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Meet the Mumbai University Professor Who Has Planted 2,500 Trees on Campus

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When I went to take a flat on rent in the outskirts of a metro city, the property agent showed me a huge society with 14 ten-storey buildings. Just in front of the society was a kilometer-long shopping complex and the entire area looked like a concrete jungle. The agent proudly informed, “This entire area was a jungle once, but look at it now…isn’t it beautiful?” He quickly switched on the AC in his office for us and gave another piece of information --this year it did not rain at all, which has made it hard to stay without the air conditioner. This agent is actually all of us, passive about the razing of jungles for infrastructure development but complaining about the increasing heat. “The abnormal rise in temperatures during the month of March clearly indicates that we are cutting trees, but not planting the same number in their place. Planting, nurturing and saving trees is the only solution to reduce the adverse effects of global warming,” Prof. Hubnath Pandey, who has planted more than 1,100 trees along with his team inside the Mumbai University's Kalina campus, told the Hindustan Times.

Hubnath Pandey is a Hindi professor and head of the National Service Scheme (NSS) postgraduate (PG) unit in Mumbai University.

[caption id="attachment_95446" align="aligncenter" width="500"] Hubnath Pandey[/caption] Photo Source - Facebook He is also a Hindi poet and has authored books like Samaantar Cinema and Lower Parel. Hubnath took up the mission of saving the trees four years ago. Along with the 1,100 trees in the Kalina campus, he and his team have planted 1,400 more in Ismail Yusuf College, Jogeshwari (East). Hubnath’s vision is to increase the green cover area in the city, which would help to cut down the pollution. The NSS PG unit has also decided to convert garden and kitchen waste into compost. Along with 75 volunteers from the NSS PG unit, Pandey ensures that tree species such as banyan, fig, mango, neem, coconut and palm, to name a few, are watered daily, pruned and remain healthy. Being a poet Hubnath has always tried to spread awareness on social issues through his poems. Be it his collection of poems, Lower Parel, based on the issue of mill workers in Mumbai, or his famous poem Musalman, Hubnath always carries a message in his poems. This time too, he is trying to accomplish his mission by spreading awareness through his short poems on trees. When air itself turns toxic, we need professors like Hubnath who can teach the basic lesson of survival to our kids along with academics.

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This Auto Driver Became an Amla Farmer to Support His Family. He Now Earns in Lakhs!

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Amar Singh’s story will rebuild your faith in the cliché that ‘all’s well that ends well’. He lost his father at an early age and became an auto-rickshaw driver to take care of his family. But his life took a turn and he now earns in lakhs, giving his family a life they’d only dreamed of. Amar’s father, Vrindavan Singh had 50 acres of land in Saman village of Bharatpur district of Rajasthan. However, as he slowly sold off parts of it, he was left with just 7.5 acres at the end. He and his wife Somwati Devi didn’t want their two sons and four daughters to stay away from them and hence Amar could not study after class 11, the highest class in his village school. By this time unfortunately, his father had cataract in his eyes and lost his vision. Young Amar had to take up farming to support his family. Amar carried on the traditional farming of mustard, wheat and chickpeas with the guidance of his father. However, he was left helpless after his father’s death in 1984.

For many years he kept farming but couldn’t do well. So, in 1993 he decided to become an auto-rickshaw driver. He would ferry people from Saman to Kumher and back.

[caption id="attachment_95276" align="aligncenter" width="500"] Amar Singh[/caption]
“Back then there were only tangas to ferry people from my village to Kumher. Whenever I used to visit Bharatpur, I saw many autos running there and I got the idea of getting an auto in my village too. And it worked really well,” says Amar.
In few years Amar was able to buy a second-hand jeep and used it to ferry even more people. While business was good, it was only enough for the family of seven to have a good life, and Amar couldn’t save much. To add to it, he had to sell his jeep for his sisters’ marriage in 1997. However, just before he sold his jeep, he found a piece of paper inside it, which was about the health benefits of Indian Gooseberry (Amla). The piece of paper said that Amla is called ‘Amrit Fal’ because of its health benefits. The plant’s life is long and one fruit contains vitamin-C equivalent to 20 oranges. Amar read that very carefully.

There was only one option left after he sold his jeep and that was farming. Amar decided to take a chance and plant gooseberry.

