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India Celebrates Women, Ignores Abandoned Girls
7 Mar
Summary
- Thousands of girl children are abandoned annually due to son preference.
- Legal adoptions exceed 4,500, but many girls remain unadopted.
- True empowerment requires support from the cradle, not just career milestones.

India's annual celebration of women on March 8th often overshadows the plight of abandoned girl children. While corporate and social platforms laud female strength and contributions, a stark reality persists for girls left at railway stations and temple doorsteps.
Official figures show over 4,500 legal adoptions in 2024-25, yet this statistic hides the thousands of girls abandoned annually due to a deep-rooted preference for sons and systemic poverty. These children, often 'social orphans,' need more than temporary shelter.
True empowerment begins at the cradle. A robust care ecosystem, extending beyond Child Care Institutions, is vital. Family-like environments, offering unconditional love and focusing on economic rehabilitation through education and skill-building, are essential for a girl child's holistic development.
Safeguarding the girl child is a societal duty, ensuring protection, education, and a sense of belonging. This commitment moves beyond the symbolism of a single day, paving the way for a 'New India' where no girl child stands alone.



