Monday, May 11, 2026

MONDAY MAVERICKS # 12: DR. GOVINDAPPA VENKATASWAMY - THE SURGEON OF COMPASSION

Introduction - From Village Hardship to Surgeon of Compassion


Dr. Govindappa Venkataswamy was born in 1918 in Ayan Vadamalapuram, a small farming village in Tamil Nadu, the eldest of five children in a Telugu‑speaking Kamma family. His early life was marked by socio‑economic hardship — walking two kilometers barefoot to school, writing lessons in riverbed sand when notebooks were unaffordable, 
studying under lantern light and witnessing the deaths of cousins due to lack of medical care. His family lived modestly, eking out a living from agriculture. As the eldest of five children, he grew up with responsibility and hardship woven into daily life.

Tragedy struck early: three of his cousins died during childbirth due to the absence of medical care in their village. These losses left a deep imprint, convincing young Venkataswamy that becoming a doctor was not just a career but a calling. Despite financial constraints and limited access to resources, he excelled academically — completing his B.Sc. in Chemistry at American College, Madurai, and then earning his MBBS from Stanley Medical College, Madras, in 1944.

His journey was not without ridicule. Coming from a rural background, peers often doubted whether someone of his socio‑economic standing could rise in the medical profession. Yet he persisted, joining the Indian Army Medical Corps as a doctor.

At age 30, in 1948, his life took a devastating turn. A severe attack of rheumatoid arthritis left him bedridden for over a year. His fingers became permanently twisted, and colleagues believed his medical career was finished. He could barely hold a pen, let alone surgical instruments. But Dr. V refused to surrender. He retrained himself, earning a diploma and MS in Ophthalmology by 1951, and painstakingly adapted his technique to perform eye surgeries with crippled hands.

When Dr. V retired from government service in 1976 at the age of 58, he could have chosen comfort. Instead, he chose risk. With crippled fingers, modest savings, and no institutional backing, he dreamed of building a hospital that would prove compassion could scale.

This resilience — overcoming poverty, ridicule, and disability — became the foundation of his life’s work. His origins were not defined by privilege or ease, but by hardship, conviction, and an unshakable belief that service was the highest calling.


The Turning Point – From Healing Hands to Healing Sight

After retraining himself as an ophthalmologist, Dr. V spent decades in government service, performing surgeries and organizing rural eye camps. But what truly shifted his vision was witnessing the scale of needless blindness in India. Millions were losing sight to cataracts — a condition that could be cured with a simple surgery.

At one rural camp, he watched an elderly man arrive barefoot, led by his grandson. The man had been blind for years, dependent on others for survival. After a short surgery, his sight was restored. The joy in his face, and the freedom it gave his family, struck Dr. V deeply. He realized that individual surgeries were not enough — only a system could meet the scale of suffering.

This realization converged with his spiritual conviction. Immersed in the writings of Sri Aurobindo, Dr. V believed that service was a path to human evolution. Medicine, for him, was not just science or a profession but a spiritual mission — a way to restore dignity and awaken potential. He began to dream of an institution that would embody compassion, efficiency, and universality.

By the mid‑1970s, as retirement approached, he faced a choice: fade into obscurity or risk everything to build a system that embodied compassion at scale. That was the turning point. He chose the latter, pooling his pension and family support to start Aravind Eye Hospital in 1976.

The creation of Aravind Eye Care


Dr. V founded Aravind Eye Care in 1976 after retiring from government service at age 58. He started with an 11‑bed hospital in Madurai, funded through a family trust (GOVEL Trust) and personal savings, with support from siblings and peers. His family and colleagues provided space, manpower, and moral backing, allowing him to juggle his medical practice with his dream of building a compassionate institution.

The Struggle to Begin


Funds
: He pooled his pension and personal savings, but that was not enough. His siblings contributed what they could, and together they created the GOVEL Trust — a family‑anchored foundation that became Aravind’s backbone. This was not venture capital; it was sacrifice.

Space: The first hospital was set up in a rented building in Madurai with just 11 beds. It was humble, but it carried the weight of a revolution.

Family Support: His younger brother, G. Srinivasan, left a secure career to manage administration. Nieces and nephews later joined as doctors and managers. His wife and extended family stood behind him, offering moral and logistical support.

Peers & Students: Former colleagues and medical students rallied around his vision, volunteering time and expertise. They trusted his conviction even when resources were scarce.


Juggling Practice and Dream


Even before Aravind, Dr. V had experimented with outreach eye camps while in government service. He would travel to villages, examine patients under trees, and perform surgeries in makeshift facilities. These camps were prototypes — proof that efficiency and compassion could coexist. When he retired, he simply institutionalized what he had already been practicing.


Why “Aravind” and not “Venkataswamy”?


Dr. V deliberately refused to name the hospital after himself. He chose Aravind, inspired by Sri Aurobindo, whose philosophy of service and human evolution shaped his worldview.

Humility: He wanted the institution to outlive him, free of personal ego.

Symbolism: “Aravind” means lotus — rising pure from muddy waters, just as sight restores dignity from despair.

Movement over Man: By invoking Sri Aurobindo, he anchored Aravind in a spiritual lineage, ensuring it was seen as a collective mission, not a personal monument.


The Dream in Action


Dr. V’s vision was radical because it challenged the norms of healthcare delivery in India. Each principle was not a slogan, but a lived practice:

No one should be deprived of care because they don’t have money
At Aravind, patients were never turned away. Those who could afford to pay did so, but their fees subsidized the treatment of those who could not. This cross‑subsidy model ensured that poverty was never a barrier to sight.

Efficiency as compassion
Dr. V believed that compassion was not just about intent, but about design. By introducing assembly‑line cataract surgeries — where doctors specialized in specific steps and systems were standardized — he reduced costs dramatically. Efficiency meant more patients treated, more blindness prevented, and more dignity restored.

Multiplying impact through training
He knew his own hands could only perform so many surgeries. To scale compassion, he trained thousands of ophthalmologists, nurses, and technicians. Each trainee became a multiplier, carrying Aravind’s ethos into hospitals across India and abroad.

Institutionalizing empathy
Dr. V understood that values fade if they depend only on individuals. He embedded compassion into Aravind’s systems — from pricing models to patient interactions. This meant that even as the hospital grew, empathy was not optional; it was structural.