Photo Source
“If something gets into my mind, I have to do it. I kept thinking of this one piece of paper about Amla that I read in my jeep and finally decided to plant gooseberry in my farm this time,” says Amar.
Amar had planted some plum trees in 1600 sq ft of his farm some five years ago, which were now giving fruit. Once the horticulture supervisor of his district came to visit his farm and suggested that he plant more of these trees. However, Amar told him about his plans of planting gooseberry this time. The supervisor was surprised to know this as there was no farmer in that area who had ever done gooseberry farming. But as Amar insisted, he helped him to get the saplings from Pratapgarh. Amar got 60 saplings for Rs.18.50 each and planted them in his farm. And after some time he planted 60 more. It was a long process until the plants were raised and had fruits on them. Meanwhile, Amar kept patient and continued growing traditional crops. Finally after 4-5 years, when the fruits of patience were harvested, Amar encountered another hurdle. No one was ready to buy the Amlas. He would go to the mandi and come back without selling anything. He then went to factories, but the factory owners told him that those were not high quality amlas and hence would pay him very less. Amar was almost disheartened, but then he met people from Lupin Human Welfare Research & Foundation (LHWRF), a local NGO that trained village women to make murabba in 2007. The NGO taught Amar to make murabba as well as helped him with some loan to start his own processing unit.

Once the murabba was made, Amar’s younger brother would carry it in containers to sell in nearby villages. He would ask people to taste it and buy only if they liked it.

[caption id="attachment_95287" align="aligncenter" width="500"] Amrita Murrabba[/caption]
“The first year was really tough, my brother worked really hard. We would give away the murabba on credit mostly as it would have spoiled if we kept waiting for the right price and immediate cash. But to our fortune, all the villagers gave the money once they liked the murabba,” says Amar, sounding relieved.
The second year too Amar retained all his customers and the murabba was completely sold out. The confident Singh family then started making more of it and in 2009 Amar went again to the market, to sell his murabba this time. This time, shopkeepers had already heard about his product and bought it from him at a good price. Amar then set up ‘Amar Self Help Group’, which also employed women from his village. Initially they worked in a makeshift room made of polythene, but after a year Amar could build a proper room for the production process. Amar Singh’s farm now has about 100 amla trees spread across 2.5 acres. Each tree bears 200-225 kg of fruit on an average every year. However, in 2015-16, his farm saw a bumper production of about 400 quintals of amla. The process of making and selling murabba starts from December and lasts until April. The shopkeepers and factory owners now come to Amar to buy his murabba and he also delivers tins of murabba to nearby cities and villages like Kumher, Bharatpur, Tonk, Deeg, Mandawar Mahwa, Surooth and Hindaun.

The murabba is now famous by the name of ‘Amrita Murabba’, which gets him a turnover of Rs. 27 lakh to Rs. 28 lakh per annum.

[caption id="attachment_95536" align="aligncenter" width="191"] Amrita Murabba[/caption] Amar also continues to grow plum, brinjal, chilli, tomato, cauliflower, cabbage, potato, mustard and wheat. He has also built a farm pond, installed solar panels, drip-irrigated the land and installed a biogas plant in his farm. He happily trains farmers who come to ask him the art of Amla farming and processing. The horticulture department also invites him to give training sessions to the farmers. Amar believes that hard work and dedication can help anyone to achieve their dreams.
“Not everyone can get higher education and do a job. But if you work hard you can be your own boss and what’s better than that?” he asks.
Though it took him 20 years to harvest the fruit of his patience, this 58-year-old farmer is happy that he is growing and helping others to get healthy with the ‘Amrit fal’ finally! Amar is looking for like minded people to join in his venture. You can click here to contact Amar singh.

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He Had to Drop of School and Beg. Now, This Kolkata Taxi Driver Runs 2 Schools and an Orphanage

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Seven-year-old Gazi Jalaluddin studied at the local school of his village. A studious kid, he was jumping with joy to tell his father that he hadstood first in class 1. But his father had news of his own -- he was unable to gather enough money to buy him books for class 2 so Gazi would have to stop going to school. Gazi’s father was a farmer in the Thakurchak village of Sundarbans, West Bengal. He just had a quarter acre of land, which did not give enough yield to return even the inputs, only to leave the family starving for days. Gazi’s father was unwell and they came to Kolkata in search of some work, which might give them at least one meal everyday. Unfortunately no one would hire an ailing man, and Gazi ended up begging on the streets of Kolkata.

