2Photo© thehindu.comHow Kerala eradicated extreme poverty
The first thing that catches one’s attention on walking into Ambika Devi’s house, located deep inside a bylane at Chellamangalam ward in Thiruvananthapuram, is the humble grocery shop set up at the front verandah and extending to a part of the drawing room. The funding for the shop, a livelihood option tailor-made for her health condition, was provided to the 57-year-old widow along with the house, through the Kerala government’s Extreme Poverty Eradication Programme (EPEP).
“After my husband passed away seven years ago following a long battle with illnesses, I was living in our dilapidated house. But once a part of it collapsed, I went to live with my sister, where I stayed for two years. Last September, I got this house through EPEP,” says Ambika.
“In December,” says Ambika, “I got an initial funding of ₹50,000 from the project to set up the grocery shop. It was an option suggested by the Corporation officials as I could not walk much or take up any strenuous work. Since people from the neighbourhood regularly purchase from here now, I get just enough income to survive,” she says.