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USHA Partners With Small Industries Development Bank Of India To Ensure Support To The Silai Entrepreneurs

USHA Partners With Small Industries Development Bank Of India To Ensure Support To The Silai Entrepreneurs
New Delhi: 

USHA International Limited (UIL) partnered with the Small Industries Development Bank Of India (SIDBI) with an aim to ensure that the required help is given to the small and medium entrepreneurs. This partnership between USHA Silai School and SIDBI is proving to be a game changer on the ground. It has been empowering women to take control of their lives and destinies. According to Dr. RK Singh, General Manager, Promotion and Development Department, SIBI, 

The Mission Swavalamban project targets at inducing entrepreneurship culture. We believe that every person, particularly the youth, has got an entrepreneur inside. We need to bring that out in them.

Also Read: The Women From USHA Silai School Kashmir Make It To The Lakme Fashion Week 2019

He further said that in order to induce entrepreneurship culture, three important role models can be helpful- mother/parents, primary school teacher and professor. He said, 

We are trying to connect these three role models under the initiative in partnership with USHA.  We are reaching out to rural women basically for inducing entrepreneurship culture because if mother starts working, the next generation will follow. This was also amply proven when we interacted with the kids of these women. The kids told us that they also want to do something on their own in life. This is exactly what our endeavour is about.

SIDBI has set up 1,000 Swavalamban tailoring schools in five states across the country- Bihar, Rajasthan, Jharkhand, Uttar Pradesh and Telangana. The cumulative income of the women in these schools is Rs. 1.38 crore. 

Krishna Shriram, Executive Chairman, USHA International Limited said that when the organisation sets up a Silai school network, it is a matter of pride that various governments in the country are willing to utilise the skills being imparted in these schools. He said, 

We are proud of working with the Governments of West Bengal and Meghalaya. These governments understand that USHA provides self-employment and the ability to train. We are nothing more than trainers and I am very proud to say that people are approaching us for this.

Seema Yadav is one of the beneficiaries. With the help of a loan from SIDBI and a sewing machine from USHA, six months ago she started her Silai school after training with USHA and learning the nuances of stitching and tailoring. 

Also Read: With 3,500 New Silai Schools In The State, USHA And West Bengal Government Uplift Thousands Of Women

She now has students who come to her house every day to practice. Seema's husband is a mason but during the lockdown he did not have a job for almost three months and it was Seema's fledging Silai school that proved to be a source of income for the family. She said, 

I am running USHA Swavalamban Silai School. I have benefitted from the Silai School in many ways. In case my sewing machine develops minor technical faults, I can even repair it on my own because they have taught me how to do so. My stitching skills have also improved. USHA and SIDBI have given us a sewing machine, a sign board, a certificate and other stitching equipment like scissors, measuring tape among others. Initially, I had only 2-3 students but that increased gradually. In the past 5-6 months I have trained 20 women.

In the time of lockdown due to the novel coronavirus, these women have shown that being empowered with a skill, basic technical and financial support, they can support their own families and even help others economically by creating employment. 

SIDBI has identified women from the rural parts of five states of the country, whom they call as ‘Home Trainers'. These ‘Home Trainers' are being trained for leading the initiative. According to Mr. Singh, the future plan is to set up more schools in more states. 

Also Read: USHA Silai School Reaches The Remotest Islands And Villages To Empower and Upskill Women

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Do you want to be a part of the huge change that Usha Silai School is bringing about in the lives of millions of rural women? With just a simple click of a button, you can now contribute towards the opening of an Usha Silai School or support various other aspects of the school.

About the Initiative

About the Initiative

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.

 

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In Pics

Kushalta ke Kadam: Aiming for Independence Through Stitching
Kushalta ke Kadam: Aiming for Independence Through Stitching

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.

Kushalta ke Kadam: Aiming for Independence Through Stitching

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

Kushalta ke Kadam: Aiming for Independence Through Stitching

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

Kushalta ke Kadam: Aiming for Independence Through Stitching

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

Kushalta ke Kadam: Aiming for Independence Through Stitching

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.

Kushalta ke Kadam: Aiming for Independence Through Stitching

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

Kushalta ke Kadam: Aiming for Independence Through Stitching

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.

Kushalta ke Kadam: Aiming for Independence Through Stitching

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.

Kushalta ke Kadam: Aiming for Independence Through Stitching

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

Kushalta ke Kadam: Aiming for Independence Through Stitching

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

Kushalta ke Kadam: Aiming for Independence Through Stitching

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