I see these two women chatting away over cups of tea, so completely engrossed in their conversation that they stay unaware of my presence until I walk up to them and say hello. They remain oblivious to the outside world during our exchange; the baker, the vegetable vendor, the local boys that ride up on their bicycles, wondering why it is these women that caught my camera’s eye, all fail to make any real impact on their hearty laughter.
Readily agreeing to my request, the two shift up and make some space for me to sit down, one of them asking me in a combination of Tamil and sign language if I’d like some tea.
Vijiya (left), can speak in Kannada and Tamil, whereas Thoumani (right) nods and shakes her head in various directions in agreement with Vijiya, sometimes echoing what she has to say, and at other times making slight alterations to her statements in Tamil.
I begin by speaking with Vijiya, who has a peculiar straightforwardness to her. I ask her what her age is, and she gives me a definitive ‘27’, only to ponder about the accuracy of this figure a few seconds later. I haven’t moved on to my next question as yet and she blurts out that she’s not married, with an urgency that leaves me a little baffled. So I shift to a safer topic and ask her where she is from. Tamil Nadu, she tells me. It has been 8 years since she moved to Bangalore for work- a city that offers far richer opportunities than her town in Tamil Nadu. We begin to talk about her family- she has eight siblings- and she tells me that she wants to get married in two years. ‘Oh, is that so?’ I ask, attempting to lead the conversation in whichever way she steers it. But she drops it, maybe realizing that two years is further away than she can realistically plan for, maybe just because She doesn’t want to talk about the things she doesn’t have, she says it makes her sad.
Thoumani, although only a maximum of ten years older than Vijiya, has already been married for twenty years and even has a daughter who is married, as well as a son in the fifth standard.
I ask her about the future, and she laughs. I’m not quite sure if she is ridiculing me or if she is humoring the concept of having future plans and fancy hopes, perhaps it is a bit of both. She says ‘I’ve come here to work- everyday- to carry stones on my head and earn a living. That’s as much about the future as there is’.

 

The young face of the Lalitha Subbarao Nanjundayya Memorial Trust, Niska is a dynamic well-travelled advertising professional with a post graduate degree from London, UK. She grew up with the social ethics that her parents and grandparents believed in and even as a young child, used to accompany her mother to the various 4S Foundation projects. As gen next of Lalitha Subbarao Nanjundayya Memorial Trust with a forward thinking global perspective, she is looking to expand the reach of the Foundation into new areas. She feels especially passionately about new-age projects like alternative energy for villages, eco friendly industries and sustainability programmes.

A very successful corporate Image Consultant, who lived in Africa and the Middle East. A personal tragedy, the loss of her surgeon husband, forced her to step out of her secure comfort zone and become a financially independent woman, capable of providing her three children with a secure future. A dynamic Rotarian and Founder Director of The Lalitha Subbarao Nanjundayya Memorial Trust, her goal is to enable young women to fend for themselves and become productive members of society. In a world where so many urgent social problems need tackling, she believes that pooling resources, partnering with like-minded, influential individuals and involving them in social change projects is really the smart way forward.

Subbarao, a highly successful corporate head, also wore many different hats over the course of his illustrious life and career. He was many things to many people. Influential CEO of a multinational company, caring husband and father, Sai baba devotee, composer of popular hymns and bhajans, author of a devotional book and co founder of the 4S Foundation which was later renamed Lalitha Subbarao Nanjundayya Memorial Trust. He passed away in the mid-2000’s but the work he started in collaboration with his wife and daughter lives on.

Lalitha Subbarao is the inspiration behind the Lalitha Subbarao Nanjundayya Memorial Trust. Armed with a strong social conscience and a broad based global education (Masters from Ohio State University, USA) plus a deep desire to help disadvantaged women, her dream is now being realized through the efforts of the Lalitha Subbarao Nanjundayya Memorial Trust. Lalitha was a woman of substance who worked quietly and steadily towards the betterment of those around her. Besides being a role model to her children, she authored and published two books–Nanu Mattu America in Kannada (America and I) describing her student life there in the mid 1950’s and a comprehensive book – Festivals of India. She rightly believed that women must be educated, empowered and financially independent. An educated wife and mother would in turn be a strong positive influence in the family and society at large, just as she was. Her legacy is carried on by the Lalitha Subbarao Nanjundayya Memorial Trust.