Re: [AI] Gulf News

2007-10-08 Thread mahendra
great woman, we should all support her wiche ever way possible.
Kanchan, please can you send me her contack details?
on my private email. thanks
At 06:59 PM 10/7/2007, you wrote:
  An article about an amazing woman and a dear friend. Kanchan
Inner vision

By Jyoti Kalsi, Gulf News Report
Published: October 01, 2007, 00:41

This Ramadan is very special for Miriam Batliwala - because she has 
finally realised her dream of setting up a vocational training 
centre to help underprivileged
women take charge of their lives. The Women's Empowerment Centre and 
Network (WECAN) is an extension of the D.M. Jariwala Orphanage and 
school in Mumbai
set up by Miriam's father 68 years ago.

Courses

After my father, my sister and I took over the running of the 
orphanage, which houses 200 girls. We wanted to start this 
vocational centre, not only for
those staying in the orphanage but for all underprivileged women 
because we believe in empowerment of women through education and 
wanted to provide our
girls with skills that will help them to be confident and 
economically independent, says Miriam.

WECAN now runs courses in computers, fashion designing, catering, 
health care, yoga, gardening, arts and craft and English language. 
The spacious new building
is filled with the laughter of young girls, who were otherwise 
destined for a bleak future. But for Miriam the journey has been 
long and difficult. Her
plans suffered a blow when in 1998, the original 100-year-old 
orphanage building collapsed. She and her sister have worked 
tirelessly to raise the funds
for reconstruction and expansion, personally supervising every 
detail. We stood at the site through rain and sun and made numerous 
trips to small markets
in the back alleys of Mumbai to save money on plumbing and masonry 
items, recalls Miriam.

Dedication

Her achievement and her immense optimism, energy and dedication to 
social causes are all the more remarkable because she is visually 
impaired. But nobody
who meets Miriam would ever guess that she is almost blind. She is a 
vivacious person who loves to dance, play the piano, swim, play 
golf, travel to new
places and make friends wherever she goes. Besides running the 
orphanage and vocational centre, she teaches at a school for 
visually impaired slum dwellers.
She also conducts yoga workshops for sighted as well as blind people 
and has taught yoga in India, the US and now in Dubai.

Miriam belongs to a rich and well-known family from Mumbai and had 
an idyllic childhood. Her world became blurred when she was 12 years 
old and was diagnosed
with macular degeneration of the retina, a condition that had no 
known cure. But she has not allowed that to affect her life in any 
way, fighting every
challenge with courage, resilience and a positive attitude. I 
believe in counting my blessings. How can I ever complain when I 
have so much to thank God
for, and I see so many people with bigger problems than mine, she says.

Not different

Taking her cue from her parents, who treated her no differently from 
her siblings, Miriam never spoke about her condition to anyone and 
asked for no special
favours at school or elsewhere. Despite difficulties in reading her 
books she did well in school and even continued her piano lessons by 
devising a way
to play without having to read the notes. At 13, she coaxed her 
parents to send her to boarding school along with her sister and 
even played netball and
hockey at school.

I was able to do these things mainly because my parents and 
teachers never made me feel that I was any different from others and 
always encouraged me to
do everything that I wanted to do, says Miriam. In fact, her father 
insisted that like every member of the family she too must learn to 
play golf. And
as is typical of her she took it further to a competitive level and 
has won many golf championships. She cannot see the green or the 
flag, but her trusted
caddy, points her in the right direction and tells her the distance 
so she knows how hard to hit the golf ball and which club she should use.

Miriam also won medals at inter-collegiate and interstate swimming 
tournaments and even qualified for the college hockey team. But with 
her vision deteriorating,
keeping up with studies proved to be more difficult. The last straw 
came when a keen suitor arrived to seek her hand in marriage. I did 
not want to marry
a rich man who would treat me like a possession. So I decided to 
flee. I enlisted the help of an Italian friend to convince my father 
to let me go to Italy
to learn Italian, she recalls.

Yoga

Yoga has been an important part of her life since her twenties and 
she is qualified as a teacher of Iyengar Yoga. I was fortunate to 
be accepted as a student
by guru B.K. Iyengar, who gave me special training to teach visually 
challenged students. Yoga has given me inner strength and balance, 
and I have tried
to share this knowledge with as many people as I can, she says.

