By Vikas Meshram The story of 42-year-old Manglibai Hakra Garasia, a resident of Jumki village in Sajjangarh tehsil of Banswara district, Rajasthan, is an inspiring example of how renewable energy and effective use of government schemes can transform the economic future of a tribal family. As a tribal woman farmer, Manglibai has not only secured her family’s livelihood but has also emerged as a role model for other women in her region.
By Ram Puniyani* While delivering the Ramnath Goenka Lecture, Prime Minister Narendra Modi stated that India should take a ten-year pledge to root out the colonial mindset. In ten years, he noted, it will be 200 years since Lord Macaulay introduced the English-based education system. According to Modi, Macaulay’s project aimed to reshape Indian thought by dismantling indigenous knowledge systems and enforcing colonial education. He went on to argue that Macaulay’s “crime” was creating Indians who were “Indian in appearance but British in thought.” This, Modi claimed, destroyed India’s self-confidence and introduced a sense of inferiority.