Wednesday 27 April 2016

India's population explosion will make or break its economy


India's demographics are mind-boggling: By 2020, it will have 900 million people of working age, and the average age of its citizens will fall to 29.
Two years later, it should pass China to become the world's most populous country which gives an immediate edge to the rising economic growth or depleting resources.

This army of workers -- tens of millions of young people enter the workforce each year -- could be the key that finally unlocks India's vast potential. Millions will be lifted out of poverty if they're able to find good jobs.

But unless India makes big improvements in how it educates and trains students, this demographic boom could instead saddle the country with another generation of unskilled workers destined to languish in low-paying jobs.

The India's education and professional development system has not kept pace with economic growth and is in "dire need for reform."

In industry after industry, the same story is repeated. A recent survey by Aspiring Minds, which tracks workforce preparedness, found that more than 80% of India's engineering graduates in 2015 were "unemployable."

Critics say India's universities are too focused on rote memorization, leaving students without the critical thinking skills required to solve problems. Teachers are paid low salaries, leading to poor quality of instruction. When students are denied entry to prestigious state schools, they often turn to less rigorous private colleges.

"When IT industries boomed in India a few years ago, many below-the-mark private colleges emerged to cater to their needs".

Prime Minister Narendra Modi is racing to provide workers with training. His government is recruiting skills instructors, and turning old schools into learning centers. Programs strewn across various government agencies are being consolidated. Companies in the private sector are pitching in to help provide training.

The most pressing need, however, might be in primary education. Pupils in India are expected to perform two-digit subtraction by the age of seven, but only 50% are able to correctly count up to 100. Only 30% of the same students are able to read a text designed for five-year-olds, according to education foundation Pathram.

If the country's unique demographics are to pay dividends, improvement is a lesson to be learned quickly.

Inspiring India

Monday 25 April 2016

Why to save water!!??

https://youtu.be/AZeKvZegBQw

Must watch
If justifies why we need to save water.

I hope this will awake you from the fantasy world so that you will able to see the reality and need to conserve water.

Inspiring India

World War III May Just be Around the Corner

Few have said it yet. Somebody needs to. We are on the verge of WWIII.
The signs are here. 
Armies massing in a tinderbox around the oil fields of the Mideast.
 Armies massing on the India-Pakistan border, another flash point in the world.
North Korea is busily turning its nuclear facilities to the sincere task of creating enriched uranium for nuclear missiles. 
America is seen as the rising major power with a dangerously misdirected mind and That too government has now turned bellicose, a dangerous development considering the awesome military hardware it commands.
And war. They will say they don’t want world war, but world war consolidates and perpetuates their grip on power.
The intentions of the US government are not, in fact peaceful. 
 Once the fog of war settles in, none of that will matter. Once the guns begin to roar,as it will write the dark history.

Inspiring India

Fight against the VIP culture in India

In India, VIP culture is very common and we can find many so called VIPs around us. Recently, during my short drive of three hours from Delhi to Dehradun , I noticed more than two dozen VIP cars crossing me. Around a half dozen of these cars were belonging to ministers and they have a full security cover.

In India, it is common to see state and center minister moving in convoy of many vehicles each carrying four to six security personals. Not only ministers, but their relatives, friends and party workers do start enjoy VIP treatments. Everywhere in India, such VIPs always enjoy special privileges and common men suffer because of them.

Many times, we hear news that a flight was delayed for hours to accommodate a VIP or a VIP is allowed special pass. Today, common people are becoming aware of this wrong practice where public servants are given VIP treatment and they enjoy on the hard earned tax payers money.

In a country like India, where Poor farmers don't have money to buy diesel for their water pumps, the cars of convoys of VIPs waste so much of diesel on daily basis.

How long, we can allow such wastage and special treatment to these leaders when our constitution says that every person has the same rights. To make a good India, we first need to stop this VIP culture.

Newly created Aam Admi Party initially showed some hope when it said that it will not allow VIP culture and its ministers will not take security cover. However, after the election, it is also following the steps of other parties.

In the present educated Indian society, every person knows his or her constitutional rights. However, most of people still fear to raise voice against this bad culture where few people enjoy VIP treatments at the cost of common Indian tax payers. Today, our society is trapped in the hands of big politicians and rich people; and these people exploit situations to their advantage.

Today, many people just come in to politics to get the VIP treatment only. I feel happy when I see increasing resentment in people against the VIP culture and one day, I hope that VIP culture will become a history in India.

