When 23-year-old Harshini Kanhekar Urankar walked into the National Fire Service College (NFSC) in Nagpur, known for its reputation as being the only fire engineering college in the whole of Southeast Asia, little did she know that she was walking into the pages of history — that after three and a half years of arduous training, she would become the country's first woman firefighter.
It was NFSC that brought out the fire in her. Being the only girl in the entire college, she says that she was under constant watch. "It was easy and hard at the same time. On one hand, you had to put double the effort to be treated equally and on the other hand, being the only girl, the respect and attention that I received was overwhelming," she says.
She was exempted from the school's residential facility. Her ground teachers did not treat her any different from her peers. "They never saw me as just a girl. I was given the same amount of work just like everybody else and this helped me stay focused despite all the attention that I was inviting," adds Harshini.
As much as she loved wearing three different sets of uniform each day, she says that the practice was tiring. "We would start our drill early in the morning. At times, we had to carry heavy water hoses and suction hoses. Since it was a demanding task for men themselves, I used to practice the drills beforehand so that they wouldn't look down upon me. I insisted that they don’t generalise girls that way," says the resilient firefighter.
However, being the only female firefighter isn’t as rosy as one might assume. "Once when I was in Delhi, people were surprised to hear that a woman could douse a fire. I’ve been laughed at several times. Such instances keep happening, but I try to stay focused," she says.
NFSC has since seen a spike in the number of girls taking up the course, a stereotype that Harshini helped to break. "I am happy to see more women coming forward to take up this course. This is a message to the world that no job can be defined by gender," she says.
Since 2006, Harshini has been working with the ONGC. Currently, she is posted with the company's Mumbai offshore drilling service as the Deputy Manager of Fire Service. In August 2017, Harshini was named a runner-up for the NITI Aayog's Women Transforming India award that recognised her courage to break the barriers of gender stereotyping.