Something a woman would say. Let me be. Art by Sandhya Ramachandran. This is the coverpage art for the March 2011 issue.
As an 18-year-old, Shaheen Mistri walked into a slum in Mumbai and began teaching. She then went on to set up Akanksha Foundation, an NGO that works primarily in the field of education. Today, she is the CEO of Teach For India, a nationwide movement that aims to end education inequity in India. In an interview to Spark, Shaheen Mistri talks about her personal journey with Akanksha and Teach For India, her views on the Indian education system and the relevance of social entrepreneurship in today’s world. Excerpts from her interview to Anupama Krishnakumar.
In an interview to Spark’s Vani Viswanathan, Mallika Dutt, CEO of Breakthrough, talks about her journey with Breakthrough and one of their most successful campaigns, the Bell Bajao campaign.
In 1984, Urvashi Butalia co-founded India’s first feminist publishing house, Kali for Women, and then went on to establish Zubaan Books in 2003. In an interview to Spark, she talks about her journey with Kali for Women, about Zubaan and about feminist literature and publishing in India. Anupama Krishnakumar listens in.
In her interview to Spark, popular blogger Indian Homemaker speaks on issues that she deals with on her blog, her views on feminism in India and the state of women in urban India today. Vani Viswanathan listens in.
We are happy to present the February 2011 issue of Spark featuring the theme, ‘Exploring Relationships’. Please click here to access the issue on the e-reader, ISSUU, or to download the issue as a pdf or to retrieve the link to access all February 2011 contributions as posts.
The February 2011 issue is in a way a stories-special. Our writers have come up with a variety of stories that explore the many different relationships that exist in this world. We provide links to all these stories here.