
Life can hit hard, leaving women feeling lost and alone. But in villages across India, Usha Silai Schools offer more than sewing lessons—they provide skills, support, and a fresh start. These short training programs turn hardship into hope for widows, abuse survivors, and others facing tough times. Here are three real stories of women who picked up a needle and threaded their way to independence.
In Srinagar's Nowhatta area, Marifat had a comfortable life until 2023. Her husband died suddenly at Delhi airport while working in Kolkata, leaving her with a 15-month-old son and 4.5-year-old daughter. Her in-laws abandoned her, sending her back to her parents' home with nothing. Overwhelmed and jobless despite two master's degrees, she felt trapped. A neighbor suggested Usha Silai School through the University of Kashmir's social work program. Hesitant but desperate, Marifat joined the nine-day residential training.
There, she learned sewing, met supportive women, and rebuilt her confidence. Today, she runs a boutique near Jamia Masjid, earning Rs 8,000–15,000 monthly. "I want to help 10–20 women like others helped me," she says. Her children now have stability, and she lives with self-respect.
Near Ujjain in Madhya Pradesh, Jyoti married at 14 and became a mother at 15. For 14 years, her husband's drinking and beatings kept her locked at home. Divorced in 2012, she raised three children alone, cooking for others, driving an e-rickshaw, and fearing judgment. In December 2023, she attended Usha Silai School's nine-day training. It fit her life—no need to leave home long-term. By January 2024, she opened her own school in Kalukhedi, training villagers and taking orders. Now remarried to tailor Mewaram, they share the business.
Earning steadily, Jyoti funds her kids' education and gains community respect. "Stitching gave me an identity—no more wandering," she shares. She wears her mangalsutra for dignity, turning pity into pride.
In Neemki village, Sikar, Rajasthan, Vimla married at 10, quitting school for household duties. Widowed young with son Ankit and daughter Monika, she faced in-law rejection and labored on farms.
Supported by family but pressured, she heard about Usha Silai School at an Anganwadi meeting. In 2021, she joined nine-day training in Reengus—her first trip away. Returning with a machine and certificate, villagers marveled. She now earns Rs 8,000–10,000 monthly, runs a tailoring business with husband Mewaram, and teaches locals. Her daughter studies medicine privately, her son is in 12th grade. Vimla warns against child marriage in classes: "I regret mine—let girls study first." From laborer to leader, she proves skills change fates. Usha Silai Schools, started in 2011, select the most vulnerable women—no caste or religion barriers. The nine-day training covers sewing, life skills, and business basics, turning trainees into entrepreneurs. As Mohan Lal, Usha's regional manager, notes, it's a "mindset change." These women don't just stitch clothes—they mend lives, inspiring families and villages. One needle, endless possibilities.
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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.
A new wave of corporate-community partnerships is equipping rural women with skills, income and confidence
USHAs Silai School Programme empowers women across India by turning sewing into independence. Women become trainers and leaders, transforming their lives and communities through skills, confidence, and income

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.

Rebari girls grow up learning traditional embroidery, which along with their new found sewing skills developed at Usha Silai Schools, is helping them earn a living.

Usha Silai School has empowered many rural women to support their family and send their children to school.

The Usha Silai School, established in a small nondescript village that goes by the name of Kottai, is helping empower people from varied communities.

The all-inclusive Usha Silai School Programme covers the entire nation from hamlets tucked between hills to villages cast by the sea.

Vegetables farmers from the Mizoram hills earn very little given the topography of the area. Usha Silai Schools have played an important part in this region by skilling women to financially contribute towards their households.

Usha Silai School learner Lucy has trained seven other women in her community, helping them to become financially independent.

Women like Kaviben from the nomadic Rebari community are finally laying down their roots as they begin to gain financial independence and thereby stability through Usha Silai School.

Usha Silai School, located in the Gujarat's Bhuj village, is enabling rural women to earn as much as Rs. 2,500-4,000 each month.

Usha Silai School, in association with a Gujarat based NGO called Kala Raksha, is trying to bring about a Silai revolution in Bhuj.

Besides training other women from their community, many Usha Silai School learners have become entrepreneurs in their own right.

With sewing becoming easily accessible and lucrative, the silai schools are also helping revive traditional motifs and designs.