---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Shiva Shankar <[email protected]>
Date: Wed, Feb 25, 2009 at 10:12 AM
Subject: India's real life slumdog billionaire (fwd)
To: undisclosed-recipients



*Kalpana Saroj - India's real life slumdog billionaire*

*http://www.hindu.com/thehindu/holnus/001200902241252.htm*

Mumbai (IANS): You could call her India's real life slumdog
billionaire. Kalpana Saroj, a Dalit woman who broke social shackles
and left her ramshackle home in the poorest part of her village 26
years ago to begin life afresh, today heads a Rs.300 crore business
enterprise.

On Monday, state Forests Minister Babbanrao Pachpute inaugurated the
new plant of her company Kamani Tubes in Wada, around 75 km from
Mumbai.

For the 48-year-old Saroj, it was a dream come true. Standing outside
the factory premises with her husband Shubhkaran, pilot son Amar, 24,
and daughter Seema, 22, she smiled radiantly -- and remembered her
painful past.

"Born in a poor Dalit family, I was married off forcibly at the age of
12 to a man more than 10 years older to me,"Saroj told IANS. "A year
later, I came back to my parents' home. The following year, I tried to
join the police force like my father, but I was rejected."

Her attempts to rebuild her broken life were thwarted by other
residents of her village, Roparkheda in Maharashtra's Akola district.
They accused her of "overstepping social norms and boundaries".

She bore the insults for 10 years before leaving the rural slum in
which her family stayed to come to Mumbai.

Saroj moved into Ghatkopar here, met a man and married him, but he
died in 1989, leaving her to fend for their two minor children.

Undeterred, she began managing her husband's small steel almirah
manufacturing unit, launched a construction company and with the
realty sector booming, made profits. She ploughed this money into
small steel and sugar units.

Her biggest challenge came in March 2006 when her firm, Kalpana Saroj
and Associates, took over the ailing Kamani Tubes and turned it around
to a profitable enterprise.

A brand leader in non-ferrous tubes, the company was started by
Mumbai's well-known industrialist Ramji Kamani, a close associate of
the country's first prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru, who visited the
Kurla factory twice.

However, a family discord affected the firm adversely. By 1975, it was
on a downslide and was declared "sick"after the owners abandoned it.

Later, a court allowed the workers' union to run the company.

The experiment failed. By 1997, the company had run into debts of over
Rs.160 crore.

Almost a decade later, in March 2006, as per a court directive,
Kalpana Saroj and Associates were given charge of the company, its 560
employees and the total debt burden.

*Saroj took up the challenge. *

According to Kamani Tubes Managing Director M.K. Gore, in an effort to
boost employees' morale, she cleared in one go Rs.85 crore in salary
arrears totted up over 17 years.

"I was born, grew up and lived in poverty for the first two decades of
my life. I know what a worker undergoes when salaries are not paid on
time - the bills, the creditors, the fees and other expenses. So it
was very important for me to gain my workers' confidence,"Saroj said.

Gradually, production resumed and touched 3,000 tonnes of non-ferrous
tubes and pipes.

Owing to disputes over the ownership of the 1.8 acre property in
Kurla, Saroj withdrew from a long court battle and began scouting for
another location outside Mumbai.

"With an investment of around Rs.3 billion, we decided to shift the
plant to Wada. We are the first in the country to install two
giant-sized Pilger machines of Germany, costing Rs.100 crore,"Gore
said.

Her next targets are taking up the Kamani production to 10,000 tonnes,
diversifying to manufacturing 100 different alloys, and catering to
defence and communications requirements.

"Since my son is not interested in managing my business, I may even
launch a private airline for him,"she laughed.



Film Brings Light To Age Old Issue In India
http://cbs2chicago.com/local/slumdog.dalit.chinnappan.2.942156.html

CHICAGO (CBS)

Hundreds of people broke out their best Bollywood dance moves in India
Sunday night when eight Oscars went to the rags to riches movie
*Slumdog Millionaire* which was shot in the slums of Mumbai.

Fans in Chicago say they couldn't be more proud of the film. CBS 2's
Mike Puccinelli reports on why one Chicago priest says living in those
slums was life altering.

"It is a reality... it is a life journey," Father Benjamin Chinnappan said.

The movie follows the paths of children referred to as slumdogs trying
to survive in the slums of Mumbai, India.

Father Chinnappan didn't grow up in an urban slum, but he did grow up
impoverished- in a straw roofed hut with a mud floor in rural India.

Like many of the children depicted in the film, he hails from a class
of people deemed so low in Indian society they are called untouchables
or Dalits - people who he hopes will benefit from the attention
generated by *Slumdog Millionaire. *

"When I saw this movie it breaks my heart. At the same time I am glad
that the reality, the hypocrisy with which we have been living in
India has come to light," Father Chinnappan said.

He says this is because India has been living under a system of
apartheid for more than a thousand years and the Dalits have always
been at the bottom.

"They are not treated as a human person...They are treated like
rubbish," Chinnappan went on to say.

Gracy Vachachira isn't an untouchable but will never forget being
treated like one in India years ago.

"We could still not touch them. If they touched us by mistake they had
to take a bath," Vachachira said.

Chinnappan says all too often Dalit children are forced into child
labor or prostitution. Women are often targeted for sexual and
physical abuse. He says in short, Dalits are often treated worse than
animals.

"A person in India will touch a cat or dog but he will not touch an
untouchable," Chinnappan said.

That's why although he was deemed untouchable by virtue of his birth,
Father Chinnappan has made it his life's work to touch the lives of as
many Dalits as he can.

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