The State of Women in Rural India
India is home to over 400 million rural women, yet they remain among the most vulnerable populations in the country. According to the 2021 Census and NFHS-5 data, only 41% of rural women participate in the labour force, and nearly 23% of girls are married before the age of 18. Limited access to education, healthcare, and economic opportunities keeps millions of women trapped in cycles of dependence and poverty.
The gap between urban and rural women is stark — rural women are twice as likely to be illiterate, three times less likely to have a bank account, and far more likely to experience domestic violence. Addressing women's empowerment in rural India is not just a social cause — it is an economic imperative that can unlock India's full growth potential.
Education as the Foundation of Empowerment
Study after study confirms that educating a girl transforms her entire family. According to the World Bank, each additional year of schooling for a girl increases her future earnings by 10–20%. Educated women marry later, have fewer and healthier children, and are far more likely to send their own children — especially daughters — to school.
At Suryanvi Foundation Trust, we prioritise girls' education through our Vidya Jyoti programme. From providing school supplies to running after-school study centres for girls in communities where female dropout rates are highest, we create safe, supportive learning environments that keep girls in school.
Skill Training and Financial Inclusion
Education alone is not enough. Women need marketable skills and access to financial systems to achieve true independence. Across India, NGOs are running transformative programmes that include:
- Tailoring and Handicraft Training: Enabling women to earn from home-based or cooperative businesses.
- Self-Help Groups (SHGs): Micro-savings and micro-lending groups that build financial discipline and community solidarity.
- Digital Literacy: Teaching women to use smartphones, UPI payments, and online marketplaces to sell goods and access services.
- Health and Nutrition Awareness: Workshops on maternal health, menstrual hygiene, and balanced diets using locally available foods.
The Ripple Effect of Empowering Women
When a woman is empowered, she reinvests 90% of her income into her family — compared to 35% for men (UN Women). This means empowering women has a direct multiplier effect on child nutrition, education, and household well-being. Communities with empowered women also exhibit lower rates of child marriage, domestic violence, and infant mortality.
How You Can Help
Support Suryanvi Foundation Trust's initiatives to empower rural women. Whether you volunteer as a mentor, sponsor a girl's education, or donate to our skill-training programmes, your contribution creates a ripple of change that extends far beyond one individual.
Visit our donate page or volunteer page to take the first step today.