Challenges – From Fragile Beginnings to Scalable Vision


Financial Fragility

Starting Aravind was not backed by investors or government grants. Dr. V relied on his pension, personal savings, and contributions from siblings through the GOVEL Trust. Funds were tight, and every rupee had to be stretched. Equipment was second‑hand, facilities were modest, and salaries were lean. The financial challenge was constant: how to sustain free care for the poor while keeping the hospital afloat.

Spreading the Word

In the early years, awareness was a hurdle. Rural communities were suspicious of modern hospitals, and many patients feared surgery. Dr. V personally led outreach camps, traveling to villages, examining patients under trees, and convincing families that blindness could be cured. Word of mouth became his most powerful tool — each restored patient became a walking ambassador.

Initial Response & Emotional Strain


The first months were slow. Beds remained empty, and surgeries were few. For a man who had staked his retirement savings and reputation, the poor response was emotionally taxing. Yet Dr. V never wavered. He believed that persistence and compassion would eventually win trust.

Planning to Scale


By the late 1970s, he began to think beyond survival. Scaling up meant balancing three considerations:

Efficiency: He introduced the “factory model” of cataract surgery, inspired by assembly‑line systems, to reduce costs and increase throughput.

Cross‑subsidy: Wealthier patients paid market rates, subsidizing free care for the poor. This financial model became Aravind’s backbone.

Training: He invested in training ophthalmologists and nurses, multiplying impact beyond his own hands.


Support System


Family: His brother G. Srinivasan managed administration, nieces and nephews joined as doctors, and the family stood united behind the mission.

Peers: Former students and colleagues volunteered, lending credibility and manpower.

Community: Local supporters in Madurai offered moral encouragement, seeing Aravind as service to society.


Maverickism* – Turning Obstacles into Systems


What is Maverickism - Maverickism is the art of turning adversity into architecture — converting ridicule, scarcity, and skepticism into systems that scale compassion and justice.


Dr. V’s journey shows that Mavericks don’t just endure challenges — they transform them into blueprints. His struggles were financial, emotional, cultural, and systemic. Yet each barrier became the seed of innovation. This is "Maverickism" in action:

Suspicion into Trust: Empty beds and skeptical patients pushed him to lead rural eye camps, meeting people face‑to‑face. Outreach became the foundation of Aravind’s credibility.

Poverty into Access: Fragile finances inspired the cross‑subsidy model — ensuring no one was deprived of care because they lacked money.

Scarcity into Efficiency: Limited resources forced him to innovate with assembly‑line surgeries, proving that efficiency itself could be an act of compassion.

Isolation into Movement: Emotional burden became spiritual conviction. By embedding empathy into systems, he ensured Aravind was not dependent on one man, but lived as a collective mission.

Conclusion – Maverickism in Sight


Dr. V’s life was proof that hardship can be turned into architecture. Born in poverty, crippled by illness, and doubted by peers, he refused to surrender. Instead, he transformed adversity into systems: outreach to build trust, cross‑subsidy to guarantee access, efficiency to scale compassion, and training to multiply impact.

This is Maverickism — the doctrine that obstacles are not endpoints but raw material for innovation. Dr. V showed that one man, armed with conviction and humility, could build an institution that outlives him, restores dignity to millions, and redefines what healthcare can mean.

Aravind Eye Care was never about him; it was about proving that compassion could be institutionalized. His crippled fingers performed over 100,000 surgeries, but his true legacy was not in numbers — it was in the belief that no one should be deprived of care because they don’t have money, and no system is too rigid to be remade in the image of empathy.

For Mavericks today, Dr. V’s story is a call to action:
  • Dream beyond self. Anchor your vision in values, not ego.
  • Turn adversity into design. Let scarcity sharpen innovation.
  • Institutionalize compassion. Build systems that embody empathy, so they endure beyond you.

Dr. V’s journey reminds us that Mavericks are not defined by privilege or ease, but by conviction and resilience. His life is a manifesto in itself: service as revolution, compassion as scale, and Maverickism as the art of turning struggle into systems.

#DrVenkataswamy, #AravindEyeCare, #Maverickism, #SocialEntrepreneurship, #HealthcareInnovation, #CompassionAtScale, #ResilientLeadership, #CrossSubsidyModel, #OutreachCamps, #SriAurobindo, #TrainingImpact, #ScalingCompassion, #ServiceAsRevolution, #EfficiencyInHealthcare, #InstitutionalizingEmpathy, #VisionBeyondSelf, #TurningAdversityIntoSystems, #HealthcareForAll, #BlindnessPrevention, #MaverickLeadership, #GlobalInspiration, #SocialImpact

Friday, May 8, 2026

SUPPORT COMMUNITY INITIATIVES PART IV: CITIZENSHIP BEYOND THE BALLOT


Introduction — Democracy in Daily Life


Casting a ballot is powerful, but democracy does not end at the polling booth. It continues in the streets, schools, parks, and neighborhoods where citizens live. Supporting community initiatives is how citizens transform democratic ideals into tangible improvements in everyday life. Whether through grassroots volunteering or institutional collaboration, these initiatives strengthen trust, foster solidarity, and ensure that democracy delivers beyond promises.

India offers countless examples: from the Versova Beach clean‑up in Mumbai, led by lawyer Afroz Shah, to Self‑Help Groups (SHGs) in Tamil Nadu that empower rural women, ordinary citizens have shown extraordinary capacity to mobilize. Globally, initiatives like Canada’s Daily Bread Food Bank or the UK’s Big Lunch community festival demonstrate how civic engagement builds resilience and solidarity.


1. Grassroots Civic Action — Power of Local Engagement

  • Neighborhood Projects: Citizens often start with small, local actions that ripple outward.
Example: Afroz Shah’s Versova Beach clean‑up in Mumbai mobilized thousands of volunteers, removing over 20,000 tons of plastic waste. His initiative inspired similar drives across India.
  • Self‑Help Groups (SHGs): Women’s collectives in rural India pool resources for micro‑enterprise and social empowerment.
Example: The Kudumbashree Mission in Kerala, one of the world’s largest SHG networks, has empowered over 4.3 million women through microfinance and community projects.
  • Community Clubs: Youth groups organizing literacy drives or sports events to build social cohesion.
Example: The “Teach for India” fellowship mobilizes young graduates to work in under‑resourced schools, bridging educational gaps at the grassroots level.


