Food streets give you a taste of a city's traditional as well as some local delicacies. While some have fascinating histories, others just popped up with time.
Do you also know of such #KhauGallis? #FoodStreets#Traditional#TheBetterIndia
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(1/4) #HeroesOfHumanity
"I used to do philanthropic work along with the job. Seeing young girls toiling for hours in the rubbish dumps for a living, I realised that something should be done for the underprivileged children too."
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Nandita Banerjee from Danapur, Bihar, then quit her bank manager job and worked for homeless children. She decided to open schools for impoverished girls and started the NGO 'Nai Dharti' in 2011.
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Sister Nivedita Girls' School, run by the NGO in Maner block of Danapur's Sarai village, is now providing free education to 100 underprivileged girls who cannot afford school supplies.
Serving a plethora of local and seasonal delights, every region across India has its own take on the thali. Which one would you crown 'satisfaction on a platter'?
PS. This is not an exhaustive list. Did you check out Part 1?
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His father worked as an operator in Hindustan Unilever Ltd (HUL) and earned barely enough to sustain the family, which comprised Johnny along with three sisters and two brothers.
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Owing to financial problems, Johnny had to leave school when he was in Class 7 and take up odd jobs. From selling pens and dancing on the streets of Mumbai to mimicking Bollywood actors, Johnny did it all.
In India, women account only for 19.9% of the total workforce, out of which 81.3% belong to rural women, as per World Bank Data (2020). @DrRumaDevi
Though access to education has improved, those who are more educated remain unemployed because of the unavailability of formal jobs and low wages.
However, various organisations and individuals are working towards improving this situation by providing skill training and even creating job opportunities for the #ruralwomen across the country. @SajheSapne
(1/5) #WorldStudentsDay
Ninth-grade students Sanjula Sreekumar, Vyshak Ajit and Madhumati Anand of Amrita Vidyalayam, Kollam (Kerala), have created an ultralight body of cane, jute and straw for dropping delicate payloads.
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Sanjula researched the medical angle, studying the type of emergency supplies required to be transported.
Madhumati took up the core design of the delivery platform, turning to an engineering principle called Tensegrity.
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Vyshak explored how to slow down the fall of the payload structure, a complex task still being addressed.