Women Transforming India Awards was launched
by NITI Aayog, in partnership with the UN in India and MyGov, to recognize the
transformational impact of work undertaken by women across India's villages,
towns and cities. The campaign this year, to promote equal opportunity of
women, has received an overwhelming 3000 entries from across the country.
An eminent jury comprising Nirupama Rao,
Former Foreign Secretary and Ambassador, P.T. Usha, Indian Olympian, Pooja
Thakur, Wing Commander, Indian Air Force, Dr. Arvind Panagariya, NITI Aayog
Vice Chairman, Amitabh Kant, NITI Aayog CEO and Yuri Afanasiev, UN Resident
Coordinator undertook a rigorous process to shortlist 12 top awardees from
awe-inspiring stories of women change makers across India.
The list of the awardees and the
transformational work undertaken by each of them is attached below.
The Award Ceremony is scheduled to take
place today on August 29th, 2017 from 7:30 pm to 8:30 pm at
Jacaranda, India Habitat Centre, New Delhi. The Chief Guest of the event, Union
Minister of Textiles, Information & Broadcasting Smt. Smriti Zubin Irani, will
present the awards at the event.
Laxmi Agarwal,
Uttar Pradesh
Rising from the Ashes
In 2005, a shy
14-year-old Laxmi Agrawal, who nursed dreams of being a singer and
participating in reality TV shows, was waylaid by her 32-year-old stalker and
his friends. Laxmi had rejected his advances and turned down his proposal days
before the incident. The man and his friends threw acid on Laxmi’s face to
teach her a lesson for her ‘arrogance’. Her stalker felt that if he destroyed
her face, her fate would be worse than death, given the emphasis society places
on looks, especially for women. Laxmi was left to die on a busy road, with cars
hitting her unconscious body, till a Good Samaritan helped get her to a
hospital. Despite the trauma, the nightmarish months spent in the hospital and
the disgusting yet predictable reactions from people, Laxmi’s spirit remained
indomitable. Acid had melted her skin but not her being. Her family’s
unwavering support also helped her get back on her feet. Gradually, the
braveheart took back control of her life and used her experience to help other
survivors like her. She became an activist campaigner for Stop Acid Attacks and
also realized her childhood dream of being in front of the camera by becoming a
television host. In 2014, she received the International Women of Courage Award
by the former US First Lady Michelle Obama. She was also chosen as the NDTV
Indian of the year. Laxmi continues to challenge artificial and misogynistic
stereotypes thrust upon women by society and inspires survivors like her to
take the world by the horns.
Subasini Mistry
Hasnapukur, West Bengal
The Hospital That
Vegetables Built Having lost her husband at a young age due to lack of medical
care, 65-year- old Subasini Mistry toiled for two decades to realize her dream
of building a hospital for the needy. She is living proof that one does not
need to be young, rich or educated to be an achiever. What it does take is
grit, hard work and the audacity of hope. Subasini Mistry’s husband, a
vegetable vendor, died at a young age because he was too poor to get medical
help for a common ailment. Within a month of his death, his illiterate wife and
four children were on the streets. Like her late husband, Subasini too started
selling vegetables to make ends meet. She vowed that one day she would build a
hospital for the poor and needy in the very village her husband breathed his
last in. People laughed at her impossible dream. But Subasini was no ordinary
woman. For the next 20 years, she worked as a domestic help, manual labourer
and vegetable vendor. She saved most of her earnings for her dream hospital,
while spending the rest on raising her four kids. Subasini used her savings of
two decades to buy an acre of land in her husband’s native village. She
appealed to the community to help in any way they could and they did. Her son,
Ajoy, managed to raise Rs 50,000 from acquaintances, friends and organizations.
A one-room clinic came into being, the beginning of the hospital-to-be. Three
doctors from adjoining areas were persuaded to attend to the sick for free.
Patients started streaming in and Subasini became a household name. In 1995,
the foundation stone for the hospital was laid and was open to the public a
year later. Today, the 45-bed hospital spreads over three acres and has the
best of doctors and medical equipment. Major surgeries for the poor are done
for less than Rs. 5000 and minor ailments are treated for under Rs. 10. The
Humanity Hospital is testament to the iron will and tenacity of Subasini
Mistry, a truly extraordinary woman.