Inspiring India

Friday 22 April 2016

Initiatives can bring about a change

Pollution levels in most parts of Delhi have showed significant improvement covered by the odd-even plan.
Even then, pollution levels were still high in some parts of North Delhi. However, it is time to head to Central Delhi and take a deep breath.The breathe analyzer gives us a clear picture about the same.
The initiative of the Delhi government has somehow succeeded and fulfilled its aim partially establishing a great example of how a small initiative can help in mending lives of people by giving them a healthy environment to breathe which can even create history.
This proves that when all the people come together to solve a national problem it is resolved with greater speed,efficiency and effectiveness.
"Together we can do anything "
Inspiring India

Wednesday 20 April 2016

The Challenges of Education in Rural India

When we talk about education in India, we can’t just talk about how education is in urban cities of India, without going deep into rural education that constitutes almost 90% of the schools being located in rural areas.

Recent studies have shown how the face of education in rural parts of the country have developed to a great extent, but some remote areas still do need a serious checkup with children failing to receive basic quality education.

We cannot but agree that, it is education that leads to the road to betterment of a community and the nation at large. And when we think about bring in a reformation in education, we have to point out what all prevents the education system in India to develop. Let’s start it with rural education.

The most common problems that hinders the growth of education in rural India can be pointed out as

Lack of proper transportation. Most villages have poor connectivity from one place to another and that is often one of the main reason why, despite efforts by local governing bodies to build schools, often go in vain.

Children, most of the time have to walk miles to reach these government funded schools and this often demotivate them to attend school on a regular basis.
People belonging to remote rural areas have meager incomes, which at times is too less to sustain a family of maybe four or five. Most likely, children from these families won’t be sent to schools, instead would be asked to assist the earning member of the family to add up some extra income.

On the other hand, teachers in rural educational centers in villages are paid poorly, often leading to lack of attention by teachers, ultimately forcing the students to suffer.

Lack of proper infrastructure at these rural schools is also a big concern. Most of the schools don’t have proper classrooms, teaching equipment, playgrounds and even basic facilities like clean toilets.
 Thus, the poor condition of schools are big reasons to drive away students.

Proper availability of basic facilities like clean toilets, drinking water, adequate classroom facilities, timely motivational programs for teachers etc should be there.

The right reformation can definitely bring about a positive change towards the development of rural education in India.

We all should try to provide elementary education to children and discourage child labour.These children are future of our country,if you want our country to be successful in future help the poor to access education.

No country can really develop unless its citizens are educated.
This can help in removing most of the evils of the society.
Try to give your best to the society,it needs you.

It is for
Your surroundings
Your society
Your country
It is another way of serving your country, you need not to be necesarily in an army for that.

Inspiring India

Tuesday 19 April 2016

Child marriages--a destruction of the bride's future

UNICEF defines child marriage as marriage before 18 years of age and considers this practise as a violation of human rights.

The harmful consequences of child marriage are segregation from family and friends, limiting the child's interactions with the community and peers, lack of opportunities for education.

 Girl children often face situations of bonded labour, enslavement, commercial sexual exploitation and violence as a result of child marriage. Because of lack of protection child brides are often exposed to serious health risks, early pregnancy, and various STDs especially HIV/AIDS.
There are many reasons why parents consent to child marriage such as economic necessity, male protection for their daughters, child bearing, or oppressive traditional values and norms.

Globally more than one third of the women between the ages 20-24 were married before they reached the age of 18. Approximately 14 million adolescent girls between the ages 15-19 give birth each year. Girls in this age group are twice more likely to die during child birth than women in their twenties.

The practice continues well into the 21st century, and conflicting laws at the state and central level aren’t doing anything to make things better. Section 8(1) of the Rajasthan Compulsory Registration of Marriages Bill 2009, appears to recognize child marriage as legal by urging all persons below 21 years of age to register their marriage and is in contradiction of the Centre’s Prohibition of Child Marriage Act, 2006.

The prevalence of this evil in India is a reflection of the deep misogyny harboured by our culture and religious practices. In order to control women’s sexuality, production and reproduction, the strategy to claim women’s bodies at very young ages was evolved. Caste endogamy (maintaining the ‘purity’ of one’s line) too is maintained through this practice. The BIMARU states (Bihar, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh) in addition to being economically poor and backward, are also the states with the highest rates of child marriages. This suggests a correlation between this social ill and poverty – where brides aren’t allowed to prosper into healthy, economically productive, self-actualized beings.

