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"One person can make a difference, and everyone should try."
These words of one of America's best-known presidents, John F Kennedy, probably inspired a former Indian engineer to try to transform what was once a bone-dry region into a green oasis – simply by motivating its inhabitants to do what they earlier thought was impossible.
The village lies at about 120 km from Bengaluru in Anantapur district of Andhra Pradesh. Little was known of it previously, with no signboards even indicating its location to outsiders. But it has now become famous through its self-sustaining model.
What's more, the village boasts of a Wi-Fi facility, provides entrepreneurial opportunities to farmers and has its own syllabus for children to hone their skills rather than learning by rote.
Even as many parts of rural India still lack rudimentary amenities, the sustainable development model of this small hamlet makes it an example when it comes to water conservation, power generation, ending gender bias and even eliminating casteism.
The initiative was undertaken by a 39-year-old Kalyan Akkipeddi – who gave up a lucrative job in the finance and marketing division at General Electric to travel around the country's villages in search of knowledge and arrived at remote Tekulodu.
Inspired by the simple life of tribals that he had witnessed during his travels, Akkipeddi chose to "intern" with a farmer family in Tekulodu and helped them increase their income from Rs 7,000 a year to about Rs 14,000 a month by putting scientific practices to work and tapping natural resources like solar and wind power.
In 2013, he bought a 12.5-acre plot of land a few kilometres from Tekulodu, on the forest fringe near his home town Hindupur, in the same district of the Rayalaseema region. This has evolved into what he named ProtoVillage – the prototype of an ideal village.
Applying scientific methods to farming and living sustainably, Akkipeddi, along with the villagers, has in four years transformed the barren piece of land into an inspiring model that is self-reliant, environmentally sustainable and socially cohesive.
"We want to be in the place where knowledge resides," said Akkipeddi.
As part of developing the village, ProtoVillage's inhabitants had initially built eight farm ponds in low-lying areas to store rain water and had networked them.
When local authorities had pushed farmers to dig ponds, they couldn't see the merit in them. But when they witnessed how we managed to conserve rain water, the number of requests to the administration to build farm ponds shot up, he noted, adding, "Such is the power of demonstration."
Food is cooked for all the families in a community kitchen by both men and women, irrespective of caste and creed. And they live as a joint family, with even men taking care of children.
The daily chores of the dwellers include working in the fields to grow crops, vegetables, fruits and flowers. Some are involved in carpentry, soap-making, house construction and allied activities. In the evenings, apart from indulging in folk arts like music, dance or drama, "we all sit down to talk about the things we had learnt that day," Akkipeddi shared.
"Earlier, adults in the village who couldn't read and write were shy to learn. But no longer, as we see them interacting with their kids. There is no age or gender bias in learning," said Akkipeddi's wife Shobhita Kedlaya, who plans the curriculum for the village.
Not to be left behind, the children have a system of learning which goes beyond the classroom.
The community aims at meeting nine basic needs:
ProtoVillage also houses a Rural Economic Zone (REZ), where farmers and others from the region can work on entrepreneurial ideas.
"Villagers grow poultry, rear goats and sheep, or do farming with no access to innovative work. The REZ helps them to become entrepreneurs by honing their trading skills," said Akkipeddi.
The village now offers fellowships to rural youths, who can study and adopt their practices back home.
"We would like to create a support system for people from across the country, who want to set up ProtoVillages in their districts," Akkipeddi added.
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