Praveena Solomon

Praveena Solomon is a crematorium manager of Chennai’s oldest and busiest cremation ground.[1]

Praveena started caretaking the Velankadu crematorium two and a half years ago as part of her attachment with an NGO.

Education

Praveena is an English literature graduate from the University of Madras.[2] She has also studied Nursing. Praveena was introduced to social work by her mother, who worked closely with social worker Sarojini Varadappan.

Career

She joined the NGO named Indian Community Welfare Organisation in 2004 working as a field officer and was educating underprivileged children and sex workers.[3] For Solomon, handling the crematorium is another service.

In March 2014, ICWO won the contract to run the 120-year-old Valankadu crematorium. Praveena, as caretaker of the crematorium faced initial challenges, as some of them even threatened with acid attack. Initially she did not have the support of the local people as they were also perturbed to see a woman handled the affairs of the dead.[3]

Eventually, she managed to win over the people's hearts, courtesy a combination of support from the police and her own hard efforts. Solomon worked untiringly to change the looks of crematorium that looked ugly when she took over its affairs more than two years ago. Now people say it looks like a park.[3]

Solomon's current avatar is unique as it marks the first time a woman is running a burial ground in Tamil Nadu, where—like in most parts of the country—upkeep of crematorium is a male domain traditionally.[3]

gollark: Indeed.
gollark: What if there's no dragon above them? Will they just go up and up forever?
gollark: Probably.
gollark: Discord does, at least, make it simpler to set something up without your own server, has message history, and is less cryptic.
gollark: Well, now, most communities (like this) which would probably run on IRC use Discord, which involves reliance on that single company & giving them all your datas.

References

  1. "The Chennai woman who runs a Hindu crematorium". BBC News. 4 August 2016. Retrieved 8 December 2016.
  2. NewsDesk2 (4 August 2016). "Cremation @-chennai-lady@@works%%cremation". NewsGram. Retrieved 8 December 2016.
  3. "How an English graduate gave new life to a Chennai crematorium". Hindustan Times. 17 July 2016. Retrieved 8 December 2016.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.