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She can guide too

LEAD BY EXAMPLE
Last Updated 24 June 2016, 19:04 IST
In popular imagination, a tourist guide is usually a man who accosts people outside monuments and other historical sites offering guided excursions. This image has been further reinforced by the 1965 classic film Guide, where Dev Anand transforms into Raju, a happy-go-lucky freelance guide.

However, think for a moment — instead, is it possible to imagine a woman step into Raju’s shoes, as the footloose, fancy-free guide? Perhaps not, due to the stigma attached to this vocation.

And yet, surprisingly, Indian women have been working as tourist guides since the 1970s, undeterred by the long hours in the outdoors and the responsibility of managing tourists from diverse backgrounds and with varying temperaments. So what’s the attraction? An opportunity to meet people from all over the world, to travel to different cities, while earning good money on a freelance basis are just some of the factors that draw them in.

Currently, out of the total number of government approved tourist guides listed on the Indian Association of Tour Operators (IATO) website, there are 64 female guides in a list of 1,200 in north India, 31 out of 90 in the south, 23 out of 60 in the east and just 1 out of 66 in the west.

Delhi-based Kamlesh Sharma, 70, is one of them, and perhaps one of the pioneers in the profession — she became a guide way back in 1970. “I had done multiple Masters — in History, English and a BEd. I wanted to teach, but my husband, who worked for the India Tourism Development Corporation (ITDC) felt it was better for me to become a guide. Once I started, I simply loved doing it,” she says.

Eliciting respect

For Kamlesh, it was the respect that tourists gave her that was the most valuable part of her job. “The most joyful aspect of being a guide is when foreigners respect you and openly and generously appreciate our culture. They do their homework well and ask many questions,” she elaborates. However, this job was not all fun and games. “There were times when I have had to do double duty. I used to find it difficult to climb the steps of Humayun’s tomb several times in a day. And later I developed varicose veins. But I don’t choose to dwell on the negatives,” she shares.

For Usha Bhardwaj, one of the first Russian speaking guides in the country, the toughest issue she had to deal with at one point in time was the unavailability of adequate number of hotel rooms.

“In the beginning it was really troublesome, but later one got used to handling the situation. Earlier, there were not many hotels around even in the big cities. When tourists were unable to find a suitable accommodation for themselves they would come up to me to seek advice or assistance. Though it wasn’t really my job to find them rooms, I never said no. These days, thankfully, it’s not such a problem anymore,” she says. “One has to be aware about the history, culture, traditions of the places one visits. It is the most important thing about being a guide,” she says. For her, the knowledge she has gained over the years is the biggest takeaway from the profession.   

Sweety Bhalla points out that a guide doesn’t work alone; it’s team work between the travel agent, tour operator and the guide. She informs that during the peak season, from October to April, guides work almost everyday, including weekends.

Although during off season they have to become concierges or tour escorts. Indeed, even as the female tourist guides are enthusiastic about the profession itself and are ready to overcome the challenges, they do confess to feeling the pinch when their work is not acknowledged as worthy in society. “Though I didn’t have many friends at that time, whoever came to know I was working as a guide asked me why I wasn’t doing a ‘good’ job with a pension; they felt my profession was unstable,” shares Kamlesh.

Pillar of support

As long as their family is by their side, the women don’t mind the occasional sticky times. Never mind the strangers and friends. “Things were problematic initially when I got married. People used to comment ‘she comes back late in the night, where does she go?’ But as long as the family members know where you are, one doesn’t have to react to what other people think,” says Sweety whose father, brother and uncle have worked as tourist guides.

“I never faced any opposition from my husband and his family. In fact, when I used to go on longer trips they would readily look after my children,” adds Usha, who only guides groups within Delhi now.

An increasing number of operators who are designing all women tours, in particular, prefer to hire women. “Women are natural storytellers and if you give them a list of attractions they add more to it and make it better,” says Reshma Chadha, who has initiated a startup, ‘Bon Voyage’, that provides thematic tours for women. Talking about the profession’s image among girls in smaller cities, she says, “Though there are misconceptions, working with foreigners is considered to be prestigious. Their families like it when they bring home international tourists to show them a slice of daily life,” she elaborates.

Speaking for her lot, Sweety signs off with this, “Guides are like ambassadors of their country; they are the window to its culture, heritage and society. It is a blessing to be one.”

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(Published 24 June 2016, 16:03 IST)

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