2. Institutional Collaboration — Partnering for Scale

  • NGOs: Citizens volunteering with organizations tackling education, health, or poverty.
Example: The Akshaya Patra Foundation, headquartered in Bengaluru, runs the world’s largest mid‑day meal program, feeding over 2 million children daily. Citizen donations and volunteer support are critical to its success.
  • Municipal Bodies: Participating in ward committees, public hearings, or civic audits.
Example: In Pune, the “Pune Municipal Corporation’s participatory budgeting” allows citizens to propose and vote on local projects, ensuring funds reflect community priorities.
  • CSR Programs: Employees joining corporate social responsibility initiatives that fund schools, sanitation, or skill training.
Example: The “Big Lunch” initiative, supported by the Eden Project, encourages millions of people to share meals with neighbors, strengthening community bonds with corporate and civic backing.


3. Building Trust and Accountability

  • Transparency: Citizens monitoring how funds are used in local projects.
Example: Delhi’s “Mohalla Sabhas” (neighborhood assemblies) allow residents to directly influence budget allocations, ensuring transparency in spending.
  • Collaboration: Grassroots groups working with municipal officers to ensure projects meet community needs.
Example: In Bengaluru, the “Janaagraha Centre for Citizenship and Democracy” partners with citizens and local government to improve urban governance and accountability.
  • Feedback Loops: Using digital platforms to report progress or challenges.
Example: The “Neighbourhood Watch” program, supported by local councils, uses apps and community meetings to keep citizens engaged in safety and accountability.


4. The Ripple Effect of Community Initiatives

  • Social Cohesion: Volunteering builds empathy across class, caste, and religion.
Example: The “Dabbawala” network in Mumbai, famous for delivering lunchboxes, also organizes blood donation camps and disaster relief drives, showing how community service strengthens social bonds.
  • Sustainable Development: Local projects often address environmental and social issues simultaneously.
Example: The “Barefoot College” in Tilonia, Rajasthan trains rural women — many of them grandmothers — to become solar engineers, combining sustainability with empowerment.
  • Global Parallels: Example: The Daily Bread Food Bank in Toronto distributes millions of pounds of food annually, supported by citizen volunteers and donors.
Example: The “Big Lunch” community festival brings millions together each year, fostering unity across diverse neighborhoods.


Conclusion — Citizenship in Action


Supporting community initiatives is democracy lived daily. It is how citizens move from voting for change to building change with their own hands. Whether through grassroots volunteering like Afroz Shah’s beach clean‑up, institutional collaboration like Pune’s participatory budgeting, or global efforts like Canada’s food banks, these initiatives prove that democracy thrives when citizens act beyond the ballot.

Community initiatives strengthen trust, foster solidarity, and ensure that democracy delivers beyond promises. They remind us that citizenship is not passive — it is active, creative, and collective.

This journey continues. In our next article, Protect the Environment, we will explore how citizenship extends to safeguarding the planet — because community well‑being is inseparable from ecological responsibility.



#SupportCommunityInitiatives #GoodCitizen #CivicDuty #Democracy #Volunteerism #GrassrootsAction #NGO #CSR #Accountability #Transparency #Community #Responsibility #Ethics #Governance #RuleOfLaw #CivicValues #Participation #SocialCohesion #Empowerment #CitizenshipSeries #ProtectTheEnvironment

Wednesday, May 6, 2026

PILLAR 8: ENVIRONMENT & SUSTAINABILITY - LIVING IN BALANCE WITH NATURE


Introduction — The Ecology of Dignity

The first five pillars built the architecture of human dignity — health, resilience, trust, knowledge, and work. Yet all of them depend on one silent foundation: nature. Without clean air, fertile soil, and stable climate, every other right collapses.

India’s challenge is stark. Rapid urbanization, industrial growth, and consumption have lifted millions out of poverty but strained ecosystems beyond endurance. Rivers are choking, forests shrinking, and cities gasping for air. Sustainability is no longer a choice; it is survival.

To live in balance with nature is to recognize that ecological stewardship is a civic duty, not a luxury. It is the moral economy of coexistence — where progress respects planetary boundaries and prosperity honors future generations.


Global Lessons

Germany — Circular Economy and Waste Segregation Germany recycles nearly 70% of its waste through strict segregation laws and producer responsibility. Citizens separate waste at home, industries design recyclable packaging, and municipalities enforce compliance. The result: cleaner cities and a thriving green‑tech sector employing over 2 million people.

Japan — Energy Efficiency and Urban Green Design

Tokyo’s “Smart City” initiatives integrate solar rooftops, efficient transport, and green corridors. Japan’s Top Runner Program pushes manufacturers to exceed energy‑efficiency benchmarks, making sustainability a national habit.

Nordic Countries — Carbon Neutrality and Citizen Accountability

Denmark and Sweden aim for net‑zero emissions by 2045. Citizens track their carbon footprint through apps, and municipalities reward low‑emission lifestyles. Happiness and sustainability converge — clean air, walkable cities, and social trust reinforce each other.

Costa Rica — Forest Regeneration and Ecotourism Economy

Through payments for ecosystem services, Costa Rica reversed deforestation and now generates over 50% of GDP from ecotourism. Citizens see conservation not as sacrifice but as livelihood.


Indian Vignettes — Ecology in Action

Chipko Movement (Uttarakhand) In the 1970s, villagers led by Gaura Devi hugged trees to prevent logging — a non‑violent revolution that redefined environmental activism. Chipko proved that ecological protection begins with community courage.

SayTrees (Bengaluru)

Founded by Kapil Sharma, SayTrees mobilizes urban volunteers to plant and nurture saplings across Indian cities. Over 1 million trees have been planted, transforming barren plots into green lungs.

Clean Ganga Mission

Launched in 2014, this national program combines river rejuvenation, sewage treatment, and community awareness. Cities like Varanasi and Haridwar now show measurable improvements in water quality and biodiversity.

Solar Villages (Gujarat, Rajasthan)

Villages like Dhundi and Baripatha have adopted decentralized solar grids, empowering farmers with clean energy and reducing diesel dependence.

Waste Warriors (Dehradun, Dharamshala)

Grassroots volunteers led by Jodie Underhill and Taashi Doma organize waste segregation, recycling, and awareness drives, proving that civic responsibility can clean mountains and minds alike.


Why Environment Matters for Quality of Life

  • Health: Pollution and climate stress directly affect physical and mental well‑being.

  • Resilience: Ecological balance cushions communities against floods, droughts, and heatwaves.

  • Livelihood: Agriculture, tourism, and crafts depend on natural resources.