Do your part

UAE 

Re: [AI] Gulf News

2007-10-08 Thread Pranav Lal
Interestingly enough, I recognize the name of the journalist who has written
the article. She is a family friend. Chuckle

Pranav


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[AI] Gulf News

2007-10-07 Thread pamnani
 An article about an amazing woman and a dear friend. Kanchan  
Inner vision

By Jyoti Kalsi, Gulf News Report
Published: October 01, 2007, 00:41

This Ramadan is very special for Miriam Batliwala - because she has finally 
realised her dream of setting up a vocational training centre to help 
underprivileged
women take charge of their lives. The Women's Empowerment Centre and Network 
(WECAN) is an extension of the D.M. Jariwala Orphanage and school in Mumbai
set up by Miriam's father 68 years ago.

Courses

After my father, my sister and I took over the running of the orphanage, which 
houses 200 girls. We wanted to start this vocational centre, not only for
those staying in the orphanage but for all underprivileged women because we 
believe in empowerment of women through education and wanted to provide our
girls with skills that will help them to be confident and economically 
independent, says Miriam.

WECAN now runs courses in computers, fashion designing, catering, health care, 
yoga, gardening, arts and craft and English language. The spacious new building
is filled with the laughter of young girls, who were otherwise destined for a 
bleak future. But for Miriam the journey has been long and difficult. Her
plans suffered a blow when in 1998, the original 100-year-old orphanage 
building collapsed. She and her sister have worked tirelessly to raise the funds
for reconstruction and expansion, personally supervising every detail. We 
stood at the site through rain and sun and made numerous trips to small markets
in the back alleys of Mumbai to save money on plumbing and masonry items, 
recalls Miriam.

Dedication

Her achievement and her immense optimism, energy and dedication to social 
causes are all the more remarkable because she is visually impaired. But nobody
who meets Miriam would ever guess that she is almost blind. She is a vivacious 
person who loves to dance, play the piano, swim, play golf, travel to new
places and make friends wherever she goes. Besides running the orphanage and 
vocational centre, she teaches at a school for visually impaired slum dwellers.
She also conducts yoga workshops for sighted as well as blind people and has 
taught yoga in India, the US and now in Dubai.

Miriam belongs to a rich and well-known family from Mumbai and had an idyllic 
childhood. Her world became blurred when she was 12 years old and was diagnosed
with macular degeneration of the retina, a condition that had no known cure. 
But she has not allowed that to affect her life in any way, fighting every
challenge with courage, resilience and a positive attitude. I believe in 
counting my blessings. How can I ever complain when I have so much to thank God
for, and I see so many people with bigger problems than mine, she says.

Not different

Taking her cue from her parents, who treated her no differently from her 
siblings, Miriam never spoke about her condition to anyone and asked for no 
special
favours at school or elsewhere. Despite difficulties in reading her books she 
did well in school and even continued her piano lessons by devising a way
to play without having to read the notes. At 13, she coaxed her parents to send 
her to boarding school along with her sister and even played netball and
hockey at school.

I was able to do these things mainly because my parents and teachers never 
made me feel that I was any different from others and always encouraged me to
do everything that I wanted to do, says Miriam. In fact, her father insisted 
that like every member of the family she too must learn to play golf. And
as is typical of her she took it further to a competitive level and has won 
many golf championships. She cannot see the green or the flag, but her trusted
caddy, points her in the right direction and tells her the distance so she 
knows how hard to hit the golf ball and which club she should use.

Miriam also won medals at inter-collegiate and interstate swimming tournaments 
and even qualified for the college hockey team. But with her vision 
deteriorating,
keeping up with studies proved to be more difficult. The last straw came when a 
keen suitor arrived to seek her hand in marriage. I did not want to marry
a rich man who would treat me like a possession. So I decided to flee. I 
enlisted the help of an Italian friend to convince my father to let me go to 
Italy
to learn Italian, she recalls.

Yoga

Yoga has been an important part of her life since her twenties and she is 
qualified as a teacher of Iyengar Yoga. I was fortunate to be accepted as a 
student
by guru B.K. Iyengar, who gave me special training to teach visually challenged 
students. Yoga has given me inner strength and balance, and I have tried
to share this knowledge with as many people as I can, she says.

Do your part

UAE residents can support WECAN by helping to improve the facilities. For more 
information, go to
www.wecan-india.org

Ramadan

Ramadan is a time for introspection, being grateful for all we have and 

Re: [AI] Gulf News

2007-10-07 Thread renuka warriar
Very much inspiring.
Renuka.

