Education for girls hit hard by India’s drying wells

Published
SANGITA Santosh (right), who dropped out of school to manage household chores, walks home with her sister after fetching pots of water from a village in the drought-prone district of Nandurbar, Maharashtra.—AFP
SANGITA Santosh (right), who dropped out of school to manage household chores, walks home with her sister after fetching pots of water from a village in the drought-prone district of Nandurbar, Maharashtra.—AFP

NANDURBAR: Each morning, 17-year-old Ramati Mangla sets off barefoot with a steel pot in hand, walking several kilometres to fetch water from a distant spring in India’s Maharashtra state. By the time she returns, school has already started.

“I have kept my books,” she said. “But what if I never get a chance to go back?” In the drought-hit villages of Maharashtra’s Nashik and Nandurbar districts, wells are drying up and rainfall has become increasingly erratic — forcing families to adapt to harsher living conditions. As men migrate to nearby cities in search of work, girls like Mangla are left to take on the responsibility of collecting water.

It’s a chore that can take hours each day and leaves little time for school.

Local officials estimate that nearly two million people in these regions face daily water shortages.

A 2021 UNESCO report warned that climate-related disruptions could push millions of girls out of classrooms.

Many families, struggling to survive, see no option but to keep their daughters at home or marry them early.

“Children living in drought-prone areas, with family responsibilities for fetching water, struggle with attending school regularly, as collecting water now takes a longer time due to water scarcity and pollution,” the UN children’s fund wrote in a report.

For Mangla and many other girls across India, climate change is turning the simple act of fetching water into a choice between survival and education.

Published in Dawn, November 19th, 2025

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