Mother of India – Journey of Manan Chaturvedi
“Journey for those who don't know about Journey.”
God could not be everywhere, So He created Mother. Unfortunately, some children are deprived of even a Mother. So God created ANGEL.
This powerful story chronicles the selfless journey of Manan Chaturvedi, fondly known as the "Mother of India."
This all happened in 1994, when a fashion designer aspirant was ready to begin her journey and was on her way to Delhi to fulfill her dreams. But on the way, she saw a tiny little 7-year-old starved girl near a garbage heap, eagerly searching for something to eat. That moment changed everything. She pledged her life to become a mother to those children abjured by society. She thought to herself: "For whom am I going to design clothes? In my country, children don't even have clothes to wear or food to eat." That day, she chose not to color fabrics but to fill colors in the lonesome eyes of the nation. For years, she distributed clothing and food to children in slums. Then, one day, she came across a severely injured girl named Gauri, bleeding badly from a head wound. She rushed the child to the hospital and stayed with her for three days. When people suggested she take the girl home, she did—and that moment became the beginning of a lifelong mission. That very month, she took in eight more children. After that, the number only grew, and the question of "who came from where" never mattered. From these selfless acts, Surman Sansthan was born.
Today, she is lovingly known as the Mother of India, a woman who traded her dreams of fashion for the fabric of humanity, and whose heart beats for every abandoned soul she calls her own.
She was running NGO, Its been a few years, Meanwhile, she also got selected as a Chairperson of the Rajasthan State Commission for Protection of Child Rights.
Now she is running Manan-The Voice of Children and Angel of Love, She does Live Painting Show for Child Right awareness, and her journey for children with a mission is still going on.
Yes, We chose a different approach, will you support it?”