"I am extremely happy that the Prime Minister took my name and praised my work. It is a morale booster," Noor Jehan told PTI as she welcomed scores of BJP leaders and media persons who flocked her home in the nondescript village Beri Dariyawan, which is some 25 kms from here.
Noor Jehan provides solar lamps to villagers at a moderate cost of about Rs 3.3 a day or Rs 100 per month, helping about 50 families in the village where government infrastructure is virtually non-existent and electricity has still not reached.
Hailing Noor Jehan, he said she is working as per the meaning of her name -- 'giving light to the world'.
"Her work can be an inspiration for all those want to fight climate change," he said.
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After the demise of her husband 20 years ago, Noor Jehan did not know how she was to raise her small children without any land to till.
"But three years back my life changed when an NGO, which used to operate community radio in my village, provided me with a solar plate and rechargeable lamp," she said.
Initially she used the lamp to light her home at night, but she started renting it out when she ran out of money for her children's studies. "When the NGO came to know that I've started renting out the lamp, they provided me with some more. Today, I have 50 of them and the NGO has given me five more solar plates as well," Noor Jehen said.
Noor Jehan now hopes that PM's praise will help her in getting some financial aid from the government so that she can raise the number of lamps to 100.
"There is no power in the village and therefore, the demand for solar lamps is increasing as more and more people want to make sure their children get to study even during the night hours," she said.