If there is ever a story about dreams coming true, it is the story of Vinod Matho. Even when the odds were stacked against him, he found a way to overcome them and build his future.
When Vinod’s Engineering Dream Came True

If there is ever a story about dreams coming true, it is the story of Vinod Matho. Even when the odds were stacked against him, he found a way to overcome them and build his future.
From utter despair to resurgent hope, the story of Munia doesn’t only break the odds but highlights how proper treatment and guidance can make a difference in the lives of people affected by leprosy.
The Bard’s words of wisdom proved right again in another place and another time – around 8,500 km away from where the Bard lived, in Villupuram district of Tamil Nadu, in 2017. The Leprosy Mission Trust India’s (TLMTI) SOAR project (SOAR stands for ‘Securing Opportunities towards Advancing Revenue’), while doing a survey in Rubanarayanallur village in Cuddalore district of Tamil Nadu to identify persons with disabilities who need project support for livelihood, came across six women, either with disabilities or having children with disabilities. For these women, the challenges of disability and the social exclusion were not the only problems.
Dr Amrita Daniel, an orthopaedic surgeon working in TLM Faizabad Hospital, in Uttar Pradesh tells how Chand Ali, a 61-year-old man, who consulted her with leprosy-related foot drop and severe ulcer was brought back to normal life.
Married at an early age of 13, Nazma was sent back to her parent’s home in Rasoolpanah village, in Barabanki district of Uttar Pradesh, by her husband. This was after two months of marriage as he suspected she had some disease as she was thin and anaemic. “When I came back home, I faced a lot of problems. I had just one set of clothes with me. I used to wash them and wear it every day,” says Nazma