Freeing the Daughters of Nepal

Urmila Chaudhary

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2012 OFF in Oslo
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Nepalese women’s rights activist and a former domestic slave under the Kamlari system, Urmila Chaudhary, was exploited, abused, and forced to work without any compensation for 11 years. At the Oslo Freedom Forum stage in 2013, Chaudhary told the incredible story of how she escaped domestic servitude as a child in the home of a Nepalese politician and fought back against the system that enslaved her and thousands of other girls. 

About the Speaker

Urmila Chaudhary

Urmila

Chaudhary

Abolitionist and former child domestic slave

Urmila Chaudhary is a Nepalese women’s rights activist and a former domestic slave under the Kamlari system, a form of debt bondage. At the age of six, she was forced to leave her family and was sold into domestic servitude. For 11 years, she was exploited, abused, and forced to work without any compensation in the house of a wealthy, well-known family in Kathmandu. Chaudhary was rescued by the Nepal Youth Foundation at 17 and began her fight for the many girls still enslaved under the Kamlari system. She is the subject of the 2016 award-winning German documentary “Urmila: My Memory is My Power,” which follows her fight for Kamlaris rights and freedom. In 2017, she won the Theodor Haecker Prize for political courage and sincerity.

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