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FEATURES

The Seeds are Sown

The first set of Amrita SeRVe Fellows completes their one year of service in our villages

One year ago, our first set of Amrita SeRVe Fellows finished their training and travelled to their assigned villages to work with the people to find solutions for many pending issues.

Specific results quickly became clear. In Madhya Pradesh, a cancer patient was helped to avail of government cash benefit for his treatment. In Bihar, the children of the Musahar community were sensitised to the importance of hygiene by giving them baths in the river and feeding them nutritious snacks. In Gujarat, at least 100 families started their own kitchen gardens, while in Rajasthan four farmers harvested their first organic produce.

Not only this, but in Chhattisgarh a family was helped to get government compensation of Rs. 50,000 when their house burnt down. Meanwhile in Jharkhand, three liquor outlets in the village were shut down and production of home-made liquor dropped significantly due to awareness campaigns and rallies against alcohol consumption.

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Ajay – Indpur, Himachal Pradesh This was the first time I stepped out of my house and it was a great experience to live and work amongst all types of people that I encountered in the village.

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Amol Motghare – Nani Borvai, Gujarat – To meet the people in the village and work with them brought me so much happiness.

The Amrita SeRVe Fellowship program started in June 2015 with three fellows. However at that time, rather than a well thought-out strategy, it was more like an experiment to find our feet in the villages. It was only in September 2015, when a group of 15 youngsters came to Amritapuri that solid work started. In three weeks of training, the new fellows took in huge volumes of material, from how to be a first responder to medical needs to how to build a sense of community by gathering people for things like regular bhajan sessions. Here’s what else they achieved during the one year :

  • medical camps in all our villages, some of which had never even been visited by a doctor before

  • tutoring of school children and adult literacy programs

  • new vocational training and jobs for villagers

  • Amala Bharatam Campaigns, Amma’s key program for getting people to clean up pollution and trash across India

  • the planting of thousands of trees with the villagers’ help and sometimes also financial contribution

  • anti-alcohol campaigns which have helped people quit liquor-drinking habits

  • formation of self help groups for agricultural, environmental and income generating projects
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Anju Singh – Junakathiwada, Madhya Pradesh I have gained a lot of self-confidence by working with different types of people in the course of my village work.

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Ashish Sejwan – Dunda, Uttarakhand The way to sustainable development in the village is to involve the entire village in the activities and to work nonstop for a long, long time on the upliftment of the village.

However, the biggest work that has been achieved in these villages is the establishment of a bond between the fellow and the villagers, due to which the villagers have started paying attention to the ideas of self-dependence, government benefits, uniting for a common cause, and taking care of nutrition for their families—all radically new ideas for them. This could not have been possible without the fellows living in the villages and mingling with the people as a part of the larger village family.

In almost all of our villages, the fellows have now single-handedly organised ladies into Self Help Groups, which are regularly saving money and slowly but surely moving towards financial independence. Similarly, another common thing that has happened in all our villages is Medical Camps. Although the camps are not held regularly, but still a start has been made in making health services accessible to the villages.

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Chandan Singh Yadav – Devgain, Jharkhand Utilising government schemes and training programs can help a lot in bringing development to the village.

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Ghanshyam Upadhyay – Pandori, Jammu & Kashmir Coordination at the organisational level among different departments is key to achieving success in village.

Recently during the 2016 monsoon, fellows organized tree-planting in all our villages. In some places they took the help of the District Forest Office, in some locations they were helped by Amma’s devotees, while in many other states they convinced the villagers to pay 25% of the cost of saplings in order to give them an incentive in preserving and taking care of the young trees.

All the various teams from Mata Amritanandamayi Math Ashram also find things in the villages much more conveniently arranged due to the presence of a regular fellow in the village. It’s easier for other departments to call for meetings, arrange for materials locally and follow up with government officials.

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Jamuna Kashyap – Deurbal, Chhattisgarh I’ve learnt that developing heart-to-heart relations is the key to achieving success in village work.

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Nand Kishore Sharma – Ratanpur, Bihar If I do my duty in the village with full devotion and dedication, Amma will take care of me and my family.

Amma’s invisible hand has been guiding and protecting the fellows all along during the last one year. They started out alone and as strangers in their villages. Today they are the torchbearers for taking Amma’s dream for rural self-reliance to the next level by laying a strong foundation in the villages. Upon this, the future fellows will surely be able to stand firm and deliver.

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Rajesh Meena – Harirampura, Rajasthan Working in the village taught me to look at and identify with the personal pains and problems of others–true empathy.