Once he was 12 or 13, Gazi started to work as a rickshaw-puller in the Entally market area of Kolkata. And in few more years, at 18, Gazi learnt to drive a taxi and became a taxi-driver in 1977.

[caption id="attachment_95578" align="aligncenter" width="500"] Gazi Jalalluddin[/caption] But was always on his mind, the many young boys back in his village still trying to make ends meet. So he formed ‘Sundarban Driving Samiti’ and started giving driving lessons to the young boys of the Sundarbans so they could start living their lives with dignity.
“I taught 10 boys in my first class for free and asked them to donate just Rs. 5 every month once they start earning. I also asked each one of them to teach two more needy boys from the village. The chain still continues and today, there are 300 boys from the Sundarbans driving taxis and earning their living in Kolkata,” informs Gazi.
Gazi also started asking his passengers if they wanted to donate some books or old clothes or medicines. Many people took interest and Gazi would collect books, clothes and medicines from them and distribute it among the destitute in his village. Many kids who had to leave studies due to lack of money to buy books just like Gazi were able to study again with his help. He continued doing this until 1997, but there was something that still made him feel restless. Since he left studies, Gazi would often dream about a school where kids wouldn’t have to pay anything to study. And now he was determined to do that himself.
“I asked lot of people in my village if they can donate some land to build a school, but no one agreed, few even laughed at me,” says Gazi.
This did not discourage this young man and he started his school in one of the rooms of his two-room house. He would go announcing in the village on a mike urging parents to send their kids to school, offering to teach them for free. Initially no one was interested. The villagers asked him how it would make a difference as they wouldn’t be able to make the kids study further, ruining all chances of them getting a job.
“They were not ready to send their kids, especially girls to school. I explained to them how they have to run back to the doctor or a literate person to read even simplest things like how to take medicines or how they have to wait for someone to read their letters and would later know that it was very urgent,” he explained.

Gazi’s efforts paid off and he started his school, Ismail Israfil Free Primary School (named after his two sons), with 22 students and two teachers in 1998 in Uttar Thakuchak, Sundarbans.

[caption id="attachment_95569" align="aligncenter" width="500"] Sundarban Sikshayatan Mission[/caption] He then kept building one room every year with some donations offered by his passengers and with his savings. By 2012, Gazi managed to build 12 classrooms, 2 washrooms and a mid-day meal room in his school. Without any help from the government, this school dropout was now giving free education and a meal to the underprivileged kids.
“Initially we struggled a lot. It used to be muddy in the rainy season and the polythenes that we used for our makeshift school for so many students would leak. But then thankfully with people’s help there came a building. However, that too was inside our Muslim colony and there was no proper road to reach it. I wanted to build a bigger school beside a road. So I began to ask for help from my passengers to build a bigger school,” he says.
Two of Gazi’s passenger helped him to buy land for the school, some took the responsibility to pay the teachers and some helped him to start the mid-day meal in his school. With the help pouring in, he was able to build his second school, Sundarban Sikshayatan Mission, in 2009 in Purv Thakurchak, Sundarban, 2 Km from his first school. Now, there are around 21 teachers, four non-teaching staff and nearly 425 students in these two schools. Gazi did not stop here. Many of the students in his schools were orphans who were forced to beg just like Gazi did. He wanted to provide shelter to these kids and began to collect funds for an orphanage. More people pitched in and Sundarban Orphanage Mission was built in 2016. He arranges all the residential requirements of these orphans by saving money from his earnings and help received by those who donate.
“I still struggle to give mid-day meal to all the kids. Sometimes, I can’t give the full salary at once to the teachers, but they are also very cooperative. My unknown passengers have helped me to fulfil my dream and I dream of a world where no Gazi has to stop going to school anymore,” he says.
Gazi especially thanked Arun Kumar Dubey who donated land for his orphanage, Dipankar Ghosh, Ajeet Kumar Saha, Deepa Dutta, Barnali Pai and many others who are helping him to sustain the schools and the orphanage. You can click here contact Gazi Jallaluddin or you can donate for this noble cause. Bank details to donate – Name - Sundarban Orphanage And Social Welfare Trust Account Number – 1096011062636 Bank Name – United Bank Of India Branch – Mayukh Bhavan, Salt Lake, Kolkata- 700091 IFSC Code – UtbIOMBHD62 Branch code – MBHD62

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These Girls Carried Their Father to the Funeral Pyre Breaking All Stereotypes

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“He sweeps her hair back from her ears; he swings her above his head. He says she is his émerveillement. He says he will never leave her, not in a million years.”  ― Anthony Doerr, All the Light We Cannot See It is said that no one can love a daughter more than a father does and vice versa. Fathers are often very influential in their daughter’s lives, especially when it comes to self-esteem and decision-making. Nanjibhai Prajapati, a school clerk in the small town of Bhildi in North Gujarat, raised his six daughters along that line of thought.