Safeena Husain
Mumbai, Maharashtra
Bridging the Gender
Divide in Education Safeena Husain, is the founder and executive director of
Educate Girls, a non- profit organization working for girls’ education in some
of the most educationally backward districts of India. Safeena Hussain has been
involved in development projects across South America, Africa and Asia for the
past decade. In India, this London School of Economics graduate has built upon
her a cause closest to her heart: ensuring girls have access to quality
education and get equal opportunities to better their future. Safeena with the
help of a local team successfully conducted a 500-school pilot in Pali,
Rajasthan and established Educate Girls as an NGO in 2007. Educate Girls focuses
on community mobilization to increase girls’ enrollment and retention and
improving learning outcomes for all children in government schools. The
organization works with community-level volunteers in each village called Team
Balika, who serve as the champions for the cause. These champions go
door-to-door to identify out-ofschool girls and convince their parents to send
them to school, conduct village meetings, work with school management
committees to prepare school improvement plans, and facilitate the use of
Educate Girls’ creative learning and life skills kits to improve learning
quality and create girl leaders. With a focus on enrolment, retention and
learning, Educate Girls has evolved into a 12,000+ schools program, with over
1,50,000 girls enrolled in school till date, reaching over 3.8 million total
beneficiaries. Safeena’s efforts to bridge the gender gap in education in India
have been widely recognized. Under her leadership, Educate Girls has received
the prestigious 2015 Skoll Award, 2014 WISE Award, the 2014 USAID Millennium
Alliance Award and the 2014 Stars Impact Award and the India Development
Marketplace Award in 2011 from the World Bank. She also received the British
Asian Trust’s Special Recognition Award from HRH Prince Charles for outstanding
contribution in education. Safeena won the 2016 NDTV-L’Oréal Paris Women of
Worth Award in the Education Category.
Arunima Sinha
Faizabad, Uttar Pradesh
Mind Over Matter:
Transcending Adversity to Make History
From being thrown out
of a train, losing her leg and facing an uncertain future to becoming the first
female amputee to scale the highest mountain in the world, Arunima Sinha’s
awe-inspiring story is one of grit, perseverance and conviction. Arunima Sinha,
24-year-old national level volleyball and football player, dreamt of joining
the Central Industrial Security Force and was on her way to take the
examinations, when she was thrown off a train by a group of hoodlums for
refusing to part with her gold chain. She lost her left leg, and with it,
seemingly, her chance of making a mark in the world of competitive sports. Such
a setback would have snuffed the hopes and morale of an average person.
Arunima, however, seemed to draw strength from the incident, and even as she
was being treated at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences, resolved to
climb the world’s highest mountain, Mount Everest. Fund raising helped procure
a prosthetic leg for Arunima to realise her mission. After being discharged,
Arunima enrolled for the basic mountaineering course from the Nehru Institute
of Mountaineering, Uttarkashi, which she excelled at. She then contacted
Bachendri Pal, the first Indian woman to climb Mount Everest, and trained under
her at the Uttarkashi camp of the Tata Steel Adventure Foundation (TSAF) 2012.
In 2012, Sinha climbed Island Peak (6,150 metres) in as preparation. On April
1, 2013, two years after her horrific accident, Arunima, along with Susen
Mahto, TSAF instructor, started the ascent to Mount Everest. After 52 days of
hard climbing, Arunima reached the Everest summit at 10:55 am on 21st May. She
has made history by becoming the first female amputee to scale the mighty peak.
Arunima has since received several awards and financial aid for her inspiring
achievement. She is donating all the financial aid that she has received to
open a free sports academy for poor and differently-abled persons, the Pandit
Chandra Shekhar Viklang Khel Academy. In 2015, the braveheart was awarded the
fourth highest civilian award of India, the Padma Shri and was also honoured
with the Tenzing Norgay Highest Mountaineering Award. Arunima has rightfully
secured her place in history as a person who overcame extreme adversity to
achieve glory through sheer determination and self- belief.