  • Trust: Shared stewardship builds social cohesion and intergenerational responsibility.

  • Innovation: Green technologies create new jobs and industries.

  • Equity: Environmental justice ensures that the poor are not the first victims of degradation.


Charter Directions for India — Roadmap for Ecological Citizenship


A.  Governments — Policy, Law, Finance, and Measurement

  • Legal Guarantees: Enact a National Clean Air and Water Act with enforceable standards and citizen litigation rights.

  • Green Finance: Establish a Sovereign Green Fund to support renewable energy, waste management, and biodiversity conservation.

  • Carbon Accountability: Launch a National Carbon Registry tracking emissions by sector and city.

  • Urban Planning: Mandate green belts, rainwater harvesting, and zero‑waste zoning in all master plans.

B.  Communities — Local Stewardship and Cultural Renewal

  • Eco‑Cooperatives: Form village‑level cooperatives for waste segregation, composting, and water management.

  • Community Forests: Empower Gram Sabhas to manage local forests under the Forest Rights Act.

  • Water Guardians: Citizen groups monitor groundwater and river health using open‑data platforms.

  • Cultural Pride: Celebrate local biodiversity through eco‑festivals and school programs.

C.  Institutions and Employers — Corporate Practice and Public Sector Leadership

  • Green Procurement: Prioritize suppliers with verified sustainability standards.

  • Energy Transition: Adopt renewable power for campuses and factories.

  • Circular Design: Integrate recycling and reuse into product lifecycles.

  • Employee Engagement: Encourage volunteering for clean‑ups and tree‑planting drives.

D.  Citizens — Norms, Habits, and Collective Action

  • Sustainable Consumption: Reduce single‑use plastics, conserve water, and choose eco‑friendly products.

  • Volunteerism: Join local clean‑up or afforestation campaigns.

  • Education: Integrate environmental literacy into schools and lifelong learning.

  • Digital Activism: Use social media to advocate for conservation and accountability.


Implementation Roadmap and Indicators

Short Term (1–2 years)

  • Launch 100 urban green corridors and 500 community composting units.

  • Pilot the National Carbon Registry. Indicators: number of green corridors, composting units, and registered emission sources.

Medium Term (3–5 years)

  • Achieve 50% renewable energy in public institutions.

  • Integrate sustainability modules into all school curricula. Indicators: renewable share, number of schools with environmental education.

Long Term (5–10 years)

  • Attain measurable carbon neutrality in select cities and districts.

  • Increase forest cover to 33% of national area. Indicators: carbon neutrality certification, forest cover percentage, biodiversity index.


Conclusion — Living in Balance

Nature is not a backdrop to human progress; it is the stage, the script, and the sustenance. When we protect rivers, forests, and air, we protect ourselves.

Environmental stewardship is the moral extension of citizenship — the promise that prosperity will not come at the planet’s expense. When governments legislate accountability, institutions embed sustainability, communities nurture ecosystems, and citizens live consciously, India will not just grow; it will flourish in harmony.

In the next article, i.e. Pillar 7: Public Spaces & Civic Infrastructure - Designing for Belonging, we will explore how shared spaces reflect our collective respect for both people and planet.



#EnvironmentAndSustainability #QualityOfLifeCharter #EcologicalCitizenship #ClimateAction #RenewableEnergy #Conservation #CircularEconomy #CleanAir #CleanWater #GreenIndia #ChipkoMovement #SayTrees #CleanGanga #WasteWarriors #SolarVillages #Biodiversity #GreenEconomy #SustainableLiving #CitizenAction #PlanetAndPeople #IndiaThrivesInBalance

Monday, May 4, 2026

MONDAY MAVERICKS 11 : NAVEEN TEWARI & INMOBI – INDIA’S GLOBAL TECH FOOTPRINT

Introduction


India’s startup story is often told through domestic disruption — companies solving local problems, scaling within borders, and only later dreaming global. But Naveen Tewari’s InMobi rewrote that script. In 2011, before “unicorn” was even a buzzword in India, InMobi became the country’s first. It wasn’t just a valuation milestone; it was a credibility marker. It proved that world‑class technology could be built in Bengaluru and compete head‑to‑head with Silicon Valley giants.

Tewari’s journey is about ambition tempered by resilience. He dared to enter the global advertising technology arena, a space dominated by Google and Facebook, and still carved out a niche. He refused acquisition offers, choosing independence over easy exits. InMobi’s rise is both a story of India’s global credibility and of entrepreneurial conviction — showing that Indian innovation can lead, not just follow.

Origins


The InMobi story began in 2007 as mKhoj, a mobile search startup founded by Naveen Tewari and his IIT Kanpur peers. At the time, India’s startup ecosystem was embryonic, venture capital was scarce, and global recognition of Indian tech was limited. mKhoj struggled to gain traction, but instead of folding, Tewari pivoted. He transformed the company into InMobi, a mobile advertising platform — betting that mobile ads would become the backbone of digital commerce.

This pivot was not accidental; it was informed by comparative global analysis. Tewari studied how companies like AdMob and Millennial Media were shaping mobile marketing in the West. He recognized that mobile penetration in India and Asia was exploding, and that advertising would follow. He concluded that India’s engineering talent could build equally sophisticated platforms — but with agility, cost efficiency, and a global mindset.

The turning point came when Tewari realized that India could not afford to be a passive consumer of global platforms. If Indian entrepreneurs wanted credibility, they had to build products that could scale across continents. InMobi was designed from day one to be global — not an Indian solution exported abroad, but a universal platform born in India.

By 2011, InMobi had expanded into dozens of countries, serving billions of ad impressions daily. When SoftBank invested $200 million, making InMobi India’s first unicorn, it validated Tewari’s conviction: India could produce companies that were not just successful locally, but respected globally.


