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        Bochha (Muzaffarpur), March 16 : Ragini Devi, a Bihar villager,   was once selected as an "Asadharan Mahila", or extraordinary woman, for helping   empower women. Rightly so, since she seems to have a fire in her belly as she   takes on the task of spreading awareness about AIDS. Hailing from Balthi Rasoolpur village in Muzaffarpur district,   about 70 km from Patna, she was chosen for the honour in 2006 for her   pathbreaking move to take up vegetable cultivation and inspire hundreds of women   to take it up as a means of livelihood.
 
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  The New Delhi-based Grassroots magazine called Ragini, who comes from a social   and economically marginalized background, "India's first Asadharan   Mahila".
 She also hit the headlines two years ago when she inaugurated an   international woman's conference along with the then Indian president A.P.J.   Abdul Kalam in New Delhi. It was a rare opportunity for a woman from her   background.
 
 But not ready to sit on past laurels, she has begun a   sustained effort to spread awareness about HIV/AIDS in the rural hinterland of   Bihar. Being a counsellor, Devi is busy spreading awareness about HIV/AIDS in   villages.
 
 "I am doing it as voluntary work to make a difference" she   said.
 
 "Till date the response is more than expected. People, mostly   village women, show keen interest in learning about AIDS and its prevention   measures. But the fact remains that there are deep-rooted myths and stigma   attached to the disease," she said.
 
 According to official statistics,   12,000 people among Bihar's over 83 million population are infected with the   virus, but AIDS campaigners claim these figures are under-reported. Unofficial   figures put the HIV/AIDS population of Bihar at 40,000. They are among India's   2.5 million people who suffer from the disease.
 
 Ragini Devi recalled that   initially women were reluctant to discuss and talk about HIV/AIDS due to   widespread misinformation related to the disease.
 
 "It took a few days to   convince and motivate them to gather in front of my thatched house to join the   campaign against HIV/AIDS," she said.
 
 She admitted that it was not an   easy task. "I began my campaign against HIV/AIDS last year with the help of   hand-written placards and short lectures in the local Hindi dialect," Ragini   Devi said.
 
 She decided to create awareness about prevention measures to   minimize the chance of HIV/AIDS and to fight against   misconception.
 
 Ragini Devi's initiative to campaign against HIV/AIDS is   seen here as a right step in rural Bihar.
 
 Health officials associated   with the Bihar State AIDS Control Society said that in rural Bihar, migrant   workers are considered the main carrier of HIV/AIDS virus because they got   infected during their stay outside to earn a livelihood.
 
 During her   previous effort for women's empowerment through vegetable cultivation, she had   inspired dozens to earn their livelihood through her initiative.
 
 Ragini   Devi's move to take up vegetable cultivation made her a household name in   Bochhan block.
 
 "Thanks to her, vegetables which were cultivated on a   small scale a few years ago, are now sent to different places across India and   exported too," villagers said.
 
 (IANS)
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