Kamal Kumbhar
Osmanabad, Maharashtra
The Social Entrepreneur
with a Mission
Kamal Kumbhar broke
free from the shackles of poverty and a suffocating marriage to create a
micro-enterprise network, enabling women like herself to realise their dreams
of a brighter tomorrow. Daughter of a daily-wage labourer, Kamal Kumbhar walked
out of poverty and a failed marriage to set up Kamal Poultry and Ekta Sakhi
Producer Company. Her organisation has enabled 3,000 women in the drought-prone
region of Osmanabad, Maharashtra to set up small poultry ventures for a premium
variety of chicken. This initiative has helped provide an alternative and
sustainable source of livelihood to women trapped in poverty like Kamal herself
was once. A serial entrepreneur, Kamal today owns six different businesses and
is a role model business leader. Kamal was also a winner of the CII Foundation
Women Exemplar Award 2017 in the field of micro-enterprise. A role model in her
community, Kamal has actively mentored more than 5,000 women to set up
micro-enterprises. With an inspiring life story that started from the very
rock-bottom, the only way Kamal’s headed is up and ahead.
Jamuna Tudu
Maturkham, Jharkhand
Maturkham’s Lady Tarzan
Jamuna Tudu and her band of women activists have managed to conserve 50
hectares of forest land around her village in Jharkhand, taking on the forest
mafia with little more than bows and arrows and a whole lot of courage. For
years, the dense Sal forest surrounding Maturkham village in Purbi Singhbhum
district of Jharkhand was plundered by the forest mafia for its precious Sal
timber and rare fauna. Till, a young woman from Odisha married into a family in
the village. Young Jamuna Tudu was incensed to see the mafia chopping down Sal
trees with complete disregard for the law or the tribal tradition that bans the
cutting of the trees. She was even more bewildered by the passive response of
the community at their habitat being attacked. Seventeenyear-old Jamuna decided
to take matters in her own hands. She mobilized a group of 25 women from the
village, armed them with bows and arrows, lathis and spears, and marched into
the forest to take on the intruders. Over 15 years of many fierce encounters
with the mafia and relentless sensitization of the community, Jamuna and the
Van Suraksha Samiti she formed have succeeded in protecting and conserving 50
hectares of forest land and its flora and fauna. For her courage, passion and
persistence in the face of odds, the community call her, Lady Tarzan. The Van
Suraksha Samiti has about 60 active women members, who patrol the jungle in
shifts thrice a day, morning, noon and evening. And sometimes even at night
when the mafia set fire to the forests in random acts of vandalism and vengeance.
Jamuna’s fight has not gone unnoticed. The President of India has awarded her
conservation efforts. The Forest Department has ‘adopted’ her village, which
has led to Maturkham getting a water connection and a school. In 2013, Jamuna
accepted the Godfrey Phillips Bravery Award in the ‘Acts of Social Courage’
category. Maturkham and its nearby areas are deep in the heart of Naxal
territory; Jamuna faces a dual challenge running an environment conservation
campaign in the volatile region. Today, she runs awareness campaigns through
various forest committees in Kolhan division. Around 150 committees formed by
Jamuna, comprising more than 6,000 members, have joined her movement to save
the forests.
Rajlakshmi
Borthakur,
Bengaluru
Lifesaver Device Designed
by a Mom
Her young son’s severe
epilepsy had left Raji Borthakur devastated. His seizures would come suddenly
without warning. . Living in constant fear, she never knew when the next
seizure would strike. And neither did the doctors. Determined to save her
child’s life, Raji channelled her inner researcher and innovator. She
researched epilepsy obsessively for more than three years and came up with a
simple wearable device, a smart glove, that can predict epileptic seizures
before they happen. The sensors inside the glove get vital stats from the body
and send these to the inbuilt processor. The processor works on the data
immediately and sends it wirelessly to patients and caregivers anywhere, thus
alerting them to a possible episode of seizure that could prove fatal. Raji’s
simple yet ingenious solution to her son’s life-threatening condition has the
potential of saving millions of others living with seizures.
