Nuh, counted amongst the country's most backward areas, Rabia Kidwai has broken a glass ceiling — becoming the first woman to contest Assembly polls from the constituency where women are rarely seen without a veil, let alone lead a political campaign and fight an election. While the 34-year-old businesswoman from Gurguram is aware of the myriad challenges that confronts her — the deep-rooted gender bias, the outsider tag in Nuh, the general lack of awareness and education among voters, and seasoned political opponents — she also knows she represents a change which is precisely why, she feels, people would vote for her in these assembly polls in Haryana.
Kidwai, granddaughter of former state Governor Akhlaq Ur Rehman Kidwai, has been fielded by the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP). Up against her are battle-hardened Congress MLA Aftab Ahmed and Indian National Lok Dal's Tahir Hussain, who also holds sway among the locals.
Kidwai is up for the challenge though, banking on her family's political lineage and her being a woman. As the polling day nears, she is busy campaigning, seeking votes for herself and her party.
«The women here tell me that they rarely visit any political party's office to raise any problems they might have. Although the gender bias situation is not as it used to be decades back, they tell me it is still not very common to have a woman contesting elections or sitting at a political party's office to attend to women coming with problems or request,» she told PTI in an interview.
Artificial