Do-gooders, self-starters, game-changers. Twenty-one men and women who have broken the rules to make a difference to their own lives and those of others.
A group of youngsters who combated state apathy and searing conflict to win big at a martial arts contest in Bhutan. A young woman who gave up a career in software to provide a low-cost funeral service for dignity in death. An heir to a healthcare empire who wants to be a catalyst in re-learning ancient Indian wisdom. A young tea-seller in the Dooars who funds and coaches a football team because few things generate as much confidence as brilliance at a sport.
In a world beset with darkness, the few sources of light need to nurtured. The special issue of India today, filled with stories of those who have combated the odds, is a tribute to the human spirit of endurance, excellence and endeavour. It celebrates altruism, the art of giving away. It marks empathy, the ability to feel the pain of others. It honours kindness, the quality of mercy that is increasingly lost in us.
Think of the men and women in the next few pages as participants in The Happiness Project. It is the perfect antidote to the Age of Anxiety we live in now, full of self help manuals and better-life coaches. These men and women have sometimes triumphed in challenging circumstances, to achieve seemingly impossible goals. Their story can be compelling and inspiring. Then there are others, who go beyond their brief, to provide opportunities for others. These are not just the Bill Gates and the Azim Premjis. It could be the young single man who fought the system to be allowed to give an orphaned, mentally challenged child a home. It could be an IAS officer who offers subsidised meals to starving migrant labourers. They are the dispellers of darkness, the harbingers of hope, the counters to cynicism.
This story is from the January 30, 2017 edition of India Today.
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This story is from the January 30, 2017 edition of India Today.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
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