Motherhood is often built on sacrifice, resilience, and hope. Across rural India, women are not only nurturing families but also driving social and economic transformation within their communities. This Mother’s Day, the journeys of Khemlata Bisen, Anita Mudi, Lilawati, and Jayvanta Narbad Parte celebrate the extraordinary strength of mothers who turned adversity into opportunity and inspired change far beyond their homes.
Khemlata Bisen: The Mother Who Built Financial Independence Through Farming
In Rategaon village of Balaghat district, Madhya Pradesh, Khemlata Bisen struggled for years with limited income from traditional farming and mounting household responsibilities. Health challenges made daily wage labour difficult, while ensuring quality education for her children remained a constant worry.
Her life changed when she joined local Producer Groups and received training in market linkages, crop processing, and sustainable agriculture. She diversified into crops like paddy, turmeric, onion, garlic, and seasonal vegetables while adopting organic fertilizers that reduced farming costs.
Today, Khemlata independently contributes nearly ₹20,000 annually toward her children’s education and has become a respected community leader. Her journey reflects how economic empowerment can help mothers secure dignity and opportunity for future generations.
Anita Mudi: The Mother Who Inspired an Entire Village to Dream Bigger
In the drought-prone Bankura district of West Bengal, Anita Mudi’s family once depended entirely on uncertain rainfed farming. Repeated crop failures often pushed families toward migration and poverty.
Determined to change her circumstances, Anita experimented with watermelon cultivation in 2020 despite community skepticism. Though her initial attempt brought limited success, it opened the door to new possibilities.
With support from PRADAN, Anita became a community mobilizer who encouraged farmers to adopt diversified agriculture, solar-based irrigation, and collective marketing systems. Her annual income rose dramatically from ₹26,100 before 2022 to ₹2,81,800 by 2024.
More importantly, Anita became a symbol of leadership and resilience, proving how one woman’s courage can transform an entire community.
Lilawati: The Mother Who Turned Loss Into Community Leadership
When Lilawati lost her husband in 2016, she was suddenly left alone to care for her children and sustain her family. Financial insecurity became overwhelming, and her daughter’s heartbreaking question“Maa, should we skip dinner to save money?”captured the depth of their struggle.
But Lilawati refused to surrender to despair.
She joined a Self-Help Group and began earning as a Village Resource Person before receiving training through PRADAN-supported livelihood initiatives. Soon, she introduced crops like tomato, chili, and bitter gourd in her village and earned ₹30,000 from an investment of ₹7,500.
Her success encouraged other villagers to shift toward vegetable farming. She later established an agricultural tool bank for small farmers and even donated part of her ancestral land for a Sorting & Grading Centre that improved market access for local producers.
Today, Lilawati is celebrated not just as a successful farmer but as a leader whose determination transformed an entire village.
Jayvanta Narbad Parte: The Mother Championing Regenerative Agriculture
Jayvanta Narbad Parte, from Gaunajhola village in Balaghat district of Madhya Pradesh, spent years relying on traditional farming due to limited resources and irrigation challenges. Alongside supporting her family and working as an Anganwadi Sevika, she aspired to adopt better agricultural practices but lacked the opportunity.
Her turning point came in 2023 when she learned about the Kheyti Net House Model through village-level meetings organized by PRADAN. Inspired by regenerative agriculture practices, she began cultivating brinjal and vegetables using organic inputs like vermicompost, liquid jivamrit, Trichoderma viride, and drip irrigation systems.
Investing ₹3,730 on just six decimals of land, Jayvanta transformed her farm’s productivity. While paddy cultivation previously earned her only ₹1,500 annually from the same land, regenerative brinjal farming is expected to generate nearly ₹14,000 in income.
Her success has made her a role model for other farmers in the village. As Jayvanta proudly says, “Regenerative Agriculture Practices sustain the environment; therefore every farmer should use this technology to ensure the sustainability of their farms and livelihoods.”
The journeys of Khemlata, Anita, Lilawati, and Jayvanta remind us that mothers are often the strongest pillars of resilience in rural communities. Through courage, innovation, and determination, these women transformed hardship into opportunity, not only for themselves but for countless families around them.
This Mother’s Day, their stories celebrate a powerful truth: when women are empowered, communities prosper, futures brighten, and hope takes root for generations to come.



