Tag Archives: Gazalla Amin

Kashmiri woman entrepreneur wins laurels

JAMMU &  KASHMIR :

Srinagar :

A progressive woman entrepreneur of the valley has won laurels for the state by being selected for two different honors both at national and global level. Doctor turned entrepreneur, Gazalla Amin has been selected for Vital Voices Lead Fellowship programme and has been declared winner for the ‘India Today Woman Entrepreneur of the year 2013’ award.

Vital Voices Lead Fellowship is a global initiative that aims to identify, invest and bring visibility to extraordinary women around the world by unleashing their leadership potential to transform lives and accelerate peace and prosperity in their communities. The fellowship is a three year programme wherein only 100 women from across the world are selected after every 3 years.

“The VV (Vital Voices) lead fellowship is a wonderful thing and I am grateful on being selected as a part of this wonderful experience. It’s a huge honour and means a lot to me,” Gazalla Amin told this reporter.

Gazalla Amin chairperson, Fasiam Agro Farms is the first woman entrepreneur to be selected for the prestigious Vital Voices Lead Fellowship programme from Kashmir. “It means a lot to me as interacting with women from across the globe will help me expand my business understanding. It can help me channelizing my dreams, and understanding how to make it better. And most importantly it will help me receive education about realizing goals and I may contribute to women’s issues in my own region,” said Amin.

In addition to this, Gazalla Amin has also won the ‘India Today Woman Entrepreneur of the Year’ award, the grand ceremony of which was held on April 19, in New Delhi. The India Today Women Entrepreneur of the Year Award is a prestigious award which is given for outstanding achievement as an entrepreneur. The award is given on a nationwide level by the India Today Group. Gazalla Amin who was informed through email and a phone call about her feat was declared winner among the three shortlisted candidates.

“It gives me immense pleasure to inform you that a select Jury has nominated you as the winner of the award in “India Today Woman Entrepreneur of the year” category. Three names were short-listed in this category from which you were selected unanimously,” reads the email sent to Amin by India Today group.

Gazalla Amin was invited for the award ceremony ‘India Today Woman Summit and Awards 2013’ which was held on April 19 in the Indian capital. The summit aims to provide women executives in India with the vision, strategies and skills needed to succeed in today’s world, both in their homes and as professionals in the workplace.

“We all work hard to achieve something and it’s absolutely wonderful when you get a chance to learn more. And the recognition one gets for their efforts encourages others also to try and do better,” added Amin.

It was in 2004 when Gazalla Amin swapped from medicine to entrepreneurship and decided to grow Lavender flowers and make a business out of it. Since then there has been no looking back as she has emerged as one of the prominent faces of women empowerment.

source: http://www.worldpulse.com / WorldPulse.com / Home> Public Story / by Khurram Rasool / June 08th, 2013

Woman on top

Srinagar, JAMMU & KASHMIR :

Dr Gazalla Amin’s is an incredible story that holds the promise of inspiring many women writes Sana Altaf.

In December 2013 when Dr Gazalla Amin became the first woman member of the Jammu and Kashmir Chamber of Commerce and Industry, the first thing she did was to put up a ‘no smoking’ signboard outside the office premises in Srinagar. Recently when the city received its heaviest snowfall of the season, bringing normal life to a standstill, she decided to take matters into her own hands. With the snow cutters she had purchased before the winter set in, Amin and some of her employees cleared roads and by-lanes across the city, something that had been neglected by the local civic agency.

“The city was under a pristine carpet of white. No one had made it to work that day and I wondered why they were holed up inside their homes when it was so lovely. When I called up some of my staff, I realised that many would be stuck as only a few streets had been swept. So I simply gathered a few people together and we did the job ourselves. All of us have to get involved in the community, we cannot always rely on the government,” asserts Amin, who is in her late-forties.

For years now, Amin has been trying to work at bringing about positive change in the lives of ordinary Kashmiris. She was not, however, groomed to be the change-maker she became. Like most middle-class girls in the Valley, she went to the all-girls Presentation Convent in Srinagar and, later, enrolled in the medical college at Srinagar. “I never wanted to be a doctor. But since my parents wanted me to be one, I had no choice. In those days, children hardly had a say in such matters,” remarks Amin.

During the fourth year of her MBBS degree, however, the family started looking for a suitable match for her and soon she was married to a young businessman. Though she completed her studies after marriage, Amin never got down to practicing medicine as she became a mother soon after. As she dutifully ran her home and took care of her three sons, she decided to put her education to good use by teaching at the newly-instituted Jhelum Medical College in the early 1990s. She continued there for three years, but gave it up as her sons grew older and needed more attention. All this time, however, Amin never once abandoned her secret desire to do something that “lay outside the confines of what I had been told was ‘good’ for me”.

That opportunity came to her when she visited her native Sonawari village in Bandipora district of south Kashmir. Amin recalls, “The land there was lying neglected and barren. I realised that I could make a difference in the local community by involving them in cultivating crops that would be commercially viable.”

In 2004, when Amin decided to grow lavender and rose in order to extract and sell their oils, her family and friends were not in favour of her making the switch from medicine to business. After all, women were never associated with entrepreneurship in Kashmir. But Amin was determined to fight such feudal attitude and invested her savings of about Rs 8 lakh in the farm to grow and process aromatic plants.

“As I was from a professional family, my exposure to running a business was minimal. But I decided to hang in there anyway. I didn’t earn anything out of it for three years, but I knew I would learn the ropes on the job,” she adds. Another driving factor for her was that she was keen to see local farmers increase their earning potential – a lavender crop brought in about 20 times as much as, say, maize – to better support their families.

Today, Amin’s Fasiam Agro Farms, besides dealing in essential oils, includes dry fruits and honey under its umbrella. Apart from her business venture, she founded Women’s Association for Kashmir Entrepreneurs (WAKE) in an effort to provide direction to women’s entrepreneurship in the state.

Last year, she also contested the elections of the Jammu and Kashmir Chamber of Commerce and Industry, which had no female representation since its inception in 1934. Amin broke into this privileged circle by becoming the first woman member of its executive council.

source: http://www.deccanherald.com / Deccan Herald / Home> Supplements> She / WFS / February 15th, 2014