
Acharya Pramod hailed Rajeshwar Singh’s grassroots initiatives as a ‘beacon of hope and transformation’, commending his focus on empowering daughters to reshape India’s future.
Taking to X, he posted, “Your vision is a beacon of hope and transformation. By uplifting our daughters, you are sowing seeds of strength, dignity, and progress that will bloom for generations. History will remember your work not just as reform, but as the renaissance of a stronger, wiser Bharat. jai shree kalki.”
Your vision is a beacon of hope and transformation. By uplifting our daughters,
you are sowing seeds of strength, dignity, and progress that will bloom for generations.
History will remember your work not just as reform, but as the renaissance of a stronger, wiser Bharat.
jai… https://t.co/zlFiJ30oFi— Acharya Pramod (@AcharyaPramodk) July 16, 2025
Rajeshwar Singh explained why he is opening Tara Shakti Kendras, digital libraries in girls’ schools, sports clubs in every village, and starting a girls’ degree college in remote Lateef Nagar. He is also conducting digital training at RBS centres and emphasising women’s empowerment.
“Empowering our daughters is not just social reform – it is nation-building,” he posted on X.
Why am I opening –
Tara Shakti Kendra,
Digital Libraries in girls’ schools, Girls sports club in every village, starting Girls degree college in remote Lateef nagar village, Conducting digital training at RBS centres and emphasising on women empowerment?”Because empowering our…
— Rajeshwar Singh (@RajeshwarS73) July 16, 2025
Economic and Social Impact
Singh stressed that women’s empowerment can add $770 billion to India’s GDP by 2025, citing a McKinsey report. Yet, only 23% of women participate in the formal workforce today, according to the World Bank (2024).
“Women’s participation isn’t a privilege – it’s an economic necessity,” he noted. He added that an educated woman is twice as likely to educate her children, quoting UNESCO data. Female literacy is 70.3%, behind male literacy at 84.7%.
“Educate a woman and you educate a generation,” Singh said. He highlighted that empowered women lead to healthier families, better nutrition, and responsible parenting.
Breaking Poverty and Building Leadership
He pointed out that women reinvest 90% of their income into families, as per UN Women India. Their empowerment breaks cycles of poverty, especially in rural, Dalit, and tribal households.
“The fastest way to lift a family out of poverty is to empower its women,” he wrote.
Singh added that India needs more women in governance, with just 15% women in the Lok Sabha. Studies show women leaders invest in health, education, and grassroots development. “When women lead, society listens and progresses,” he said.
He concluded that empowered women create safer societies. States with high gender equality report lower crime, better education, and stronger social harmony. “No nation can rise without lifting its women,” Singh affirmed.
Also Read: PM Modi To Unveil ₹12,200 Crore Development Projects In Bihar & West Bengal
To read more such news, download Bharat Express news apps