- Original Message - 
From: pamnani [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: accessindia@accessindia.org.in
Sent: Sunday, October 07, 2007 10:29 PM
Subject: [AI] Gulf News


 An article about an amazing woman and a dear friend. Kanchan
 Inner vision

 By Jyoti Kalsi, Gulf News Report
 Published: October 01, 2007, 00:41

 This Ramadan is very special for Miriam Batliwala - because she has 
 finally realised her dream of setting up a vocational training centre to 
 help underprivileged
 women take charge of their lives. The Women's Empowerment Centre and 
 Network (WECAN) is an extension of the D.M. Jariwala Orphanage and school 
 in Mumbai
 set up by Miriam's father 68 years ago.

 Courses

 After my father, my sister and I took over the running of the orphanage, 
 which houses 200 girls. We wanted to start this vocational centre, not 
 only for
 those staying in the orphanage but for all underprivileged women because 
 we believe in empowerment of women through education and wanted to provide 
 our
 girls with skills that will help them to be confident and economically 
 independent, says Miriam.

 WECAN now runs courses in computers, fashion designing, catering, health 
 care, yoga, gardening, arts and craft and English language. The spacious 
 new building
 is filled with the laughter of young girls, who were otherwise destined 
 for a bleak future. But for Miriam the journey has been long and 
 difficult. Her
 plans suffered a blow when in 1998, the original 100-year-old orphanage 
 building collapsed. She and her sister have worked tirelessly to raise the 
 funds
 for reconstruction and expansion, personally supervising every detail. We 
 stood at the site through rain and sun and made numerous trips to small 
 markets
 in the back alleys of Mumbai to save money on plumbing and masonry items, 
 recalls Miriam.

 Dedication

 Her achievement and her immense optimism, energy and dedication to social 
 causes are all the more remarkable because she is visually impaired. But 
 nobody
 who meets Miriam would ever guess that she is almost blind. She is a 
 vivacious person who loves to dance, play the piano, swim, play golf, 
 travel to new
 places and make friends wherever she goes. Besides running the orphanage 
 and vocational centre, she teaches at a school for visually impaired slum 
 dwellers.
 She also conducts yoga workshops for sighted as well as blind people and 
 has taught yoga in India, the US and now in Dubai.

 Miriam belongs to a rich and well-known family from Mumbai and had an 
 idyllic childhood. Her world became blurred when she was 12 years old and 
 was diagnosed
 with macular degeneration of the retina, a condition that had no known 
 cure. But she has not allowed that to affect her life in any way, fighting 
 every
 challenge with courage, resilience and a positive attitude. I believe in 
 counting my blessings. How can I ever complain when I have so much to 
 thank God
 for, and I see so many people with bigger problems than mine, she says.

 Not different

 Taking her cue from her parents, who treated her no differently from her 
 siblings, Miriam never spoke about her condition to anyone and asked for 
 no special
 favours at school or elsewhere. Despite difficulties in reading her books 
 she did well in school and even continued her piano lessons by devising a 
 way
 to play without having to read the notes. At 13, she coaxed her parents to 
 send her to boarding school along with her sister and even played netball 
 and
 hockey at school.

 I was able to do these things mainly because my parents and teachers 
 never made me feel that I was any different from others and always 
 encouraged me to
 do everything that I wanted to do, says Miriam. In fact, her father 
 insisted that like every member of the family she too must learn to play 
 golf. And
 as is typical of her she took it further to a competitive level and has 
 won many golf championships. She cannot see the green or the flag, but her 
 trusted
 caddy, points her in the right direction and tells her the distance so she 
 knows how hard to hit the golf ball and which club she should use.

 Miriam also won medals at inter-collegiate and interstate swimming 
 tournaments and even qualified for the college hockey team. But with her 
 vision deteriorating,
 keeping up with studies proved to be more difficult. The last straw came 
 when a keen suitor arrived to seek her hand in marriage. I did not want 
 to marry
 a rich man who would treat me like a possession. So I decided to flee. I 
 enlisted the help of an Italian friend to convince my father to let me go 
 to Italy
 to learn Italian, she recalls.

 Yoga

 Yoga has been an important part of her life since her twenties and she is 
 qualified as a teacher of Iyengar Yoga. I was fortunate to be accepted as 
 a student
 by guru B.K. Iyengar, who gave me special training to teach visually 
 challenged students. Yoga has given me inner strength and balance