Kavita Devi (journalist) explained

Kavita Bundelkhandi
Birth Place:Kunjan Purwa, Chitrakoot district, Uttar Pradesh, India
Birth Name:Kavita Devi
Occupation:Editor-in-Chief and News Anchor at Khabar Lahariya
Awards:Chameli Devi Jain Award for Outstanding Women Mediapersons (collective)

Kavita Devi, alternatively Kavita Bundelkhandi,[1] [2] is an Indian journalist and news presenter. She is the editor-in-chief and co-founder of the grassroots feminist news network Khabar Lahariya.[3] Devi was notably the first Dalit ("untouchable") to become a member of the Editor's Guild of India.[4]

Biography

Kavita Devi was born in the remote village of Kunjan Purwa,[5] near Banda, Uttar Pradesh, to a family of Dalit farmers.[6] The eldest among six children, she was married off at the age of 12 and received no formal education.[7] In her testimony, Devi states that a non-government organisation (NGO) had opened a center in her village where she studied extensively for six months, and after substantial resistance from other villagers including her family.[8] She is noted to have been the first woman from her village to have received an education as a result.[9] In later years, she has gone on to complete her graduation and earned a Master of Arts in journalism.

Devi states that she started working with a small newsletter Mahila Dakiya, which was run by the center in her village and marked the beginning of her journalistic career. Eventually in 2002, she co-founded Khabar Lahariya along with seven other women, with the support an NGO called Nirantar,[10] and funding from the Dorabji Tata Trust, the National Foundation of India and the Dalit Foundation.[11] [12] In 2004, the journalists at the paper collectively became the recipient of the Chameli Devi Jain Award for Outstanding Women Mediapersons. By 2014, the paper had six editions and journalist staff of around 40 women.[13] It was described by Business Standard, as having become the backbone of the people in the impoverished rural regions of Bundelkhand and Awadh, in the states of Uttar Pradesh and Bihar.[14]

Over time, Devi has served in a number of positions in the organisation such as the editor of the Banda edition,[15] the head of digital operations,[16] and initially as a solo field journalist. She also runs a weekly news commentary show called The Kavita Show on the network and has been the editor-in-chief since 2019.[17] In the same year, she appeared as a speaker at a TED conference which resulted in widespread attention on her story,[18] and was described by the host and actor Shah Rukh Khan as an inspiration.[19]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Bhandare. Namita. 2020-10-16. A model for rooted, inclusive journalism. 2020-11-25. Hindustan Times. en.
  2. Book: Pande, Pooja. Momspeak: The Funny, Bittersweet Story of Motherhood in India. 2020. Penguin Books. 978-0-14-349778-3. en.
  3. Web site: 12 February 2020. Kavita Devi on the jobs that will define India's future. 2020-11-24. Quartz India. en.
  4. Web site: Murti. Aditi. 2020-10-31. Tell Me More: Talking Media Ethics and Representation With Kavita Devi. 2020-11-24. The Swaddle. en-US.
  5. Web site: Dhamini. Ratnam. 2019-11-09. 'People wouldn't think of me as a journalist': Kavita Devi, editor-in-chief, Khabar Lahariya. 2020-11-24. Hindustan Times. en.
  6. Web site: Hazra. Nivedita. 2019-11-10. In Conversation With Kavita Devi: The Editor-In-Chief Of Khabar Lahariya. 2020-11-26. FII English. en-US.
  7. Web site: Kotamraju. Priyanka. 27 June 2017. A reporter's notebook. 2020-11-24. Business Line. en.
  8. Web site: 1 September 2011. Khabar Lahariya, A Women Rural Newspaper in Uttar Pradesh, India. Ritimo. en.
  9. Web site: Gupta. Neha. 2019-09-23. Women in News panel discusses impact of 'Me Too' in Indian newsrooms. 2020-11-24. WAN-IFRA. en-US.
  10. Web site: Katakam. Anupam. 25 April 2008. Making news. 2020-11-26. Frontline. The Hindu. en.
  11. Web site: Gahilote. Prarthana. 2 April 2004. Khabar Lahariya: When six women started a wave. 2020-11-26. The Hoot.
  12. Web site: Chakraborty. Sanghamitra. 1 November 2004. Mother India. 2020-11-26. Outlook India.
  13. Web site: Ratnam. Dhamini. 2019-11-09. Small-town newsrooms fail to provide equal space to women. 2020-11-26. Hindustan Times. en.
  14. News: 2014-03-02. Khabar Lahariya: Making rural media a force for change (Media Feature). Business Standard India. Indo-Asian News Service. 2020-11-26.
  15. News: Pande. Manisha. 2012-11-10. Writing from the roots. Business Standard. 2020-11-26.
  16. Web site: 2017-08-15. The First Woman With Her Own Talk Show in Bundelkhand Shares What Freedom Means to Women. The Better India. en-US.
  17. Web site: 2018-08-14. A video featuring a 'witch' goes viral with seeming complicity from the police and press in UP's Banda. Firstpost.
  18. Web site: 6 November 2019. कविता गुनगुना रहीं बुंदेलखंडी हक की 'लहरिया'. Dainik Jagran. hi.
  19. Web site: 8 November 2019. "Kavita Devi is an inspiration for all of us" says Shah Rukh Khan on TED Talks India Nayi Baat. 2020-11-26. Telly Chakkar. en.