Child marriage is low among women who have had access to higher education and secondary education. Marriages in India are often unregistered, and are socially binding if not legally, which makes it hard to survey.

In 2006 the government of India update legislations regarding child marriage and passed the Prohibition of Child Marriage Act, 2006 which is not making much of a difference in the situation.

The young generation needs to overview the situation and take a stand over it and try to resolve the problem by assessing with resources like higher education and making them aware about their rights.


Inspiring India

The Cruel And Horrifying Face Of Child Labour In Firozabad

Located in the western interiors of the state of Uttar Pradesh, there is a quaint little town called Firozabad, which also goes by the name of ‘Suhag Nagri’. True to this sobriquet which is emblematic of the rich colours associated with marriage, Firozabad is a hub of the bangle making industry. Clinking bangles of red-green-yellow-blue is a common sight in Sardar Bazaar of Firozabad. However, look closer and you’d be petrified by the Uvisible horror, and deafened by the hushed crying of many dwellers of this place.

Sardar Bazaar is not just known for the beautiful glass bangles it puts up for sale everyday-it is also infamously known as a market place where slave trade still exists, this time in the form of child labourers.

There are primarily two kinds of child labourers in this town. The first-where the children work part time and attend school. In another, more horrifying picture, children who are sometimes as young as 5-years-old, work full time for this industry. Meagre pay and atrocious, unhygienic work conditions have relegated their lives to a condition of extreme trauma. Several investigations, case studies and reports have been carried out to put a halt to this. Even though the country has several laws and acts related to the issue of child labour like The Factories Act of 1948, The Mines Act of 1952, The Child Labour (Prohibition and Regulation) Act of 1986, The Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection) of Children Act of 2000, they have completely failed to gain effect. As per reports, Ministry of Labour and Employment, which is officially responsible to implement the National Child Labour Project Scheme, has opened some schools. However, the everyday battle these innocent ones have been thrust into, leave little space in their lives to study or even dream of studying.

When a child is born in this world, as per a United Nations Convention on Child Rights, he/she is entitled to the fundamental rights of survival, development, protection and participation. Interact with a child from Firozabad and ten minutes into the conversation, you would be convinced that these ‘rights’ have been reduced to a farce. Their development, physical and mental, has been deterred by abject poverty. Their participation in daily affairs has boiled down to monotonously engaging in hours of wretched work. Surviving the storm is the only thing they know but it is far from being a‘fundamental right’,but it is rather the only alternative they have to dying.

The fight is on.

The burden directly falls on the society’s shoulders to rescue these kids and save their childhood. We need to constantly, incessantly and without fail, remind ourselves of the fact that there are several avenues open before us to actively fight this. All we need to do is take that big first step.

Inspiring India

Eve teasing needs to be paid attention

The structure of Indian society has always been male dominated. But in the modern era, women tried to break the centuries of shackles by venturing into male dominated areas.  Though, we have grown by leaps and bounds yet the most basic structure of society is showing no signs of improvement.

Eve teasing is a huge issue in many metropolitan cities of India. .A large percentages of Indian women have faced or are facing this menace. Whether it is a public transport system or public places or shopping malls or multiplexes, women find themselves vulnerable to the threat of eve teasing everywhere. Eve teasing is complex problem and it requires more attention that what it has actually got. 

Every man needs to be aware of ‘how to treat a woman’.  Eve teasing in India has to do with women empowerment and girl education. What’s the point of education if the people are not even willing to respect women? The traditional mindset often blames the eve teasing incidents on women that they provoke male by wearing scanty clothes. That is actually a lame excuse. Even if females wear modern dresses it does not give men license to harass women. The answer lies in changing the mindset and inculcating morals and values in our education system. 

Eve teasing must be stopped. Women deserve respect. Men and women are equal.Women have the right to live freely in the world. Independence is their birth right. They have the right to lead their lives as males. On the other hand, the family and society of the victims or teased girls should have the courage and resolve to support them. Most often, they are misunderstood by their family whenever they inform the family members about teasing. The family and society should support them mentally. So as the govt. must take things seriously. The country wants both of them to be active in such issues.

We still have to go a long way to completely rectify the situation.It is only possible when everyone comes together,give a deep thought about the situation and understand the gravity of the menace and try to solve it.