Growth & Impact


  • Global Expansion: From Bengaluru to 60+ Countries InMobi’s decision to scale globally was audacious. At a time when Indian startups were still proving themselves domestically, Tewari set his sights on international markets. Within a few years, InMobi was serving billions of ad impressions daily across 60+ countries. This wasn’t just expansion; it was a credibility marker. It proved that Indian engineering talent could compete with Silicon Valley on equal terms. Impact: India’s startup ecosystem gained its first global ambassador, showing that “Made in India” could mean “Trusted Worldwide.”
  • Innovation: Ahead of the Curve InMobi pioneered AI‑driven ad targeting and mobile monetization long before these became industry norms. By anticipating how mobile commerce would evolve, Tewari positioned InMobi as a thought leader rather than a follower. Impact: Innovation became InMobi’s shield against giants like Google and Facebook. It wasn’t about catching up; it was about setting the pace.
  • Partnerships: Building Global Trust Collaborations with Microsoft, Samsung, and other global brands gave InMobi credibility in markets where Indian startups were still unknown. These partnerships were not just business deals; they were endorsements that validated InMobi’s technology and reliability. Impact: InMobi became a bridge between Indian innovation and global corporations, strengthening India’s reputation in tech.
  • Independence: Choosing Conviction Over Exit While many startups sold early, Tewari refused acquisition offers. He believed that independence was essential to preserve InMobi’s identity as India’s global tech ambassador. This choice demanded financial discipline and resilience. Impact: InMobi became a symbol of entrepreneurial integrity — proving that success need not come at the cost of autonomy.

InMobi’s revolution is best understood in scale: India’s first unicorn, valued at ~$12 billion, with FY23‑24 revenue of $1.3 billion, net profit of $100 million, and operations in 60+ countries serving billions of ad impressions daily. It proved that Indian startups could compete globally, stay independent, and redefine ad‑tech for emerging markets.


Global Impact in Numbers

  • Founded: 2007 (pivoted from mKhoj to InMobi)
  • Global Reach: Presence in 60+ countries, empowering thousands of marketers and publishers worldwide
  • Revenue: $1.3 billion in FY23‑24, with 18% YoY growth
  • Profitability: Net profit of $100 million, EBITDA margin at 18%
  • Valuation: ~$12 billion (2023)
  • Employees: ~1,500 globally, expanding product and engineering teams
  • Funding Milestone: SoftBank’s $200 million investment in 2011 made InMobi India’s first unicorn

Revolution for Indian Business

  • Credibility Marker: InMobi’s unicorn status proved Indian startups could attract global capital and scale internationally.
  • Global Tech Footprint: Competing with Google and Facebook in ad‑tech, InMobi showed Indian companies could build platforms trusted by Microsoft, Samsung, and other global brands.
  • Innovation Leadership: Pioneered AI‑driven ad targeting and privacy‑focused advertising solutions years ahead of industry norms.
  • Independence: Refused acquisition offers, preserving autonomy and positioning InMobi as India’s global tech ambassador.

Revolution for Global Entrepreneurship

  • Emerging Market Leadership: InMobi demonstrated that innovation has no geography — world‑class platforms can be born outside Silicon Valley.
  • Cultural Scaling: Successfully managed teams and clients across continents, proving that global entrepreneurship requires cultural intelligence as much as technical brilliance.
  • Consumer Tech Expansion: Through its subsidiary Glance, InMobi reached 300 million active users, with ambitions to hit 1 billion by 2025, expanding into Japan, US, and Latin America.

Challenges

  • Global Competition: Facing Google and Facebook meant competing against companies with near‑infinite resources. InMobi had to innovate relentlessly and prove credibility through performance. Lesson for Entrepreneurs: Mavericks must earn trust through results, not rhetoric. Competing with giants requires sharper focus, faster execution, and unwavering belief in your edge.
  • Scaling Across Cultures; Operating in 60+ countries meant navigating cultural differences, regulatory landscapes, and diverse consumer behaviors. Tewari had to build teams that were globally fluent yet locally sensitive. Lesson for Entrepreneurs: Global success demands cultural intelligence. Mavericks must lead with empathy, adaptability, and respect for diversity.
  • Funding & Independence: Refusing acquisition offers meant walking a tightrope: balancing growth with financial discipline. It was tempting to take shortcuts, but Tewari chose conviction. Lesson for Entrepreneurs: Mavericks protect their mission even when tempted by exits. Independence is not stubbornness; it is clarity of purpose.

Lessons for Mavericks

  • Global Vision, Local Execution: Tewari proved that world‑class technology can be built anywhere if the vision is global and execution is disciplined. Takeaway: Don’t limit your ambition to geography. Build with a global mindset, but execute with local precision.
  • Adaptability is Strength: Pivoting from mKhoj to InMobi showed that flexibility is foresight, not weakness. Takeaway: Treat pivots as evolution, not failure. Mavericks adapt before the market forces them to.
  • Integrity in Scale: Staying independent demonstrated that success need not come at the cost of autonomy. Takeaway: Protect your mission. Mavericks know that credibility is built not just by growth, but by staying true to their core.
  • Build for the World: InMobi was designed from day one to be global. It wasn’t an Indian solution exported abroad; it was a universal platform born in India. Takeaway: Mavericks design for universality. Build products that resonate across cultures, not just within borders.


Key Questions budding Entrepreneur's must ask
: What global challenge in your industry could become your credibility marker? How can you pivot with foresight, protect your mission with integrity, and design solutions that resonate universally?


Conclusion


Naveen Tewari’s InMobi is more than a company; it is a movement that redefined India’s place in global technology. From a pivoted startup to a $12 billion global powerhouse, InMobi proved that Indian entrepreneurs can build platforms trusted worldwide, compete with Silicon Valley giants, and remain independent.

For entrepreneurs, the lesson is clear: innovation has no geography, conviction has no ceiling, and credibility is earned through resilience. Mavericks are remembered not just for what they build, but for the revolutions they ignite — and InMobi ignited one that placed India firmly on the global tech map.




#MondayMavericks #NaveenTewari #InMobi #GlobalTech #IndiaUnicorn #AdTech #Innovation #Leadership #Entrepreneurship #MadeInIndia #QualityOfLifeSeries

Friday, May 1, 2026

VOTE RESPONSIBILITY PART III: THE CITIZEN'S GREATEST POWER

Introduction — From Awareness to Action

In our last article, Stay Informed, we explored how knowledge empowers citizens to resist manipulation and strengthen democracy. But awareness alone is not enough. The true test of citizenship comes when we step into the voting booth. Voting is not just a right; it is a responsibility, a sacred act that shapes the destiny of nations.

This is the third article in our 10‑part series on actionable steps to be a good citizen. Having laid the foundation with Respect the Law and Stay Informed, we now turn to the next pillar: Vote Responsibly. Responsible voting means exercising your right with integrity, awareness, and foresight — ensuring that democracy reflects the collective wisdom of its people.


