Chaitanya Engineering College Women Empowerment Cell

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Chaitanya Engineering College Women Empowerment Cell this organisation helps in upliftement of women and creating awareness among different age groups of society.. A woman is the full circle.

We ask justice, we ask equality, we ask that all the civil and political rights that belong to citizens of INDIA, be guaranteed to us and our daughters forever. Within her is the power to create, nurture and transform.

04/02/2016

RESPECT A WOMAN Bacause
You can feel her INNOCENCE in the form of a daughter
You can feel her CARE in the form of a sister
You can feel her WARMTH in the form of a friend
You can feel her PASSION in the form of a beloved
You can feel her DEDICATION in the form of a wife
You can feel her DIVINITY in the form of a mother
You can feel her BLESSING in the form of a grandmother
Yet she is so TOUGH too
Her heart is so TENDER... So NAUGHTY... So CHARMING So SHARING... So MELODIOUS... She is a WOMAN... And She is A life!!!
"To all the wonderful woman"

08/03/2014

She gave life. She is a wife.
She is a mother and she is a friend.
She is a sister a survivor to the end.

Appreciate her, we don’t dare.
Ask her worries, we don’t care.
Wipe away her tears, they are invisible as air.

She works cooks and clean.
She laughs, helps comfort, and hides her pain.
When you struggle she pulls you through

All this is she and what do we do?
Complain and create a mess.
Provide stress and leave her feeling depressed..
Push her away and ignore her advice.
Tell her she is nothing without thinking twice.

She was r***d tortured and abused.
Told she was nothing and would always be used just for pleasure forget her pain.

She swallows her pride, put her feelings aside.
Does as you need in order for you to be free.
Ignores your ignorance and tolerates your flaws.
You call her Bitch, Slut, Hoe and Tramp
She answers with pride dignity and a complete loss of self.
You call her nothing.
I call her Strong, Smart, Sensual, Caring, Giving, Surviving, Tolerant and powerful
I call her WOMAN!

HAPPIE WOMEN'S DAY.

Kanika Dewan: The diva who designed floors of IGI's Terminal 3Dewan's family-owned business, Bramco, headquartered in Ba...
20/01/2014

Kanika Dewan: The diva who designed floors of IGI's Terminal 3

Dewan's family-owned business, Bramco, headquartered in Bahrain, carried out the floor work for the airport. More than 130,000 sq m of tiles were laid before the deadline of 11 months was over. After the project for the Delhi International Airport, Bramco is now working on a similar project with the Mumbai International Airport. The company has also done the flooring for a Leela Hotels project in Delhi.

For somebody who has contributed to designing mansions of several billionaires, apart from the work at the airports, Dewan does not boast of a design education. After majoring in finance at the Wharton business school, instead of continuing with investment banking, in which she had dabbled for a while, Dewan decided to become an interior designer.

Bramco is now proving to be the base of Dewan's new business. After her Wharton days, she decided to start a vertically integrated design firm that would capitalise on the exclusive availability of exotic marbles and granite from Bramco's mines.

"Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing tha...
03/01/2014

"Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."
# raise voice against HUMAN TRAFFICKING..!!!

Radhika's Story: Surviving Human Trafficking

This title presents an incredible story of triumph over evil in the modern world. It is a moving account of what a mother's love for her child can achieve even when the odds are stacked against them both. It is a horrifying first-hand account of a survivor of human trafficking in the 21st-century. It is a portrayal of the illegal and sordid underworld of trafficking in human organs. "Radhika's Story" - A seemingly innocent sip of Coca-Cola, drunk by a starving and desperately thirsty 14-year-old girl led to the first of Radhika Pariyar's human trafficking experiences. Drugged, Radhika woke up hours later, in great pain, only to discover that her kidney had been removed and sold to the highest bidder. Radhika was married by force but tried to make the best of her situation. She had a much-loved son, but Rohan's birth signified the next harrowing episode in Radhika's life - she was trafficked again. Living in India, separated from her son and forced to have s*x with up to 25 men a day, Radhika refused to accept her lot. Desperate to be reunited with her child, she fought against the odds, finding the strength to escape her horrific life and rescue her son and finally find sanctuary in a refuge set up to help survivors of trafficking. Journalist Sharon Hendry tells Radhika's horrifying but incredibly inspiring story. She also highlights the pervasive nature of human trafficking in the 21st century. The author is donating funds from this book to Maiti Nepal, the refuge which helped Radhika and Rohan and which continues to help survivors of human trafficking. This title is suitable for: fans of true crime; anyone interested in inspirational stories of triumph over adversity; and, anyone interested in globalization and human trafficking.