Inspiring India

Sunday 17 April 2016

Reasons for increasing rapes in India

The two main reasons in this regard are:
1. The Mentality: 
The problem lies in the mentality of the patriarchal Indian society wherein a woman is considered inferior to men in the society. It lies in the thought that a man has the right to rule over the body, mind and soul of a woman; that a woman is incomplete without a man. It lies in the thought that a woman dressed "provocatively" wants to be raped. A woman going out to discotheques and pubs, drinking,smoking or going out with a gang of boys is considered to be an easy catch. She is labelled to to be characterless-"A Bad woman" and is considered to be giving an "invitation to rape".The question arised in the male minds is "She is a woman. How can she?". On parallel lines, a man dressed fashionably is cool.He is a dude if he drinks and smokes and has girls swooning around him. How does the society justify this? The mentality that a man must prove his manhood by getting laid with a girl. This patriarchal mentality itself is the main cause of the increasing rape scenario. The root of all causes lies in this cheap mentality. Of course, it is not true for all sectors of the Indian society and cannot be generalised, but it stands true for majority of the cases.
2. Cases reported:
Another major reason is that women have started to speak up. They have started to come forward and report the rape and molestation attempts they have faced with enough guts. It is not that earlier there were lesser rape attempts, but women wouldn't come up and report them. Awareness amongst women in this regard has helped. Moreover, it is the realisation that they have had enough of it. Loopholes still exist in our law making system which as of now does not recognize "marital rape". Once proper laws are employed, more cases are sure to come up.  
Other reasons like lack of proper police security and less severe punishments for rape as per Indian laws are also true and equally saddening.

If we try to implement these in reality it can make a huge difference.
A small effort can bring about a change in drastic which is very crucial in present scenario.
Please do whatever you can to make a safer society for women so that they pace in sleek chivalric certainty.

Inspiring India

Saturday 16 April 2016

AFTER NIRBHAYA, 209 MORE RAPE CASES TILL DATE, SHAME ON US!

After the Nirbhaya incident, India booked 209 more rape cases without any shame or guilt. And many more are adding the scenario. We do not have any conscious or feel for those undergoing trauma and distress. We are just reading the news and keeping our mouth shut. No raised voice, no protest, no proper policing and weak law are making the culprits to escape after some days detention in jails.

The spate of violent crimes against women shows no sign of stopping in Delhi. In the latest reported incident, a 19-year old girl Ghaziabad has stated that she was gangraped by three men with whom she was sharing an auto. The incident took place on 2 March.

According to IBN-Live, the girl said she was taken to an isolated area near Dasna in Ghaziabad and gangraped. According to her complaint, the autorickshaw changed direction and moved towards Dasna.

The woman had walked to the Masuri police station after the incident and told police personnel what had happened.

An FIR has been filed in regard to this case and two men who have been charged with rape, abduction and robbery.

“Around 10.30 pm, they left her in a field in Masuri and fled with her wallet and her mobile phone, police told the Indian Express.

“We tracked the accused using the woman’s mobile phone. Ankit and Dabban, both residents of Masuri, have been arrested and remanded in custody. The third man, Vikram, is absconding. They stole the auto on March 2. While the medical examination of the woman is inconclusive on rape, we have registered a case based on the complaint of the woman”.

According to a recent report, Delhi has witnessed around four rape cases a day in 2013, almost double the rate in 2012. The city witnessed a total of 181 rapes between 1 January and 15 February, Minister of State for Home Affairs Mullappally Ramachandran had told Rajya Sabha in a written question.

The number by itself is very high given that it has only a little over three months since the national capital was rocked by protests after the horrific Delhi gangrape case.

The situation is worst in the metropolitan cities as the cases of rapes are increasing day by day,i sometimes wonder what would be happening in the rural areas of India where women is not even given a decent position in the society.They are suppressed in the name of tradition, cultures and blackmailed for the sake of their parents respect in the society.
There are enormous unknown rapes almost happening everday.The girls are not safe,their parents are worried to send their daughters alone and the girls themselves are scared of being raped.Almost every girl has faced eve teasing in her life.

There is a need for a change in the upbringing of the young generation and mindset of the society.

The society is for the betterment of people and not for suppressing or motivating injustice or crime.

We need to face this, and revolt against it.
We cant let people buy justice anymore.

