This Village Was In Total Darkness Until This Boy Came And Changed Their Life Forever

Where there is peace there is prosperity and progress. Where there is inability to resolve conflict, like that in Kashmir, youth get derailed from enlightenment and prosperity.

While youth in Kashmir have been kept busy in stone pelting to fight for their rights, in India, youths are flourishing like the budding flower of spring season.

For the 76 households in the tiny Indian village of Naro ka Kheda, northern Indian state Rajasthan, Prabh Singh,a 24-year old student of Durham University Business School came as a ray of hope to those eyes who had never seen electricity in their village before.

On 23 July 2015, the first house was electrified, thanks to a pilot project by a Durham University Business School student. The village, situated 25kms away from Udaipur, had never had its own power supply. The people of that village had a weekly routine of walking seven kilometers to charge their mobile phones.

Know The Hero

Prabh Singh, a 24-year-old who originally hails from Delhi, is an aspiring boy who always dreamed of wearing a three-piece suit and working in an investment bank. Instead he hatched a plan to bring electricity to remote areas in his home country.

“I was talking with three classmates about the availability of solar panels on eBay and how people in Britain live off the grid during their casual fishing trips using affordable solar power,” he explains. “It ended up being the inspiration of my project.

“I thought, if the people in the West can use solar power as a luxury item, then why can’t people in my home country, where around 75m people live without electricity, use it as a necessity item?”

And so “Project Kiran” – which means (ray of light) was born.

“Despite being born and brought up in India, I had never spent a night in a village, let alone a night in a village without access to electricity,” Singh says. “I worked with the villagers, lived with the villagers and sat on the floor in their dark houses eating with them to get a sense of the benefits ‘Project Kiran’ could bring.”

The £7,000 cost of the pilot project was covered by collective funding from the villagers and North East Centre for Technology Application and Reach (NECTAR), an autonomous society in the Indian government, who agreed to support to the initiative.

The project created an ‘easy to install and service’ electricity kit, ensuring the initiative was accessible to residents in remote locations and comprised of a solar panel, three light bulbs, a strip light and a charging socket for a mobile phone. It has also been able to set up a maintenance network bringing in revenue, which Singh says enables the village to add around 50,000INR (£500) to their local economy.

Wish You All The Best Singh

Aiming at encouraging rural entrepreneurship, now Singh wants to take his ray of light to other villages, and hopes to turn his project into a profit making business,

“I am in talks with an Indian central government agency to replicate the same project in 50 remote Indian villages based on the similar kind of revenue and service mechanism.

“The happiness and the amazement which I saw in those villagers’ eyes after they used electricity in their house for the first time is unmatched to any professional accomplishment that I could ever imagine achieving.”