- Nowadays-Preeti Shah
- When she was eight years old, her mother gave her some papers and asked her how much money she earned in a week.
Ashwitha Shetty was born in Mukkudal village in Tirunelveli district of Ta Milnadu. The main source of employment for most of the poor families in the village was the BD industry. Ashwitha's mother also made beedi. Playing in the dust and with stones, climbing trees and eating guavas and mangoes - that's how he spent his childhood, but as he got older he saw his mother working ten to twelve hours and started helping her in her work, but at the same time she continued to study. Growing up, Ashwitha saw that most of the women in the village were victims of domestic violence and were silent instead of protesting. He did not understand why this was happening. Women's illiteracy, on the other hand, was a constant concern. When she was eight years old, her mother gave her some papers and asked her to count how much money she had earned in a week. Ashwitha noticed that no amount was written on it, only fingerprints. Because Anne's mother was illiterate. She never went to school, so how do you sign?
Seeing this, Ashwitha told her mother that she would teach him to sign. At first the mother refused, but then when she came to sign it, her face shone with pride and joy as if she had achieved a great success. In the society in which she lived, her daughters' only job was to cook, clean the house, and raise the children. Ashwitha always felt that there were only three points of identity - poor, rural and girl. At times, she even felt that she did not need to be born. While making BDs, she would sometimes ask her mother, 'Will my life be different from yours? Will I have the opportunity to study in college? ' The mother, who knew the reality, simply told her to finish school first.
But Ashwitha always feared that after finishing high school, she would get married, as her sister was also married at an early age. When she was thirteen, she had the opportunity to read Helen Keller's autobiography. He decided to continue his studies after completing his high school education. There was a little confrontation with his father and relatives. He got admission in BBA, but again the same marriage thing. Ashwitha wanted to get out of this situation. In the Tamil magazine, he read about the Young India Fellowship in Delhi. The librarian helped him and interviewed him over a friend's phone, as he did not have the money to go to Delhi. She eventually received the scholarship.
The father was very upset and the mother was worried, but Ashwitha reached Delhi. She saw that out of 7 students, she had graduated from a village college. Initially, the subconscious feels. English language problem too. He worked ten times harder than his classmates. He learned a lot. The study continued and Anne's life changed a lot. He became a community engagement manager at S.V. Started working in healthcare. It was a model to raise awareness about primary health care in rural India. She went to school and college to teach students about anemia and cardiovascular disease.
Returning to his hometown Tirunelveli, he founded the Bodhi Tree Foundation. The foundation provides various trainings to village graduates and provides some opportunities. It gives an understanding of everything like fellowships, scholarships, government jobs, private jobs, entrepreneurship. It organizes two-day training programs for Arts, Science, Polytechnic and Engineering students. So far, the program has covered two and a half to three thousand students in about twenty colleges. She has received the Mother Teresa Social Enterprise Scholarship. Ashwitha raises funds for her foundation. He has achieved freedom and spread his wings and made his dream come true.
Earn masculinity and originality!
Shadan Siddique started his designer glass and mirror business in 2016 on a 100 square foot space near his home in Ripon Street.
In the extreme grief and struggle that comes in G-One, some people are helpless and broken, while some people overcome the challenge and achieve success. Mohammad Shadan Siddique is one such hardworking successful businessman. He was born into a very middle class family on Ripon Street in Kolkata. Seven siblings and parents lived in the bus square foot house. The father ran a grocery store, but realizing the importance of education in life, the father wanted to give higher education to his children. He taught his children in a convent school and worked hard for it.
His sixth child, Shadan Siddique, excelled in his studies and wanted to become a doctor, but while he was studying in 12th standard, his father died suddenly of a sudden heart attack. Shadan Siddique's elder brother worked in Japan and helped the family financially. He too died of a heart attack in 2004 at the age of eight, four years after his father's death.
Even in such a difficult situation Shada continued to give entrance exams in medical and engineering. In 2006, he got admission in Techno India University in Production Engineering. In 2010, from his college, he got a job in a multinational oil production company and moved to Guwahati, Assam. Here he was earning fifteen thousand rupees a month as a production manager, but he had a constant longing to run his own business. So after three years, he resigned in 2012 and returned to Kolkata. At that time his salary was forty thousand.
Calcutta has come, but what to do now? After her father's death, her siblings stopped running a grocery store. Instead his younger brother Danish started a glass and mirror shop. He got interested in this business after seeing his brother doing this work. On the other hand, he got an MBA in marketing. Decided to do. He was admitted to Goenka College of Commerce and Business Administration, Kolkata.
Thinking about the business of glass, he thought that a lot of people are making ordinary glass and mirrors, but no one is making decorative and safety glass in Kolkata and all over East India. So he saw many opportunities in this business. While studying for his MBA, he continued his research on decorative glass.
After completing the course in 2014, he started a designer glass and mirror business in 2016 on a 100 square foot space near his home in Ripon Street. Shadan Siddique thought that his business would run well from day one. Because the LEDs in Anne's shop. There were many types of modern glass that people liked, such as Mirror, Modern Mirror, Decorative Glass, Venetian Mirror, Etching Glass, Glass Wall Panel, Decorative Lankard Glass and Float Annealed Glass, but it turned out that there were no sales for the first six months.
Shadan was seriously worried about the failure in the early days. He rarely received any orders. They began to think that he had not made a wrong decision. Because the glass they sold was twenty to thirty times more expensive than ordinary glass. He did not give up in such a state of anxiety and despair. They approached several companies. Created an online portal. Gradually began to receive orders. Orders were received not only from Kolkata but also from many parts of the country.
In the first year of 2016-17, the turnover was three million. Initially they were outsourcing manufacturing, but then started their own unit near Kolkata. With that he started another show room in Kolkata. In 2012, his company became a private limited company. Today it has three show rooms in Kolkata. Twenty employees work regularly and about eighty are on contract. Shadan's company has a turnover of Rs 3 crore today.
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