Kiran Kanoji,
Faridabad
From Accident Survivor
to India’s First Female Blade Runner
Survivor of a horrific
accident, Kiran Kanojia, is a champion blade runner, constantly pushing the
limits on her quest for the next challenge. On a December day in 2011, Kiran
Kanojia, an Infosys employee, boarded the train from Hyderabad on her way home
to Faridabad, excited about celebrating her upcoming birthday with her family.
Kiran landing a job in Infosys was celebrated as a turning point in her
family’s fortunes. She is hazy about what happened next but remembers two boys
attempting to snatch her bag and pushing her out of the train. On the eve of
her birthday, Kiran lay in a hospital bed catching snatches of conversation
about ‘saving the leg’. Life as Kiran knew it would never be the same again.
When Kiran returned to Hyderabad six months after the accident and her
amputation, she fought to get back control of her life. The Dakshin
Rehabilitation Centre (DRC) helped her do just that. Mohana Gandhi, a
consultant from DRC, got her and other amputees to form a running group. Mohana
suggested Kiran try the prosthetic leg. When she first wore it, Kiran was
unsure it could even support her. Gradually, the blade felt like second skin.
In 2014, Kiran attempted the Hyderabad Airtel Marathon and won her first medal.
Today, Kiran, 28, is a champion blade runner and is invited to Delhi and Mumbai
to run and flag off marathons. Her immediate goal is to participate in the
Paralympic Games and make the country proud.
Harshini
Kanhekar
Nagpur, Maharashtra
Breaking the Ceiling:
India’s First Woman Firefighter
In the 46 years of its
history, the National Fire Service College of Nagpur never saw a uniformclad
woman walk out of its gates. Harshini Kanhekar rewrote the history of the
college and the country’s fire services to become India’s first woman
firefighter. Growing up, Harshini discovered her appetite for adventure after
signing up for the National Cadet Corps Air Wing. Her ultimate dream was to don
a uniform and serve the country. Fresh from university, Harshini applied to
Nagpur's National Fire Service College (NFSC), an all-male bastion. When she
qualified for NFSC, her parents were apprehensive. Harshini, however, was
determined to overcome all obstacles. Harshini worked as hard as her male peers
to clear the course. Her drills included working with heavy water hoses and
suction hoses. As the first woman ever to take the course, the expectations
from her were much higher; she could not afford to make mistakes since her
performance would set the benchmark for other young women aspiring to join
NFSC. After graduating from NFSC, Harshini joined the fire fighter services at
the age of 26. She was selected and designated as a fire engineer at the Oil
and Natural Gas Commission (ONGC). Before joining ONGC, Harshini helped douse
several big fires in Delhi and Kolkata. Her longest operation was in Delhi when
a shoe factory caught fire, and she as part of her team had to fight fire for
six hours at a stretch. As part of her service, she has also rescued civilians
during floods, building collapses, wildlife attacks, and river swelling. After
joining ONGC in 2006, she was posted at the company’s Mehsana station, where
she was in-charge of one of the three fire stations. Owing to her bravery,
Harshini was also granted access to offshore rigs recently and is currently the
deputy manager, Fire Services. From a typical teenager studying in all-girls
college in Nagpur to becoming the first woman firefighter of the country,
Harshini’s story serves as an inspiration for millions of young Indian women
who dare to dream.
Shima Modak,
Meghalaya
A Beacon of Hope for
the Underprivileged
For almost a decade,
Shima Modak has been working relentlessly towards the welfare of the deprived
and distressed. With little financial assistance, Shima has helped restore
dignity to the lives of marginalised women and children. Moved by the plight of
the underprivileged, Shima Modak drew funds from her own earnings to start her
NGO, SPARK, which helps educate and enable marginalised groups to lead lives of
dignity. In 2010, Shima started small educational centres in community spaces
to take education to the doorstep of those kids who cannot make it to school.
These centres were run with minimum basic facilities and the expenditure
incurred was personally borne by Shima. Today, there are five such centres staffed
with 16 teachers across Shillong, catering to nearly 450 students, mostly slum
kids, ragpickers or domestic workers who have to work to support their family.
