Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Job offers, financial aid pour in for Laxmi

- Shara Ashraf letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Acid attack survivor and activist Laxmi Agarwal’s phone has not stopped ringing since Tuesday. Till that morning, the 30-year-old was struggling to makeendsme­et–shehasa threeyear-old daughter and a dependant mother, and was house- and job-hunting.

Within a day of her story being published in the Hindustan Times, though, Agarwal, who has been unemployed for a year now, has been flooded with job offers. Financial aid has poured in from all quarters, including actor Akshay Kumar who transferre­d ₹5 lakh into her account after reading the story. Agarwal is overwhelme­d. “I can’t express how I feel... my daughter and I are not alone. I have got more than 200 calls since yesterday. Many have written to me on social media, wanting to send help.”

“A man deposited ₹10,000 in m account at 2am last nigh another social media user fro Kashmir who didn’t want to b named sent me ₹15,000. A journa ist sent ₹16,000. In all, I hav received around ₹50,000 throug social media so far and a numbe of people are asking for m account number,” says Agarwal

She stays in a two-room accommodat­ion in east Delhi’s Laxmi Nagar and had separated from her live-in boyfriend — a fellow activist and the father of her daughter — Alok Dixit a few years back.

In the story published on Tuesday HT d t il d sible eviction due to her inability to pay the higher rent her landlord was demanding.

Kumar, who has starred in a number of films based on social issues, says: “My contrib ti n is gesture. I am embarrasse­d to even mention it. The idea is that Laxmi should be able to search for a job with dignity, without having to worry about paying house rent or stressing about not being able to provide a nutritious meal to her baby. I wish people realise that when a person is in need of livelihood, medals, awards and certificat­es don’t pay the bills. It’s important to support through practical means.”

In her interview with HT, Agarwal said the despite receiving a number of awards, walking the ramp and giving motivation­al talks, she had no money to even meet her basic needs.

Dixit, for his part, said he was helpless and did not have money to support their child.

A trained beautician, Agarwal says she has received 15 job offers within just 24 hours of the publicatio­n of the story. “I can’t believe that there are so many compassion­ate human beings. I am making a list of all the offers and will be going for meetings soon.”

Among those who have offered Agarwal help with employment is the owner of a hair and makeup academy who has proposed to make her the head of a salon after she completes a paid internship and also offered to sponsor her daughter’s schooling; the president of Rotary Club of New Delhi who has promised to arrange for a skill enhancemen­t training; and a jewellery designer who has assured Agarwal of providing for her daughter’s education.

Agarwal was injured and her face disfigured after a stalker threw acid at her in 2005. Multiple corrective surgeries later, she went on to become a well-known crusader against the crime. In 2014, she received an award from then US First Lady Michelle Obama. Along with Dixit, Agarwal co-founded an NGO where she was working as a director until last year, when she quit on account of some difference­s with her former partner.

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