Turtuk to Assam & Odisha: Usha Silai Schools turn tribal homemakers into earners via tailoring & crafts. Awards, skills, self-reliance!

In the remote village of Turtuk, Ladakh, nestled between towering Karakoram and Himalayan ranges near the Line of Control, 30 tribal women gather in a modest training center established by Samaarambh Foundation, NHPC, and Usha International. Amid Usha sewing machines and colorful fabrics, participants like Shakila Bano focus intently on stitching frocks and pillow covers during a 7-day intensive program, their expressions of newfound confidence reflecting the initiative's role in fostering self-reliance and economic dignity in this harsh, resource-scarce borderland.

Myank Khantwal, Founder of Samaarambh Foundation, interacts with tribal women trainees in Turtuk's Training cum Production Centre, surrounded by donated Usha machines and designer wear prototypes like laptop bags. As women practice advanced stitches under guidance, his emphasis on empowering underserved communities highlights the collaboration's impact, enabling regular income generation and social-economic upliftment through skills that transform homemakers into entrepreneurs in Ladakh's challenging terrains.

At Headquarters 8 Mountain Division in Khumbathang, Kargil, Shikha Krishnan, Chairperson of the Women Empowerment Centre, guides 15 women through a 25-day professional tailoring program in a vibrant training room filled with Usha machines and garment patterns. Amid the rugged Ladakhi landscape, participants stitch suits and baby frocks, embodying the Indian Army's initiative since 2002 to provide platforms for skill-sharing, professional growth, and economic independence in isolated border communities.

Women at Khumbathang's WEC blend tailoring with supplementary skills like soap-making and beautician services, their hands busy with fabrics and tools in a supportive group setting. As they transition from basic home stitching to professional earning, the scene captures the program's holistic approach, fostering creativity, leadership, and community bonds while preserving regional craftsmanship and expanding livelihood options in Ladakh's unforgiving environment.

In Dakhinkuchi village near Subankhata, Assam, along the Indo-Bhutan border, women of the Birgwshri Fashion and Home Accessories Unit showcase Bodo Aronai-inspired bags and accessories at the 14th Indo-Bhutan Friendship Fair. Amid bustling stalls and cross-border visitors, participants like Sunita Baro, trained at the Grameen Vikas Manch TCPC funded by HDFC and powered by Usha, demonstrate how collective entrepreneurship bridges cultural ties, generates sustainable income, and empowers women in this harmonious yet opportunity-limited frontier.

Kushalta Ke Kadam, an initiative by USHA Silai School and NDTV has entered its eighth season. The aim is to empower more women across rural India by teaching them sewing skills and helping them open new doors of opportunities for themselves. The initiative encourages rural women to become financially independent and entrepreneurs by taking up sewing and training others in their respective communities.
Since 2011, the USHA Silai School initiative has trained more than 12 lakh rural women through over 33,000 Silai schools, spanning over 20,751 villages across India.
The women earn Rs. 4,000 – 5,000 per month on an average, with the highest recorded monthly earning being Rs. 84,000 in a month. This earning works as a catalyst towards building their self-confidence, reducing gender inequities, and raising their stature within their families and in society at large.
Odisha's Suchismita Sahu, Rajasthan's Preeti Prajapat, Manipur's Akhirun—Usha Silai School's Kushalta Ke Kadam celebrates these awardees, from homemakers to master trainers earning accolades
From Ladakh peaks to Assam fringes, Usha Silai School trains tribal women in Turtuk, Kargil & Dakhinkuchi—crafting livelihoods with armed forces, NHPC & NGOs. Stitching national resilience
From West Bengal's transgender tailors to Telangana's tribal seamstresses and Meghalaya's embroidery revivalists, Usha Silai School's Kushalta Ke Kadam partners with NIRDPR and state governments
In Odisha's mining heartlands, Mahanadi Coalfields Limited teams with Usha Silai School's Kushalta Ke Kadam and Gram Utthan, empowering tribal women turning them into entrepreneurs
From Madhya Pradesh's stigma to Bihar's child marriages, Usha Silai School's NDTV-backed Kushalta Ke Kadam empowers women like Kalpana and Shabnam to stitch dignity and self-reliance
Usha Silai Schools give second chances to women like Srinagar's Marifat, who rebuilt after widowhood; Madhya Pradesh's Jyoti, escaping abuse to run her own center; and Rajasthan's Vimla, rising from child marriage to tailor and teacher. Through nine-day training, they gain sewing skills, confidence, and income proving one stitch mends lives and inspires communities.