PUSHPA MAURYA, 35 YEARS OLD, MANAGER OF THE MILK CHILLING CENTRE OF THE PRODUCER COMPANY, SWAAYAM KSHEER, AND WOMEN SUPP...
25/12/2013

PUSHPA MAURYA, 35 YEARS OLD, MANAGER OF THE MILK CHILLING CENTRE OF THE PRODUCER COMPANY, SWAAYAM KSHEER, AND WOMEN SUPPLIERS FROM NEIGHBOURING VILLAGES. PICTURE BY GRAHAM CROUCH/UNDP
Ten years ago Pushpa Devi Maurya joined a self-help group to make ends meet in the village of Chak Padri in the state of Uttar Pradesh, northern India. Today this 35-year-old mother of two manages the bulk milk chilling centre set up by the milk producers’ company near her village. The centre collects milk from 56 villages and supplies on average 2000 litres of milk a day to the state’s milk grid.

This project was possible because women’s voices are starting to be heard. The lives of 50,000 women in 500 hundred villages in three of the poorest districts of Uttar Pradesh have been transformed through a UN Development Programme (UNDP)-IKEA Foundation pilot initiative titled Swaayam, which started two years ago. The partnership seeks to empower women socially, economically and politically. Thanks to these successes, the pilot is now being expanded to reach 2.2 million women.
Under the UNDP-IKEA Foundation’s Swaayam initiative, Pushpa learnt business skills through financial literacy training in 2009. Earlier as small dairy producers, Pushpa and other women like her were able to eke out meager profits with middle men taking the larger share. Realizing the power of the collective and greater awareness about the potential of their business, Pushpa and 9,000 other women dairy producers came together to take their new found knowledge to the next level. They formed a producer company, Swaayam Ksheer (ksheer means milk in Hindi), in November 2011. Each member holds an equity stake in the company, which soon hopes to take this membership to 12,000.

On average the profits of the members have at least doubled in the past year by eliminating middlemen and taking charge of all the processes involved in supplying milk to the state’s milk grid. As Pushpa pointed out, “Women can do a lot. But when women don’t have money they become helpless and there’s very little they can do. That’s why we decided to get together and set up this company so we can make some money and progress. “
Two chilling centres have been set up and running and six more are in the pipeline to service the needs of its soon to be 12,000 members. At a cost INR 2,000,000 (nearly US$38,000) per centre, this fledgling company has ambitious goals.

Over the last four months, the company has generated business worth INR 3,400,000 (more than $64,000) and over the next year it will generate benefits to its producers to the tune of INR 14,000,000 ($264,000).

A ten member board elected from among the members of the company made a presentation to the visiting UNDP-IKEA Foundation delegation recently under a tent in a remote rural setting. They outlined the financial forecast for the company. The professionalism of this presentation would have been impressive in any corporate boardroom in Delhi or Mumbai. Besides financial and management training this was made possible through a process of social mobilization, building their respect, confidence and resilience at all levels.

Taking a cue from Swaayam Ksheer, craftswomen from these villages have come together to form Swaayan Kala, (kala means art in Hindi) with a membership of 5,000 women. This was inaugurated in early May and hopes to supply its products to national retailers and export markets. Thousands of other entrepreneurs are following in their footsteps.

Caitlin Wiesen, UNDP Country Director said, “By building the capacities of women like Pushpa and supporting them to set up viable businesses, UNDP and the IKEA Foundation hope to lay the ground for lasting institutions and transformational change.”

25/12/2013

amazing vedio guys...do have a look :)

LOGO AND WEBSITE LAUNCH TODAY @ CEC BY Capt. D.L.L RAJU.
07/12/2013

LOGO AND WEBSITE LAUNCH TODAY @ CEC BY Capt. D.L.L RAJU.

a seminar on WOMEN EMPOERMENT AND SELF DEFENCE by C.T.C COMMUNICATIONS
05/12/2013

a seminar on WOMEN EMPOERMENT AND SELF DEFENCE by C.T.C COMMUNICATIONS

04/12/2013
  DREAMS   TIME    # DAMN HAPPY
03/12/2013

DREAMS TIME # DAMN HAPPY

when a girl is s*xually harassed its not her body which is effected but its the soul which gets permanent scars.
03/12/2013

when a girl is s*xually harassed its not her body which is effected but its the soul which gets permanent scars.

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