1. Why Responsible Voting Matters

  • Democracy’s Lifeline: Elections are the heartbeat of democracy. Without responsible voting, democracy risks becoming hollow.

  • Collective Impact: Each vote is a thread in the fabric of governance. When woven responsibly, they create strong, representative leadership.

  • Guard Against Manipulation: Responsible voting resists populism, misinformation, and short‑term promises.

Example (India): In 2014, voter awareness campaigns in rural India significantly increased turnout, ensuring that marginalized voices were heard in shaping national policy.


2. Informed Choices — Beyond Symbols and Slogans

Voting responsibly requires looking past party symbols and campaign slogans to evaluate policies, track records, and values.

  • Policy over Personality: Focus on what candidates propose, not just how they present themselves.

  • Track Record Matters: Examine past performance in governance, transparency, and accountability.

  • Long‑Term Vision: Consider how policies affect future generations, not just immediate gains.

Example (India): The “NOTA” (None of the Above) option introduced in Indian ballots empowers citizens to reject unsuitable candidates, reinforcing accountability.

Example (UK): In the 2016 Brexit referendum, citizens who studied economic and social implications voted with deeper conviction, showing how informed choices shape national destiny.

 

3. Participation and Responsibility

Voting responsibly is not only about casting a ballot — it is about participating in the entire electoral process.

  • Register and Verify: Ensure your name is on the electoral roll.

  • Encourage Others: Motivate family, friends, and neighbors to vote.

  • Respect the Process: Avoid malpractice such as vote‑buying or intimidation.

  • Stay Engaged: Follow up after elections to hold leaders accountable.

Example (India): In Maharashtra, citizen groups organized “Get Out the Vote” campaigns, increasing youth participation and reducing apathy.

Example (Canada): Civic education programs in schools encourage young citizens to simulate elections, instilling responsibility before they reach voting age.

 

4. Guarding Against Misinformation

  • Verify Sources: Cross‑check claims made during campaigns.

  • Resist Rumors: Do not forward unverified messages on WhatsApp or social media.

  • Seek Neutral Platforms: Use election commission websites and independent fact‑checkers.

Example (India): The Election Commission’s “SVEEP” program (Systematic Voters’ Education and Electoral Participation) combats misinformation by educating citizens about their rights and responsibilities.


5. The Ethical Dimension of Voting

Voting responsibly is not just about legality; it is about ethics.

  • Vote with Integrity: Do not sell your vote for favors or gifts.

  • Think Beyond Self: Consider the welfare of society, not just personal benefit.

  • Respect Diversity: Support candidates who promote inclusivity and fairness.

Example (India): Citizens in Kerala have historically voted for leaders who prioritize education and healthcare, reflecting ethical choices that benefit society at large.

Example (Canada): Citizens often weigh environmental policies heavily, voting for sustainability as an ethical responsibility to future generations.

 

Conclusion — The Ballot as a Beacon of Collective Action

Voting responsibly is not merely a civic duty; it is the heartbeat of democracy. Each ballot cast with awareness and integrity becomes a declaration of faith in justice, equality, and progress. When citizens vote responsibly, they transform democracy from a system of governance into a living, breathing partnership between people and power.

The act of voting is deeply personal, yet profoundly communal. It is the moment when individual conviction merges with collective will. A single vote may seem small, but together, responsible votes decide the course of nations. They determine whether leadership reflects wisdom or whim, whether governance serves the people or divides them.

This is where Get Out the Vote (GOTV) campaigns play a transformative role. They remind us that democracy thrives only when participation is universal. In India, youth‑led GOTV drives in Maharashtra and Karnataka have turned apathy into engagement, bringing first‑time voters to polling booths with enthusiasm and pride. In Canada and the United Kingdom, similar initiatives have used social media and community outreach to ensure that every eligible citizen’s voice is heard. These movements prove that responsible voting is not a solitary act — it is a ripple that spreads through families, neighborhoods, and nations.

Responsible voting also connects directly to the next stage of citizenship: community involvement. Once the ballots are counted, democracy depends on citizens who continue to participate — monitoring governance, volunteering locally, and supporting initiatives that translate electoral promises into tangible progress. The same energy that drives people to vote can power civic projects, environmental campaigns, and social reforms.

So, as you raise your inked finger or mark your ballot, remember: you are not just choosing leaders; you are shaping the moral compass of your society. You are affirming that democracy is not a spectator sport but a shared responsibility.

In our next article, Support Community Initiatives, we will explore how this post‑election engagement sustains democracy beyond the voting booth — through local action, volunteerism, and collective problem‑solving. Because democracy does not end with the ballot; it begins there.


#VoteResponsibly #GoodCitizen #CivicDuty #Democracy #Elections #Accountability #HumanRights #Community #Responsibility #Ethics #Governance #Transparency #RuleOfLaw #CivicValues #Participation #InformedCitizen #FightMisinformation #CivicEngagement #CitizenshipSeries #SupportCommunityInitiatives

Wednesday, April 29, 2026

PILLAR 7: WORK & LIVELIHOOD - DIGNITY OF LABOUR


Introduction

The first four pillars gave us the scaffolding of dignity:

  • Health (Pillar 1) as the first right of citizenship, without which no life can flourish.

  • Resilience (Pillar 2) as the inner strength to endure and adapt.

  • Trust (Pillar 3) as the invisible infrastructure binding communities together.

  • Knowledge as Equity (Pillar 4) as the lifelong empowerment that sustains progress.

But all of these pillars ultimately converge in one lived reality: work and livelihood. It is through labor that health is maintained, resilience tested, trust expressed, and knowledge applied. Work is not merely survival or income — it is identity, dignity, and empowerment. A society that values labor values life itself.

India’s challenge is stark: while millions are educated, millions more remain underemployed or trapped in informal work without security. The dignity of labor must become a national ethic, ensuring that every citizen — whether farmer, artisan, coder, or caregiver — is respected, fairly compensated, and supported by safe, humane workplace culture.

This pillar insists that employment, fair wages, and workplace dignity are not economic issues alone — they are moral imperatives. They determine whether education translates into opportunity, whether resilience is rewarded, and whether trust is honored in the marketplace.


Global Lessons

  • Germany — Apprenticeship Model Over 50% of German youth enter dual training programs that combine classroom learning with paid work. As a result, youth unemployment is consistently among the lowest in Europe — around 6% compared to the EU average of 14–15%.