Inspiring India

Friday 15 April 2016

Depleting groundwater levels

Now, everyone in India understands that we have a serious water crisis. Too many of our rivers are polluted, dammed, or dying. Rainfall is becoming increasingly erratic, and expected to become more so. Our groundwater is depleting fast. Our lakes are drying up or filling with sewage, especially in urban centres. Our water and sanitation infrastructure is old and creaking in many places and does not even exist in others. Agriculture, industry and urban settlements all compete for the same scarce resource. It is no longer a problem that can be discussed without remedy. Rich or poor, it affects us all, here and now.

But if we had to choose one area for immediate attention, it would have to be groundwater. Groundwater is fuelling much of India's growth in rural and urban areas. This has resulted in severe scarcity and quality issues, especially in these high growth areas

India has always been a groundwater civilisation. For thousands of years, different regions had the most aesthetically designed, functional open wells that tapped into the shallow aquifers.The coming of the deep rigs and the borewells in the 1970s completely changed the way India used its groundwater reserves.

India is now the largest user of groundwater in the world. We draw more groundwater than two giant economies-USA and China. We have approximately 30 million wells, including the new borewells and the old open wells, drawing 250 cubic km of water. Groundwater now contributes to about 85 per cent of India's drinking water security, 60 per cent of its agricultural requirements and 50 per cent of urban water needs.

The big irony is that despite this reality, much of India's public investments have gone into surface water-dams and canals for irrigation, huge pipelines for drinking water.

Overwhelmed by the arrival of a new technology that allowed rapid scale-up, the government's response has been slow.

Water is a state subject in India. Administration at the Centre as well as in the states has tried but failed to fully resolve the questions of who really owns the groundwater, how it should be mapped, extracted and replenished.

So, through ignorance and with impunity, farmers, governments, industry and ordinary citizens have drilled deeper, and just about anywhere with frightening results. Sixty per cent of India's districts have serious issues of either depletion or pollution.

At the same time, poor sanitary practices have led to faecal contamination. Millions defecate in the open, and millions of others unknowingly contaminate groundwater through leaching from toilet pits.

As a society, we are now faced with tough choices. It is worth betting big on groundwater, which can actually lead us to water security. And we can become a mature groundwater civilisation. Again.

We need to join hands,come together and fight for good.And try to resolve the water disputes which the government has failed to do.
Only then our society will overcome the problem of water scarcity.
We all should try to contribute a little towards it on our level.It will create a change
and
Intiative by us
Can change
India's future

Inspiring India

Ministers fake concern over Maharashtra water crisis

At a time when several parts of Maharashtra are facing severe water crisis, thousands of litres of water were used for a make-shift helipad at a village, close to the airport, where Revenue Minister Eknath Khadse landed for reviewing droughtsituation in Latur district.

Local officials used 10,000 litres water for the helipad at Belkund village where the minister paid a visit to review the drought and water scarcity relief measures today.

Incidentally, Belkund is just around 40 km from Latur.

When asked about this "wastage" when Latur is being supplied water through rail wagons, Khadse, a senior BJP leader, said he wasn't aware of the issue.

It was "arrogance" of power" by the BJP-led government.

The incident shows the government is "non-serious" on drought and has become "arrogant" due to power.

"The minister could have landed at Latur where there is a proper airport and then driven to the village in a few minutes. But Khadse wanted to insult people in the drought- affected area who are struggling for a single drop of water," he said.

Latur is one of the worst-affected districts in Marathwada region and of late two special trains carrying water were rushed to the parched city to tide over the crisis.

It clearly shows how the BJP leader is just showing off his concern about the drought-stricken people and doesnt really care about the matter.
It is sarcastic how 10,000 litres of water was made available instantly for the minister but not for the poor who are dying everyday for a single drop of water.Such kind of ignorance and carelessness should not be accepted by the people and we should protest against such practices.Heavy penalty should be imposed on the minister for such a big social crime.

Inspirating India

WATER IN CRISIS - INDIA

With a diverse population that is three times the size of the United States but one-third the physical size, India has the second largest population in the world. According to the World Bank, India has taken significant steps to reduce poverty but the number of people who live in poverty is still highly disproportionate to the number of people who are middle-income, with a combined rate of over 52% of both rural and urban poor.

Although India has made improvements over the past decades to both the availability and quality of municipal drinking water systems, its large population has stressed planned water resources and rural areas are left out. In addition, rapid growth in India's urban areas has stretched government solutions, which have been compromised by over-privatization.

