Millions of lives full of promise: mothers who could provide for their children, daughters who could be the first to graduate from high school, and young women who could start businesses and create jobs. This is the future we can and must achieve together. Yet almost everywhere around the world, women and girls are still denied these opportunities, often simply because of their gender.
Empowering women to participate in economic life is essential to build stronger economies, achieve goals for development and sustainability, and improve the quality of life for families and communities. Winning rights for women is about more than giving opportunities to any individual woman or girl; it is also about changing how countries and communities work. Developing half of the society and remaining the other half underdeveloped won’t prosper a nation.
The most effective way to reach the goal of women empowerment is providing proper education and information to them. We focus on workforce development and vocational education for women, which includes education and training, creating ways to connect to local business, and supporting women in job entry, retention and promotion to management and leadership positions, as well as promote female entrepreneurship and eliminate the legal, regulatory and cultural barriers that prevent women from participating in their local economies.
In 2016 our founder Aparna Rajawat started Aaleya Welfare Society to sponsor education for poor kids. Later, she started Pink Belt Mission with the objective to strengthen every Indian women by providing them health awareness, safety techniques, legal rights, cybercrime, self-defense, computer literacy, and vocational trainings in order to prevent sexual and domestic abuse.