  • Japan — Lifetime Employment Traditions Large firms historically offered lifetime employment, fostering loyalty and stability. Even today, workplace culture emphasizes respect and teamwork. Despite a shrinking workforce, Japan’s employment rate remains high, with female participation rising from 60% in 2012 to nearly 72% in 2025.

  • Nordic Countries — Collective Bargaining & Happiness Union density is among the highest globally — 65–70% of workers are union members. Wages are set through collective bargaining, ensuring equality and work‑life balance. Denmark, Sweden, and Finland consistently rank in the top 10 of the World Happiness Report, linking labor equity directly to social well‑being.

  • United States — Gig Economy & Minimum Wage Debate About 36% of U.S. workers engage in gig work; for 29% it is their primary job. While offering flexibility, gig work often lacks benefits. Minimum wage debates highlight inequity: as of 2025, the federal minimum wage remains $7.25/hour, unchanged since 2009, while states like California raised it to $16/hour, showing the gap in dignity of work.


Indian Vignettes — Work & Livelihood


MGNREGA (Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act) — 2005

  • Why introduced / Purpose: Launched to provide a legal guarantee of at least 100 days of wage employment per rural household per year, reduce rural distress migration, and create durable rural assets.

  • Core design: Demand‑driven public works programme with wage payments, social audits, and women’s participation targets.

  • Scale / Key outputs: Since 2006, MGNREGA has generated billions of person‑days of work annually and created millions of rural assets (water harvesting, roads, land development).

  • Outcomes / Impact:

    • Income support: Provided a predictable wage floor for rural households, cushioning seasonal shocks.

    • Women’s empowerment: High female participation (often 40–60% of workers), increasing women’s control over income.

    • Local assets: Improved water availability and soil conservation in many districts, supporting agricultural productivity.

    • Migration: Evidence shows reduced distress migration in high‑implementation areas.

  • Challenges: Delays in wage payments, variable implementation quality across states, leakage and monitoring gaps, and limited convergence with skill development for longer‑term livelihoods.

Skill India (National Skill Development Mission) — 2015

  • Why introduced / Purpose: To bridge the gap between education and employability by scaling vocational training, certification, and industry linkages for youth.

  • Core design: Multi‑agency mission with short‑term training, sector skill councils, and recognition of prior learning.

  • Scale / Key outputs: Millions trained through government and partner centres; large‑scale campaigns to certify informal workers and youth.

  • Outcomes / Impact:

    • Employability: Many trainees gain short‑term employment or improved wages; sectoral placements in manufacturing, services, and construction.

    • Recognition: Formal certification helps workers transition from informal to formal roles in some sectors.

    • Industry linkages: Apprenticeship and employer partnerships in high‑demand trades.

  • Challenges: Variable training quality, mismatch between training and local labour market demand, low post‑training placement rates in some regions, and the need for stronger career pathways beyond short courses.

Startup India — 2016

  • Why introduced / Purpose: To catalyse entrepreneurship, reduce regulatory friction, and create high‑growth jobs through incentives, incubation, and easier compliance for startups.

  • Core design: Tax and compliance relief, easier patent processes, incubator support, and a Startup India hub for mentorship and funding facilitation.

  • Scale / Key outputs: Rapid growth in registered startups and incubators; notable job creation in tech, services, and product sectors.

  • Outcomes / Impact:

    • Job creation: Startups have created new employment opportunities, especially in urban and semi‑urban areas.

    • Innovation: Increased product and service innovation, export potential, and new business models.

    • Ecosystem growth: Expansion of angel investors, VCs, and accelerators.

  • Challenges: Many startups face scaling barriers, access to late‑stage capital, regulatory uncertainty in some sectors, and regional concentration (majority clustered in a few cities).

Informal Sector

  • Why focus matters / Purpose: The informal economy sustains livelihoods for the majority of Indians; policy must address its vulnerabilities to ensure dignity of labor.

  • Scale / Key facts: The informal sector employs a large majority of India’s workforce (estimates commonly range from 60–80% depending on definitions), spanning agriculture, construction, domestic work, street vending, small manufacturing, and services.

  • Outcomes / Impact:

    • Economic backbone: Informal work provides subsistence and flexibility for millions, especially in rural and peri‑urban areas.

    • Women’s participation: A large share of women’s work is informal and unpaid or underpaid, affecting household welfare and gender equity.

  • Challenges: Low and irregular incomes, absence of social security (health, pensions, unemployment), unsafe working conditions, lack of formal contracts, and weak bargaining power. Policy gaps persist in extending social protection, credit, and skilling at scale.

SEWA & Cooperative Models — (longstanding grassroots examples)

  • Why introduced / Purpose: Self‑Employed Women’s Association (SEWA) and similar cooperatives were created to organize informal women workers for collective bargaining, financial inclusion, and enterprise development.

  • Core design: Member‑owned cooperatives, microfinance, collective marketing, and social protection schemes.

  • Outcomes / Impact:

    • Economic agency: Improved incomes for many women through collective enterprises (handicrafts, textiles, services).

    • Social protection: Access to savings, insurance, and childcare services that enable sustained work participation.

  • Challenges: Scaling cooperative governance, market access, and integrating digital platforms while preserving local control.


Why Work & Livelihood Matter for Quality of Life

  • Economic Security: Fair wages and stable jobs reduce poverty and inequality.

  • Social Dignity: Work is identity. Respect for labor culture builds pride and belonging.

  • Health & Resilience: Safe workplaces prevent accidents and stress. Balanced work hours protect mental health.

  • Trust Infrastructure: Collective bargaining and workplace solidarity strengthen social bonds.

  • Generational Continuity: Livelihoods sustain families, transmit skills, and create intergenerational stability.

  • Innovation & Growth: Entrepreneurship and skill development drive national progress.

  • Equity: Dignity of labor ensures that every form of work — from farming to coding — is valued equally.


Charter Directions for India — Detailed Roadmap

A practical, actionable expansion of the Charter directions that turns principles into measurable policy, institutional practice, community action, and citizen norms.

Governments — Policy, Law, Finance, and Measurement

Goal: Guarantee dignity through wages, safety, social protection, and transparent measurement.

  • Legal Guarantees

    • Fair wage framework: Enact a statutory national minimum wage floor indexed to inflation and regional cost of living; require sectoral minimums through tripartite boards.

    • Universal social protection law: Phase in statutory access to health insurance, pension contributions, and unemployment support for all workers including informal and gig workers.

