‘Sangini’ to counsel breast cancer patients. “I want to make them aware of sustainable food habits and living,” she said.

Janak Palta has spoken at the UN about her journey as an environmentalist. She represented India in UN for a high-level forum on sustainable development goals. She was recognised as ‘Green Hero’ by The Energy and Resource Institute (TERI) in India. She also serves as an advisor of Solar Cookers International.

Born in a Punjabi family in Chandigarh, Janak had never been into college. But she did her studies privately and pursued MA in English literature, and political science and MPhil in political science, and a doctoral degree in sustainable community development.

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Editor : Anoopa Sebastian Sebastian

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