Panipat:As the nascent rays of sunlight declare dawn in the quaint village of Nagla, Jano sets on her motorcycle laden with milk cans every day without a miss. A milk-'woman', as opposed to the typical Indian stereotype, Jano rides to Panipat to sell around 90 litres of milk every day to make a living.
What started as an attempt to keep the financial spine of her family intact has led to a fully flourishing milk business that the woman single-handedly manages. Over the years, the business has seen exponential growth, resulting in an income of around Rs 1 lakh per month for Jano and her family. "The money is more than we need honestly, but then nothing is permanent. We try to spend nearly as much as we earn," said Jano.
Being a middle-aged Muslim woman in Haryana with a husband and children to look after, doing the kind of job Jano does every day is not without its own hurdles. When asked what made her take up such an unusual job, she said the circumstances had left her no other option. "My husband was crippled in an accident a few years ago. My elder child was just 5 at the time and he had fallen severely ill with no money left for his treatment. I figured there was no point in waiting for my husband to get up and earn money. I decided I'll do what he does every day -- sell milk. I learned to ride the bike by myself and got going. It seems like yesterday that I started. God has been kind, it's going good." The woman took forward her husband's business to heights that the family must have never expected.