Jointly authored by noted women's rights activists Gargi Chakravartty and Supriya Chotani, the book 'Charting a New Path: Early Years of the NFIW' documents the significant aspects of what is known as the "silent period" in the Indian women's movement.
The NFIW (National Federation of Indian Women) was established in 1954 as a mass organisation by several leaders of the former Mahila Atma Raksha Samiti including Ali.
The major issues highlighted by the women's movements back then included equal pay for equal work, right to land to peasant women, against dowry and "particularly the fight against patriarchy," she said.
"It is true that once the Report on Equality came out in 1974, it really brought out that in 25 years of independence women had not made the sort of progress that we thought we had made," Basu said.
The book highlighted how these lesser known women's struggles formed the foundations of the feminist phase that followed in the 1970s and 1980s.
"Partriarchy may not have been spelt down the way it has been 1975 onwards," Chakravartty said as she asked, "wasn't Urmila Devi's reference to a woman as a 'glorified maid servant' in the first Congress an attack on patriarchy?"
"NFIW was not the women wing of CPI. I got this information not from any document but from Calcutta police records, which included intercepted letters," she said.
