Mother's Day: What makes these visually-impaired women supermoms?
Sunday, 10 May 2015 - 9:30am IST | Agency: dna | From the print edition
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Maitri Porecha

Three visually-impaired women share their stories about hard-word,
sacrifices and diligence that makes them true supermoms
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 From left: Alka Kamble with son Swapnil, Neelam Vinkare with son
Tejas, and Sharda Khatnawne with daughter Monika
list end

An epitome of selfless love and care, a mother will always be special
for her child. On the occasion of Mother's Day, we meet three
gumptious women who
have beaten all odds to rear their children. With tremendous hard-work
and persistence, they may look ordinary, but look closely and you will
notice that
they are visually-impaired. We share their stories

Alka and Swapnil Kamble

Looking resplendent in a parrot-green and pink salwar kameez,
48-year-old Alka Kamble is comfortably seated with her son Swapnil by
her side. The mother
of this 21-year-old met her husband Suresh and got married in her
early twenties. An instructor with NSD Industrial Home for the Blind,
an agency that
provides vocational help for the visually impaired, Suresh's was a
love marriage.

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A few years into their marriage, their son Swapnil was born. About his
birth, Alka says, "When the doctors told us that our son's eyesight is
alright,
we were relieved. I told myself that I was going to see the world
through his eyes."

A senior telephone operator with MTNL for the last 28 years, Alka has
always been a working mother. She reminisces about her childhood days
and shares,
"We were seven sisters with one brother. Though I was born blind, I
never felt bereft of sight as I went to a normal school and performed
well in exams."

Her excellence in academics reflects well on her son Swapnil who
completed his diploma in mechanical engineering and now works at the
Godrej and Boyce
company. About his mother, the doting son says, "I have never been
treated differently by my parents. In spite of the many difficulties
they faced, they
provided me everything. I truly love them and it's entirely my
responsibility to care for them in their old-age."

Neelam and Tejas Vinkare

Kandivali resident, Neelam Vinkare was born healthy, but at six years
of age, a mysterious fever took her sight away. Raised by her
grandparents, Neelam
is a graduate in Marathi literature with a healthy work experience.
Together with her late husband Bhimrao, she has an 18-year-old son
Tejas.

Starting out as an assistant at the Andheri Blind Home, Vinkare's
first job included duster making, weaving and tailoring and she later
went on to operate
a telephone booth. Bhimrao meanwhile worked as a door-to-door salesman
selling household items. After her husband's death at the age of 47,
Neelam became
the sole breadwinner of the family and Tejas was her biggest support system.

Currently the teenager is studying arts at Ruia College and aspires to
become a newspaper reporter, while Neelam continues to work at the
booth. She makes
Rs 1500 per month and confesses that life is tough.

"With the advent of mobile phones, telephone booths do not make much
business anymore," says Neelam. Tejas adds, "Moreover, the booth is
located in the
vicinity of a college and rowdy youngsters often trouble my mother by
snatching chocolates or biscuits without paying any money." The
adoring son therefore
accompanies her mother to the shop each day and thanks his mom for her
love and sacrifice. He says, "Even in face of adversity, my mother
insisted that
I continue education. I intend to pursue night college and am
searching for a day job to sustain us," he said.

Sharda and Monika Khatnawne

Until her mid-twenties, 45-year-old Diva resident Sharda Khatnawne had
an eyesight. "When I was close to twenty-five years old, my vision
started decreasing.
The doctors said that my optical nerve was rapidly drying up. For two
years, we visited many hospitals but in vain," says the 45-year-old.

A mother to Ganesh (24), Kanchan (19) and Monika (17), Sharda was
already a married woman when she lost her vision. "It became difficult
to carry on household
work. To adjust to a life of darkness was an unprecedented challenge," she says.

Sharda's husband is a cobbler, and money is hard to come by. "To
sustain a family of five is often troublesome, but I have ensured that
my children turn
entrepreneurial," she tells us.

Over the years, she has become used to leading a life without sight
but is still a hands-on mother. "I help my daughter in her tailoring
job, to mend clothes
and whatever else they require," she says.

http://www.dnaindia.com/mumbai/report-a-different-point-of-view-2084578

Regards,

Payal Jethra



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