  • Workplace Safety and Standards

    • National occupational safety code: Consolidate and modernize safety rules; mandate enterprise risk assessments and worker safety committees.

    • Inspection and enforcement: Fund and digitalize labour inspectorates; publish compliance scores for firms and sectors.

  • Income Support and Transition

    • Guaranteed work and wage schemes: Strengthen demand‑driven public employment programs with skill linkages and asset creation.

    • Portable benefits: Create a portable benefits account for informal and platform workers to accumulate contributions across jobs.

  • Financing and Incentives

    • Dedicated Livelihood Fund: Seed a national fund to finance cooperatives, microenterprises, apprenticeships, and regional skill hubs.

    • Tax incentives: Time‑bound tax credits for firms that formalize workers, adopt living wages, or invest in worker training.

  • Measurement and Accountability

    • National Livelihood Equity Index by 2030: Annual index measuring wages, social protection coverage, workplace safety, informal to formal transitions, and job satisfaction.

    • Open data and audits: Mandate public dashboards for employment programs and independent social audits with citizen participation.

Communities — Local Enterprise, Cooperatives, and Social Norms

Goal: Make dignity of labor a lived cultural norm and local economic reality.

  • Cooperatives and Collective Enterprises

    • Local cooperative incubators: Support formation of worker cooperatives with seed grants, business development services, and market linkages.

    • Aggregation for bargaining: Promote federations of small producers and informal workers to access bulk procurement, credit, and contracts.

  • Skill Hubs and Apprenticeships

    • Community skill hubs: Fund local training centers aligned to regional demand and linked to apprenticeships with nearby firms.

    • Employer consortia: Encourage local employers to co‑design curricula and guarantee interviews or apprenticeships for graduates.

  • Social Recognition and Cultural Pride

    • Dignity campaigns: Run community campaigns that celebrate diverse work — artisans, caregivers, sanitation workers — through awards, local festivals, and school curricula.

    • Local childcare and eldercare: Community‑run care services that enable women’s sustained workforce participation.

  • Local Finance and Markets

    • Village enterprise funds: Revolving funds managed by community bodies for microenterprises and working capital.

    • Market access platforms: Digital and physical marketplaces that connect local producers to urban and export markets.

Institutions and Employers — Corporate Practice and Public Sector Leadership

Goal: Embed dignity into workplace design, HR practice, and procurement.

  • Workplace Standards

    • Living wage commitments: Public and private employers adopt living wage policies with phased timelines and third‑party verification.

    • Safe and humane workplaces: Mandatory mental health programs, reasonable working hours, and grievance redressal mechanisms.

  • Career Pathways and Skills

    • Apprenticeship and internship guarantees: Institutions commit to structured apprenticeships with clear learning outcomes and fair pay.

    • Continuous learning: Employer‑sponsored lifelong learning credits and paid study leave for skill upgrades.

  • Inclusive HR and Promotion

    • Transparent promotion criteria: Publish promotion pathways and diversity targets; audit pay equity annually.

    • Formalization drives: Proactively convert informal roles into formal contracts with benefits.

  • Procurement and Market Leverage

    • Responsible procurement: Public and large private buyers prioritize suppliers that meet labor dignity standards, creating market incentives for decent work.

    • Supplier development programs: Support small suppliers to meet compliance and quality standards.

Citizens — Norms, Practices, and Collective Action

Goal: Normalize respect for all work and build citizen capacity to demand dignity.

  • Cultural Norms

    • Value all work: Promote narratives in media and education that honor domestic work, care work, and informal livelihoods as essential to society.

    • Role modeling: Encourage public figures and institutions to visibly support dignity of labor initiatives.

  • Collective Voice

    • Worker organization: Support formation of worker groups, unions, and cooperatives; protect the right to organize and bargain collectively.

    • Consumer choices: Use consumer power to prefer products and services from dignified workplaces.

  • Skills and Lifelong Learning

    • Personal learning accounts: Citizens use portable learning credits for reskilling; communities run peer learning circles.

    • Career guidance: Schools and local centers provide realistic career counseling linking education to local demand.

  • Civic Participation

    • Social audits and monitoring: Citizens participate in audits of employment programs and local enterprises.

    • Local volunteering: Time banking and volunteer mentorship to support apprentices and microenterprises.

Implementation Roadmap and Indicators

Goal: Turn commitments into measurable progress with clear timelines and indicators.

  • Short Term 1–2 years

    • Launch National Livelihood Equity Index pilot.

    • Seed Livelihood Fund and 50 community skill hubs.

    • Mandate basic occupational safety audits for high‑risk sectors.

    • Indicators: number of hubs, fund disbursements, audit completion rates.

  • Medium Term 3–5 years

    • Statutory minimum wage floor enacted and indexed.

    • Portable benefits platform operational for informal and gig workers.

    • Scale cooperative incubators and apprenticeship placements.

    • Indicators: share of workforce with social protection, apprenticeship placement rate, cooperative revenue growth.

  • Long Term 5–10 years

    • Universal social protection coverage expansion.

    • Significant formalization of informal jobs and measurable reduction in precarious work.

    • National culture shift measured by improved job satisfaction and dignity metrics in the Livelihood Equity Index.

    • Indicators: formalization rate, reduction in informal employment share, job satisfaction scores.


Conclusion — The Moral Economy of Work

The first four pillars built the architecture of dignity: Health gave us the right to live. Resilience gave us the strength to endure. Trust gave us the bonds to belong. Knowledge as Equity gave us the power to grow.

Now, Work and Livelihood give us the means to sustain all of them — the rhythm of daily dignity.

Work is where education finds purpose, where resilience earns reward, where trust becomes collaboration, and where health meets stability. It is the living expression of citizenship.

A nation’s greatness is not measured by its GDP alone, but by the dignity of its workers — by how fairly it pays, how safely it protects, and how proudly it honors every form of labor. From the farmer and artisan to the coder and caregiver, every worker builds the moral economy of India.

To restore dignity of labor is to restore balance — between effort and reward, between aspiration and security, between human worth and economic value. It is to declare that no work is menial, no worker invisible, and no livelihood expendable.

When governments legislate fairness, institutions embed empathy, communities celebrate contribution, and citizens respect every hand that builds the nation — India will not just work; it will thrive with dignity.

The next article — Pillar 6: Environment & Sustainability — Living in Balance with Nature — will complete the circle, showing how ecological stewardship safeguards every other pillar of life and labor.



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