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Kalari Kid - She Hits Back

 
 

Arushi CV

Arushi (9) is a precocious Hindu schoolgirl training in Kalari, one of the world’s oldest martial arts. Curious and disciplined, she longs to perform with swords at the legendary Kalari Festival. When she misuses her skills in a moment of anger and is banned from participating, Arushi must learn emotional control. Guided by her trainers, Muslim sisters and Kalari champions Anshifa and Arifa, she learns that true strength lies in mastery, not aggression.

 
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Your donation brings Kalari Kid to girls in India – with community screenings and self-defense workshops.

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In a society marked by gendered violence, Arushi (9) and Milena (21) reclaim space through Kalari — one of the world’s oldest martial arts. The film follows their paths toward self-empowerment and the freedom to become the women they choose to be.

Kalari is more than a martial art. For many young women across India, it is becoming a lifeline. Through disciplined movement and collective practice, they build strength, confidence, and dignity in environments where taking space is often contested.

The film offers an intimate, multi-generational portrait of girls and women from different religious and social backgrounds who turn to Kalari as a form of self-definition and resistance. The film captures, with urgency and closeness, what it means to grow up where strength is not inherited, but learned — taught, shared, and passed on.

With your donation, you help bring the film and Kalari practice directly to girls and women in India.

With your donation you support:

  • Mobile screenings in villages and small towns in India beyond urban centers. By covering travel, equipment and translations, your donations helps that we can make participation free for everyone.
  • Hands-on Kalari introductions, led by local practitioners. By covering the costs of Kalari trainers, we create a physical experience that participants can take home alongside the impressions from the community screening of the film.

The film documents self-empowerment — the outreach turns it into action. This is not a one-off event, but a sustained, community-led initiative that leaves behind skills, networks, and ongoing dialogue.

Every contribution is directed to on-the-ground costs in India. We prioritise modest, high-impact spending and transparency.

Donating means helping the film reach the people it was made with—and for.