Bikerni Association of Women Motorcyclists

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The Bikerni: Association of Women Motorcyclists
Pronunciation
  • bye kur nee
Formation15 January 2011; 13 years ago (15 January 2011)
FounderUrvashi Patole and Firdaus Shaikh
Founded atPune
TypeMotorcycle club Motorcycle Association
PurposeWomen motorcyclists awareness and advocacy
HeadquartersPune
Location
  • India
Region
India
Membership (2011)
2000 (2019)[1]
Official language
Hindi, English
Urvashi Patole, Firdaus Shaikh, Vartika Pande, Mugdha Chaudhary, Sharvari Manakawad
Key people
Jai Bharathi, Nupur Saxena, Vartika Jain, Manashri Bordoloi, Shabnam Akram, Dnyanadaa Mhaskar, Madhuri Munjwani, Chithra Priya, Roshini Miraskar, Prasanna Dommu, Prachi Shikha, Reshaa Joshi, Krithi Uchil, Krishna Singh, G Meenakshi Rao, Silvana, Pintueli Gajjar, Dipika Dusane

The Bikerni Association of Women Motorcyclists (The Bikerni for short[2]) is an all-women motorcycle club in India. It was formed at Pune in 2011 by Urvashi Patole and Firdaus Shaikh,[3] and had over 515 members by 2014.[4][5] As of 2015, the group has over 2,000 members.[1] It was recognized by Women's International Motorcycle Association, and is the first and largest all-women motorcycle association in India.[6][7][8] Its Delhi Chapter was started by Shabnam Akram in 2012.[9] It has 17 chapters in India. [9]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Henry Stancu (25 April 2015), "Female riders hitting the road: Motorcycle clubs catering to women are becoming a global phenomenon", Toronto Star, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
  2. ^ Women's Day special: meet The Bikerni, Lonely Planet (blog), March 2016
  3. ^ Paul Debjani (21 January 2013), "Bikerni: Vrooming Ahead", The Financial Express, India
  4. ^ Sweta Goswami (18 January 2016), "Taking the road less travelled", The Hindu
  5. ^ Manoj Sharma (3 June 2019), "Bikerni: women on wheels break barriers, stereotypes", Hindustan Times
  6. ^ Nicola Morris (23 November 2012), "The Bikerni – India's First Female Biker Club", Motorbikes India
  7. ^ Sujata Reddy (11 April 2014), "India's first female biker club: What it takes to be a woman on wheels", The Economic Times
  8. ^ Sarjana (23 November 2012), "We Just Discovered India's First Women Motorcycle Club And Here's How You Can Join Them", Little Black Book
  9. ^ a b Thakur, Shrimayee (9 December 2021). "Bikerni: The road to change". The New Indian Express. Retrieved 15 April 2024.

Further reading[edit]

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