After years of serving the nation, many retired army personnel face uncertainty about what comes next. This inspiring initiative is changing that—by equipping veterans with the tools, mentorship, and confidence to become entrepreneurs. From farming to oil processing, these faujis are finding new purpose—as founders.
From earning the trust of wild animals to learning from forest-dwelling tribes, Sanket Reddy shares how the wild reshaped his life — and why it could change yours too.
India’s food delivery boom has come at an environmental cost — plastic containers that rarely get recycled. Now, Zomato is helping over 200 restaurants across 400 cities cut down on plastic, one meal at a time.
Rituricha Jain is reimagining paper production with Paperdom, crafting sustainable, 100% tree-free paper from banana fibre and textile waste. Dive into her journey of innovation and creativity that is reshaping the paper industry and helping the local farmers in Surat.
Through its unique fellowships in social entrepreneurship and responsible enterprise, Access Livelihoods is helping young changemakers work directly with farmers, educators, and waste workers, gaining hands-on experience while learning how to design impactful solutions for India’s growing problems.
Explore how a humble khadi workshop in Karnataka became the sole official maker of the Indian national flag, combining tradition, patriotism, and woman-led craftsmanship
The British may have brought in India’s railways to gain profit and control. But Indians turned those very tracks into powerful tools of resistance and unity. From carrying revolutionaries to spreading ideas, trains played an unforgettable role freedom struggle.
When Yavatmal farmer Sunil Kolpe faced declining yields and no loan support, he sold his wife’s jewellery, bought 16 buffaloes, and built a smart dairy — complete with a milk ATM, ice cream parlour, and 250 loyal customers.
Can sunflowers change a city? Chef and urban gardener Shefalii Dadabhoy thinks so, and she’s on a mission to turn Chennai bloom with sunflowers and make the capital of Tamil Nadu into a Sunflower City.
Before ACs and fridges, Indian homes kept cool with clay pots, cotton, and clever low-tech hacks. As power cuts and heatwaves rise, these timeless tricks still hold their magic.