Regardless of improvements to drinking water, many other water sources are contaminated with both bio and chemical pollutants, and over 21% of the country's diseases are water-related. Furthermore, only 33% of the country has access to traditional sanitation.

One concern is that India may lack overall long-term availability of replenishable water resources. While India's aquifers are currently associated with replenishing sources, the country is also a major grain producer with a great need for water to support the commodity. As with all countries with large agricultural output, excess water consumption for food production depletes the overall water table.

Many rural communities in India who are situated on the outskirts of urban sprawl also have little choice but to drill wells to access groundwater sources. However, any water system adds to the overall depletion of water. There is no easy answer for India which must tap into water sources for food and human sustenance, but India's overall water availability is running dry.

India's water crisis is often attributed to lack of government planning, increased corporate privatization, industrial and human waste and government corruption. In addition, water scarcity in India is expected to worsen as the overall population is expected to increase to 1.6 billion by year 2050. To that end, global water scarcity is expected to become a leading cause of national political conflict in the future, and the prognosis for India is no different.

On a positive note, some areas of India are fortunate to have a relatively wet climate, even in the most arid regions. However, with no rain catchment programs in place, most of the water is displaced or dried up instead of used. In these areas, rain harvesting could be one solution for water collection. Collected water can be immediately used for agriculture, and with improved filtration practices to reduce water-borne pathogens, also quickly available for human consumption.

Whatever the means, India needs solutions now. Children in 100 million homes in the country lack water, and one out of every two children are malnourished.Environmental justice needs to be restored to India so that families can raise their children with dignity, and providing water to communities is one such way to best ensure that chance.

Inspiration India

Thursday 14 April 2016

Save water

Drought-hit Indian village where men marry women just so they can fetch water for the family


In a parched Indian village where there is no running water, 
men are marrying multiple women so they can fetch it for the family.

For villagers in Denganmal in western India, the only drinking water comes from two wells at the foot of a nearby rocky hill - a spot so crowded that the sweltering walk and wait can take hours.

For Sakharam Bhagat, and for many of his neighbours in the village 85 miles from Mumbai, the answer was a 'water wife'.
Bhagat, 66, now has three wives, two of whom he married solely to ensure his household has enough water to drink and cook with.
'I had to have someone to bring us water, and marrying again was the only option,' said Bhagat, who works as a day labourer on a farm in a nearby village.
'My first wife was busy with the kids. When my second wife fell sick and was unable to fetch water, I married a third.'
Bhagat and his family are suffering the consequences of a critical shortage of safe drinking water in India's villages, as well as the fallout from the most severe drought that his state, Maharashtra, has faced in a decade.
The government estimated last year that more than 19,000 villages had no access to water in Maharashtra. 
India is again facing the threat of a drought this year, with monsoon rains expected to be weaker than average.
In Denganmal, a cluster of about 100 thatched houses set on an expanse of barren land, most men work as farm labourers, barely earning the minimum wage.
Marrying for water has been the norm there for many years, villagers said.
Bhagat's wives all live in the same house with him but have separate rooms and kitchens.
Two of them are entrusted with fetching water, while the third manages the cooking.
Polygamy is illegal in India, but in this village, water wives are common.
'It is not easy to have a big family when there is no water,' Namdeo, another villager who has two wives, said.
Bhagat says the women, some of them widows or abandoned, are also happy with the arrangement.
'We are like sisters. We help each other. Sometimes we might have problems, but we solve them among ourselves,' his first wife, Tuki said. 
These are the people who are struggling everyday for drops of water and we are wasting buckets of water.


There is a need for change in the thinking of the people to conserve water. Only when we will conserve here the saved water can be reached to the needy.
Everybody needs to understand the importance of scarcity of fresh water.The maids,drivers and the gardeners have to be trained to use minimum amount of water and contribute in the struggle of conserving water.
Let us all join hands to conserve water by minimizing our usage of water as much as we can.


Inspiring india

Wednesday 13 April 2016

FIGHT FOR THE FUTURE

The blog focuses on the present day evils of the Indian society that needs due attention of the public so that we can focus on solving them. We have strength when we get together and fight against such evils as one,only then we would be able to break the rigid structure and vicious circle of evils in which we all are trapped.It is an effort to make people aware about the reality and Fire them with enthusiasm to fight for a fairer society.

INSPIRING INDIA