That might be the reason why when Nanjibhai passed away, his daughters took the decision of breaking the social norms by cremating their father themselves.

Photo Source According to Hindu tradition, only a son is allowed to cremate the body of their parent. This traditional practice also allows another male member of the family to cremate the body in case the son is absent. Nanjibhai’s two daughters - Santosh and Manjula - also carried the remains of their father on their shoulders, which again, is a rite traditionally performed only by men. Though the daughters bid farewell to their father with immense grief and tears in their eyes, the strength might have been nothing less than what Nanjibhai would have expected from his beloved daughters.

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How Shyama S Beat Poverty & Social Censure to Win Kerala Govenment’s First Transgender Scholarship

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In a significant achievement, Thiruvananthapuram-native Shyama S has become the first recipient of a ₹20,000-award introduced as a part of the Kerala government’s transgender policy to encourage greater community participation in the education sector. Hailing from a financially backward family at Karamana, a suburb of Thiruvananthapuram, Shyama lost her father when she was studying in class 12. Her mother worked as a maid, and Shyama herself had to dance and do comedy shows to make ends meet, until her brother got a job in Gulf last year. However this was not the only challenge that came in her way towards becoming a teacher.

Being a transgender woman meant that she had to face obstacles and criticism at every step.

"Right from my school days I was ridiculed for the way I walk and talk. During my adolescence, when I found out my gender issues, I even had to undergo counselling sessions to come out of the mental trauma. I went through all that only because I did not want to step aside just because I am a transgender. But even after all my efforts, I was denied a job because of the gender-insensitive society," Shyama told TOI.
Shyama’s mother was always supportive and could understand her behaviour. It was because of her family, and her dedication towards studies, that Shyama could complete her Master’s in Education, specialising in Malayalam literature, from the University of Kerala. Now, after a long battle Shyama has become the first to receive the state scholarship, with the help of Oasis Cultural Society—an organisation that works for transgender persons. She dreams of pursuing PhD in Education at Jawaharlal Nehru University or the University of Hyderabad. In November 2015 Kerala became the first state in the country to announce a policy for the transgender community, released at the International Conference on Gender Equality in Kovalam. The policy is extensive, encompassing transgender men and women as well as intersex people. It also stresses on the rights of the minority community to self identify themselves as man, woman or transgender as stated in the Supreme Court judgement (2014). Though Shyama faced humiliation and discrimination during her first interview for the post of teacher at a school in Kazhakkoottam in 2014, she is determined to look ahead and apply again as a teacher or a research fellow in literature.

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This IITian Left His Lucrative Job Abroad to Become a Natural Farmer at a Village Near Kolkata

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“My father’s company manufactures spades, that’s the only connection I had with farming,” laughs Abhishek when we asked him if he had some connections with farming in the past.
Abhishek Singhania could have enjoyed his corporate job, which earned him more than a lakh’s salary every month. Or he could have chosen to stay back at his stately house in Kolkata, joining his parents’s well-established business. But he chose a rather tough path to make a smoother road to success for our farmers.

It was 2010 when Abhishek came across the news about the farmer suicides in the Vidarbha region of Maharashtra, while graduating in metallurgy at IIT Madras.

[caption id="attachment_95811" align="aligncenter" width="500"] Abhishek Singhania[/caption] He was deeply pained by the situation of farmers in our country. He would often wonder about a sustainable model that could keep farmers from bankruptcy and taking extreme steps like suicide. However, the focus was on studies, and he could not do much at that moment. Once he finished his engineering in 2012, he was placed at PricewaterhouseCoopers Pvt. Ltd. in Mumbai. The company sent him to Saudi Arabia for a project for six months, creating a huge prospect for a bright future and hefty salary for Abhishek. However, Agriculture was always in his mind and he kept thinking about it now more often, he realized that since the farmers are giving up farming, a big gap would be created in the demand-supply of food and he wanted to do his bit to help bridge that gap.
“I started thinking that farming should be inherently profitable. If it won’t be profitable then everyone would stop farming. And if everyone stops farming how will the world survive? So there is something wrong which is actually happening, that needs to be corrected, that needs to be checked,” he said.

