“I saw the benefit of getting organized, which inspired me because since my mother was organized at SEWA, she was able to make me study and understand the importance of education,” Jyoti recalls.
Jyoti’s formal journey with SEWA began in 1986, after she completed her degree in Commerce and joined full-time to coordinate various initiatives for workers like herself. SEWA was born as a trade union of poor self-employed women in 1972 in response to women’s struggles with erratic jobs and low wages.
In India, 93% of the labor workforce comes from the informal economy, economic activities that are not regulated by the government, but still add market value, yet these workers are often unrecognized. SEWA’s work aims to give voice, visibility, and validity to these workers. “We are not just women or sisters or wives; we are workers who contribute to our families, our society, and the economy of our country,” says Jyoti.
This recognition is crucial for empowering women and ensuring their contributions are valued.
SEWA’s mission is twofold: achieving full employment and building self-reliance for its 3 million members. “Full employment means work security, income security, food security, and social security,” explains Jyoti. “Self-reliance involves women gaining economic independence and decision-making power, as well as upskilling and building assets in their names.”
SEWA’s innovative approach of integrating unionism with the cooperative movement has been instrumental in empowering women. “At SEWA, we are very much need-based and demand-driven. The needs have to come from the ground,” Jyoti emphasizes.
For instance, when SEWA identified that many of its members faced significant challenges due to supply chain disruptions, they listened to the workers to prioritize and address these issues.
By directly engaging with the community, SEWA developed tailored solutions that improved the stability of the workers’ income and work conditions. This grassroots approach ensures that SEWA’s initiatives – like the SEWA Cooperative Bank, established in 1974 as the first of its kind for poor women, and RUDI, an agribusiness enterprise managed by over 250,000 small-scale farmers – are relevant and effective.
Jyoti attributes much of her learning and inspiration to SEWA’s founder, Ela Bhatt, who passed away in 2022.
“I’m really thankful to our founder Elaben because she was a guiding force… she still is,” Jyoti says. Ela Bhatt, often referred to as the “gentle revolutionary,” was deeply influenced by Gandhian principles of non-violence, self-reliance, and community-based activism.
“She [Elaben] made us understand that poverty is a kind of violence… SEWA is fighting that poverty with values,” Jyoti explains. Bhatt’s philosophy emphasized that addressing poverty, a man-made issue, required more than economic solutions; it required a values-driven approach that respected human dignity and promoted social justice.
This approach has profoundly shaped SEWA’s mission and Jyoti’s leadership. “We are not fighting the government or the employer; we are raising our voices to fight poverty,” she says. By embodying Gandhi-like values of non-violence and self-reliance, SEWA’s work transcends traditional union activities, creating a holistic model of empowerment that supports women to uplift themselves, their families and their communities.
Under Jyoti’s stewardship, SEWA has not only focused on securing fair wages and better working conditions but has also focused on capacity building, leadership development, and social security for its members. This multifaceted approach empowers women to become self-reliant and active participants in their communities, addressing not just economic issues but also social and personal growth for women to not only survive, but thrive.
Jyoti’s dedication and leadership have been recognized through her continuous re-elections as the General Secretary of SEWA since 2005. Her vision for the future remains focused on empowering the next generation of young women and ensuring their rights are upheld.
“It is only under the leadership of women that work security and income security come into the family, which sustain the livelihoods of the family as a whole,” Jyoti asserts. “So, it’s not only just women, but through their empowering [other] women, through their leadership, the family livelihood is sustainable. I think that brings peace to the family, to society, and to the nation too.”
Jyoti Macwan’s journey with SEWA is a testament to the power of collective action, values-driven leadership, and the relentless pursuit of economic empowerment for women. Through SEWA, she continues to inspire and mobilize women to fight poverty, build assets, and create a better future for themselves and their communities.
Esther Penunia