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      | Patna, March 7: Anita Kuswaha, a teenage role model and   Unicef poster girl from a poverty-stricken family in a Bihar village, is   fighting for survival. The beekeeper is in desperate need of money to revive her   apiaries, devastated by floods last year. Anita, now 19, has been keeping bees   for a livelihood for the last two years.
 It is ironic that the National   Council for Educational Research and Training (NCERT) has included a new chapter   about the success story of Anita - titled "Anita and the honey bees" - in a   Class IV book on environmental studies called "Looking Around". Her story is   inspiring students, but she herself cannot afford to go back to college.
 
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         |  Anita is upset that she has had to discontinue studies for months due to lack of   money and the need to earn a livelihood. Till July last year, she was studying   for her Bachelor in Arts (BA) English degree from MDDM College,   Muzaffarpur.
 "I stopped going to college because I have no money to   purchase books, pay the fees and bus fares. College is 15 km from my village,"   she said.
 
 Anita is disappointed with the way bank and state government   officials treated her when she approached them for a loan or a grant to help   restart her beekeeping activities.
 
 "Banks refused to give me a loan and   the state government did not help. I needed Rs.50,000 to re-start beekeeping as   the apiaries were completely destroyed by floods," she told IANS   Friday.
 
 Bank officials told her they could not give her a loan because   she had no guarantor.
 
 "I don't have a kisan credit card, nor is my name   on the BPL (below poverty line) list. So, bank officials refused to provide me   loan for beekeeping," she said. Anita asked for help from some NGOs working for   women's empowerment, but they have not responded either.
 
 Muzaffarpur   district magistrate Vinay Kumar told her that she would get financial help by   July, when the new season of beekeeping begins. "I assured her that she would   get a loan, but not now," Kumar said.
 
 Anita is unhappy with the Unicef,   too. "I was selected by the Unicef and declared their star girl. But they did   not help me. The Unicef forgot me after taking advantage of my name for vested   interest," she alleged.
 
 The NCERT chapter describes Anita, popularly   known as "queen bee", as a role model for children because of her efforts to   educate herself and rear bees to augment family income.
 
 The chapter is   full of amazing but true stories about Anita, born to poverty-stricken parents.   Both her parents work as agricultural labourers. Anita's determination to   educate herself despite poverty has been termed in the book as a "great   struggle".
 
 Her determination to rear bees two years ago when she was 17   proved to be a turning point in supplementing her family's income and funding   her school as well as college education.
 
 Later, dozens of women of her   village took to beekeeping to earn their livelihoods and educate their children.   "I started with only one box and there were over 150 boxes for beekeeping before   the floods destroyed them," she said.
 
 Till early 2006, Anita was an   unknown face in Pattiayasam, a village largely populated by Dalits, in   Muzaffarpur district, nearly 70 km from the state capital here.
 
 Anita   refused to marry young and convinced her parents to let her continue her   studies. She hit the headlines when Unicef picked up her story and selected her   as part of their "girl stars" campaign in 2006.
 
 She was the youngest of   the 15 girls selected for a Unicef multimedia campaign to create icons from   underprivileged backgrounds. The UN body made a film on her and released books   about Anita's inspirational story, along with others.
 
 Anita embarked on   the path of self-reliance by collecting Rs.1,500 by tutoring children and   purchased a box containing a queen bee.
 
 Last year, she received the "Best   Bee-Farming" award from Rajendra Agriculture University (RAU), Pusa, in   Samastipur.
 
 But now Anita, who was hailed as a symbol of women   empowerment so recently, is fighting alone.
 (IANS) |    
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