In May 2014 while working on a project in Saudi Arabia through his company, Abhishek took a break and visited the farms in Debra, Balichak and Temathani near Kolkata. This was the first time he was visiting a village.

[caption id="attachment_95812" align="aligncenter" width="500"] Sowing the seeds of hope[/caption] He would reach out to the farmers and ask just two questions – 1. What are you doing? 2. What are the problems you are facing? Abhishek realized that unlike Maharashtra, Bengal had water in abundance and the soil was fertile. But the farmers were misusing the water by growing rice three times in a year.
“And what is the profit they make out of it in a year? Just Rs 30,000! It’s like 2,500 a month. There is no profit. It brings down the price. Lot of rice is getting wasted. What’s the idea? Farmers are just doing paddy the whole year that too with chemicals. The soil has lost its fertility. Input cost is increasing as they need to buy more fertilizers and pesticides every year, which increases the production cost,” he says.

You may also like - A Beginner’s Guide to Natural Farming From an NRI Couple Who Returned to India to Follow Their Dream
Abhishek learnt four main reasons behind loss in farming through his trip:
  1. Farmers were growing low-value crops.
  2. The yield was decreasing every year.
  3. The input cost was increasing each year.
  4. Soil fertility is decreasing.
After his trip Abhishek visited IIT Kharagpur to find the solutions to these problems. There he was offered work with two professors – Prof. PBS Bhadoria and Prof. DK Swain, working on a similar project. As the project was not yet started, Abhishek went back to Saudi Arabia to continue with his job. In October 2014, he received a confirmation from the professors that ‘The Food Security Project – IIT Kharagpur’ was going to start and Abhishek could be a part of it. Abhishek immediately put down his papers and in December 2014 he came back to Kolkata. Before he started working at IIT Kharagpur, he met some agricultural startups
“Some were making smart irrigation system, some were making portable farm implements but I realized that I didn’t enjoy inventing something like this staying away from the farm, but being into the farm. I was more interested in growing. I was not an off-the-field person,” he explains.
Abhishek joined the research team at IIT Kharagpur in March 2015 and learnt about paddy farming and a few other crops with high level of farm mechanization for eight months. However, he wanted to know more about diverse farming techniques and so he decided to quit the project and jump into the field.

From October 2015 to May 2016 he travelled extensively throughout India from Meghalaya to Maharashtra and from Himachal to Karnataka. He stayed with the farmers and worked with them.

[caption id="attachment_95813" align="aligncenter" width="380"] Abhishek travelled across the country to meet natural farmers.[/caption]
“I would just book tickets from Kolkata to Delhi and then a return ticket of a month later from Delhi to Kolkata. In between this period, I would just go with the flow, taking lifts, sitting in sleeper compartments and sleeping at the farms.
During this time, Abhishek did a zero-budget natural farming training by Padm Shri Subhash Palekar. He was connected to a lot of natural farmers in this training and he kept visiting them one after the other.
“I was amazed to see this farmer from Bulandshahar who took me on a bicycle for 5 km to reach his farm and still was not tired. He was 65 years old and he and his wife were managing their 5-acre farm all alone without taking help of any labourers. I think this is the difference when you eat healthy. I stayed with them for two days and learnt a lot,” he says.

Abhishek also stayed in a farm run by Pingalwada Charitable Society in Amritsar, Punjab and worked there for a month right from driving a tractor to making fertilizers and pesticides with cow dung and cow urine. There was no work on the farm that was missed by him.

[caption id="attachment_95814" align="aligncenter" width="500"] Abhishek at the Amritsar farm[/caption] In these eight months Abhishek understood that these natural farmers had gone through loss of about 50% less yield in the first year when they shifted from chemical to natural farming. However, after four to five years the yield is much more than what would get from chemical farming. The input cost was almost zero and hence they would profit significantly more. And of course there was a huge difference in the quality and quantity of the products grown by natural farming methods.
“I visited a sugarcane farm near Muzzafarnagar in Uttar Pradesh. The sugarcanes in this natural farmer’s farm were two to three feet taller than others and also it was the sweetest in the area,” Abhishek says.