Basic education (nursery to 10th grade) is provided free to children who could
never have dreamt of going to school. Those who have completed their schooling
are then linked to a formal school. Students from these centres have been
participating in and winning state and national level sports tournaments. A key
achievement has been a group of students who’ve been trained in animation and
film-making skills participating in the Chicago Film Festival 2015. Starting
with 73 underprivileged children, the centres run by SPARK have as of date been
able to cover more than 3,000. Shima has also been working to counter human
trafficking, rescuing and rehabilitating women who are trapped into sex work
and domestic labour. Recognising the importance of educating women for the
development of society, Shima’s NGO organises evening classes for women in
Anjali, Shillong. Awareness and sensitisation programmes and health camps for
women are some of the other praiseworthy initiatives undertaken by Shima and
her team. Shima continues to soldier on, using her own resources and the
wholehearted support of the community, to improve the lives of the lesser
privileged.
Sunita Kamble
Mhasvad, Maharashtra
Mhasvad’s Doctor Madam
Sunita Kamble fought
the odds to become the first woman goat veterinarian in her region, working
with her team to protect her community’s livestock and create alternative and
sustainable livelihood opportunities for women Sunita Kamble belongs to
Mhasvad, a severely drought-affected area in Maharashtra. Livestock farming is
the key source of livelihood for the marginalised community in this region.
Given the lack of veterinarians in the remote area, the community’s prime
assets, their livestock, were highly susceptible to diseases that could prove
fatal without timely and appropriate treatment. Ms Kamble, like other rural
women in her community, had limited avenues for growth; the thought of helping
the community protect and sustain their sole source of livelihood might have
seem farfetched to most. However, Sunita was unlike the others. She persevered
in the face of opposition from her family and ridicule from the community to
become a doctor. And not just any doctor. Sunita became the first grassroots
woman goat veterinarian in the region. Livestock farmers in the Mhasvad region
finally had help at hand. Sunita and her team of seven barefoot veterinarians
have performed artificial insemination on over 2,000 goats in the area. The
idea to artificially inseminate goats was first introduced by a few state
governments in order to crossbreed and create a hybrid that can be a good
source of milk and mutton. Sunita and her team have also successfully trained
over 350 women in the technique, thus creating an alternative and sustainable
livelihood option for women-headed households in the area. From being jeered by
the community for her aspirations to being respected as “Doctor madam”, Sunita
Kamble has come a long way.
Kanika Tekriwal
Bhopal, Madhya Pradesh
Ruling the Skies
A self-made aviation
entrepreneur and cancer survivor, Kanika Tekriwal exemplifies the power of
positive thinking and strategic risk-taking. Kanika Tekriwal started her
journey in the aviation industry at the tender age of 17. She took up a
part-time job helping set up the aviation division for real estate powerhouse,
Indiabulls. Recognising the potential in the aviation sector early on, Kanika
viewed the lack of easy and informed hiring of private aircrafts at the time as
a market waiting to be captured. At 21, Kanika was diagnosed with Stage 2
Hodgkin lymphoma. Looking back, she considers the battle with cancer as a phase
in her life which gave her time to think and strategise around her ambition to
be a part of the aviation industry. After successfully battling cancer, Kanika
went back to the drawing board and launched her company, JetSetGo in 2013.
JetSetGo, India’s first marketplace for chartered jets, is an interactive
technology-driven platform enabling users to charter aircrafts and helicopters
around India. India has about 200 airstrips of which less than half are connected
by commercial flights, making the aircraft charter market a viable option for
many. Revenues at the Delhi company have grown from $64,200 in fiscal 2015 to
$3.2 million in fiscal 2016 to a projected $17 million for the year that ended
in March. JetSetGo either manages or has exclusive marketing contracts for 16
aircrafts, making it the largest fleet in India. The company operates four to
20 flights a day. At the age of 28, Kanika has won several accolades—chosen as
one of the 100 most inspirational women in the world by BBC, recognised by
Forbes Asia as one of the 30 under 30 leading entrepreneurs in Asia, CNN’s 20
under 40, and awarded the National Entrepreneurship award in E-commerce by
Government of India. Next on Kanika’s to-do list: creating a global presence
for her brand.
*****
AKT/NT/VK
Click here for PDF file: Backgrounder: Inspiring Stories -
Women Transforming India Awards, 2017