WHEN WOMEN UNITE: THE STORY OF AN UPRISING
Shabnam Virmani and Nata Duvvury
The film narrates the incredibly moving story of the anti-arrack (state-supplied
distilled liquor) movement that led to the eventual ban of arrack sales in
Andhra Pradesh in 1995. The movement started when a group of women
participating in a literacy program started questioning their oppressed status.
Spurred into action by the killing of a village woman (who was beaten to
death by her drunk husband when she tried to prevent him from molesting
their daughter), they took on the men of the village, the powerful arrack
contractors, and the repressive state machinery in a valiant struggle that
demanded a stop to the endless supply of arrack to their village (the only
village tap dispensed water once in two days while the arrack shop received
its supplies twice a day). The movement took hold and spread across the
state over a period of four hard-fought years. It was a true grass-roots
movement; even today it has no identifiable leaders. The movie documents the
incredible courage of these women, their political and social consciousness
and their steady realization that, through struggle, they could control their own
destiny.
This video is available through the non-profit organization Media for International
Development. Cost for organization: $250 + $25 s/h. Cost for individual: $85 + $15 s/h.
Contact Media for International Development, 55 East 92nd Street, 4th floor, New York,
NY 10128. tel: (212) 289-6790