You may also like - This Techie-Turned-Farmer Has Many Useful Tips for You to Take up Natural Farming  
To be sure that he knows all aspects of farming, Abhishek undertook training in fishery at CIFE Kolkata, goat rearing at CIRG Mathura and many more short courses related to farming.
“I won’t say that from the first day I was very sure, but I knew I wanted to take a chance. And from the very first day I was so comfortable. I never felt I was out of place,” says 28-year-old Abhishek.

Abhishek bought a 3-acre land on June 24, 2016 at Tona village, in South 24 Parganas district, which is 40 km from Kolkata. He named his farm Echoes, after Abhishek’s favourite song by Pink Floyd, which portrays a revolution.

[caption id="attachment_95815" align="aligncenter" width="500"] Echoes - Abhishek's farm and the little hut where he stays currently[/caption] For the first few months Abhishek would travel everyday to reach his farm from his home at Kolkata. However as he wanted to save the travel time he started living in a small hut made in his farm.
“Once you wake up at a farm in the morning, you will be amazed looking at the beautiful sunrise. You see something grow out of nothing, it is so fantastic feeling and it cannot be matched. The air is so light there that you will actually feel the difference when you come to a city you have to make more efforts to breathe.”
In just 9 months Abhishek has harvested cabbage, cauliflower, capsicum, cucumber, spinach, green gram, mustard etc. Dehradun Basmati was cultivated for the first time in the village. He has also planted four to five varieties of mangoes, two to three varieties of banana, papaya, drumsticks, betel-nut, jackfruit, chiku, orange, lemon, plum, cashew,etc.

When asked about why he has grown almost everything in his farm, he says: “The Idea was to first experiment, what grows and what not and to have a sustainable model which has everything we cannot live without.”

[caption id="attachment_95816" align="aligncenter" width="500"] The yield ![/caption] “Currently we sell health supplements like wheat grass, aloevera, geloy, amla, tulsi etc. grown at Echoes under the brand name Naturista – a Spanish word meaning Naturist –because this defines who I am. In future, they will be used to make juices using cold pressed method, which ensures the nutrition remains intact in the juices,” he informs. Abhishek uses complete natural farming method and makes his own fertilizers and pesticides using cow urine and cow dung. The best seeds and saplings collected from the farmers that Abhishek visited are used in his farm and hence the input cost is very low and he is satisfied with his yield. Once his model starts gaining profit, Abhishek plans to invite farmers to replicate this model across West Bengal and then across the country.

When we asked this IITian if he regrets his decision when he sees his friends growing faster, he tells us what one of his successful friends told him once:

“My friend who lives abroad and earns lot of money told me this - “We are all in a rat race, we are not living our lives, you are the one who is living your life. If you want to compare the success… people who are driven by money attain success faster, but people who are driven by passion, they might attain success a little later but they live a much happier and content life,” says a happy and content Abhishek from his little hut in his farm.
You can visit Abhishek’s farm at the following address – Bhangar II Block, Tona Village, South 24 paraganas district. Near Vedic village. Or click here to contact Abhishek Singhania

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In Salmon-Coloured Autos and White Uniforms, Mumbai’s First Women Auto Drivers Are Ready to Go

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The first batch of women auto rickshaw drivers start working today after the Maharashtra government reserved 5% of rickshaw permits for women Culturally, many women in India are held back from employment due to the expectations and gender biases. However, women's inclusion in the workforce could be majorly beneficial to the country's economy, with a 2015 study finding it could add $2.9 trillion to its GDP by 2025. Time has changed and women are taking up all the jobs, breaking every stereotype about gender roles.More women are breaking with traditional roles and entering the workplace in various roles.While the independent woman is the woman of now, safety issues still remain a matter of concern.
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Although Mumbai is considered safer than most cities on the subcontinent, women and visiting tourists often complain about being leered at by male cab and auto drivers. As a solution, pink taxis were introduced, which were driven by women taxi drivers. However not everyone wish to take a taxi for a ride and autos are mostly preferred for a nearby destination. Thus a scheme was introduced by the Maharashtra government that reserves 5% of rickshaw permits for women. It announced the plan in early 2016, saying that 465 licences would be made available for women in Mumbai and the neighbouring district of Thane.

To start this wonderful initiative, 19 women have been trained by the driving instructor, Sudhir Dhoipode and are ready to hit the roads of Mumbai in their brand new salmon-coloured auto-rickshaws, wearing white uniforms now.

Representative Image - Source Unlike the pink taxi initiative, the autos driven by woman in Mumbai will ferry both male and women passengers. Until now, women who belonged to lower economic background and were deprived of education and took up a job of either a cook or domestic help at households. However, this move by the government has encouraged them to step out of their houses and take up a job that can earn them more money.
"This job is much better than doing household work. I can make more money and it helps us secure our futures," Ms Chaya Mohite told AFP
Currently 40 women are being trained to take up this role. However, almost 500 women showed interest to join the clan. Featured Image Source - ANI

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Kangra Fort, Once a Trove of Royal Treasures, Withstood 52 Attacks but Crumbled to Nature’s Wrath

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The Kangra fort is India's oldest dated fort, said to be built around 3,500 years ago by Maharaja Susharma Chandra, a descendant of the Katoch family.

Once a Sugarcane Juice Seller, This Engineer Is Today Transforming India With His Innovations

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Arvind started Bharat Ek Kadam, a group comprising a team of entrepreneurs and professionals totally committed to developing the rural infrastructure in India with improvised and indigenously developed technologies that cater to the different needs of the rural mass and provide for viable alternatives to improve their living conditions.

These Nanis on a Road Trip Will Give You Some Serious Life and Travel Goals!

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Meet Neeru Gandhi (61), Monicka Chanana (52), Sarita Manocha (63) and Pratibha Sabharwal (61) who are quite popular now as ‘Nanis on the highway.’ Here’s how they got on the road.

In AP, NRIs Are Doing Their Bit to Help 5,000 Govt Schools Go Digital

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Andhra Pradesh Janmabhoomi (AP Janmbhoomi) is an exclusive online portal for the Telugu community all over the world, geared towards socio-economic development of Andhra Pradesh in particular and India in general. Created by the Andhra Pradesh government, the project is the first of its kind in terms of an NRI-backed social initiative ever instated by […]

Why a Filmmaker Left Behind the Glitz & Glam of the Industry to Take up Farming in a Village

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Seven years ago a filmmaker, Saraswati bought a little plot of land in a village 70 km from Hyderabad and became a farmer to encourage the youth to stick to their roots by becoming a role model for them.

A Mumbai Techie Shelters Hundreds of Birds and Butterflies in Her Small Apartment Balcony

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Arundhati Mhatre was gifted a bird shelter box by her friend in 2008. And it has been a life-changing gift for her.

Centuries-Old Recipes & Cooking Methods: We Unravel a Unique Himachali Kitchen Secret for You

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It is believed that about 1,300 years ago, Jaistambh, the then-King of Himachal Pradesh, liked the Kashmiri Wazwan so much that he ordered his cooks to prepare a similar meal without using meat. Thus a new menu was evolved in Himachali cuisine, eventually known as dham.

Why an IIM Graduate Left a Well-Paying Job to Start a Dairy Farm With Her Dad

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This father-daughter duo left their well-paying jobs and became farmers. Today, they earn as much as they did in their corporate jobs.

This Organisation Has Restored 39 Lakes in 10 Years. This Year, You Can Help Them Fight Drought!

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Arun Krishnamurthy laid the foundation of Environmentalist Foundation Of India (EFI) in 2007 by volunteering to clean a pond in his neighbourhood in Chennai.

This Duo Left Behind Lucrative Careers to Help You Know Your Farmers & See How Your Food Is Grown

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Siddhagiri Satvyk is the brain child of CA and CFA Akshay Agarwal and Gajendra Choudhary, an MBA graduate who ran a 3-generation-old textile business.

How a CA and Lecturer Duo Are Now Transforming This Karnataka Village by Helping Farmers

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What started as a family's aspiration towards a rustic homestead has gradually evolved into a community farming initiative in a village near Bengaluru.

These IIT Kharagpur Alumni Show How You Can Grow Organic Veggies on Your Rooftop

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Founded by IIT Kharagpur graduates, Kaustubh Khare and Saahil Parekh, Khetify is a startup promoting food sustainability to city dwellers.

Sikkim Farmers Are Earning 8 Times More by Growing These Exotic Foods. Thanks to Two Brothers

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Shoten Group is an enterprise that helps farmers grow two distinct crops—yacons (ground apple) and shiitake mushrooms.
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