whispers in the corridors

In November 2025, the most powerful classroom in Maharashtra had no walls. It had 10,500 girls in school uniforms, 250 newly trained instructors, a celebrated commando master, and a District Collector who refused to treat women's safety as a slogan.
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Over three days in Dhule, the district administration under the leadership of District Collector IAS Bhagyashree Vispute,2017 Batch completed one of the state's largest single district self defence mobilisations for girl students. The initiative, named 'Veerangana', was conceived and personally driven by the Collector. It stands today as a quiet but unmistakable statement: in this district, the safety of a girl will not be left to chance, prayer or paperwork.

A Vision Rooted in Reality
Dhule is a district of distances. Students travel long routes from tribal hamlets, farming villages and small townships to reach their schools and colleges. For IAS Bhagyashree, this geography was not an excuse. It was an instruction. If safety advisories alone could protect girls, India's daughters would already be the safest in the world. They are not.
Instead of one more campaign of posters and pledges, she chose to invest in skill, repetition and muscle memory. The idea was uncompromising: every girl in Dhule, regardless of medium of instruction, board, caste or community, deserves the right to walk home knowing she can protect herself.
"This initiative is about building knowledge, self-awareness and inner strength in our girl students. Every department of the district administration has worked as one team to make it possible. The skills our daughters have learned over these days will stay with them for the rest of their lives." She quoted
A Two-Tier Model Built to Last

What sets the Dhule model apart is that it was never designed as a one time event. It was designed as a system that could outlive the camp itself.
In the first phase, spread over two days, the administration ran an intensive Train the Trainer programme. 250 local trainers, drawn from across Dhule, were rigorously certified, creating a permanent local cadre capable of carrying the programme forward into every block, every school and every academic year.
In the second phase, spread over three days in November 2025, 10,500 girl students from schools and colleges across all mediums of instruction were trained on the ground in practical, situation tested self defence techniques.
The training was led by Grand Master Shifuji Shaurya Bhardwaj, India's most renowned commando trainer and the founder of the Mission Prahar movement, whose presence elevated the initiative from a district programme into a landmark of national significance.
Coordination as Craft
The real challenge of a programme like Veerangana was not the idea, but the execution. Education, Police, Women and Child Development, Health, Tribal Development, transport and logistics ,each department had to move in sync. Any gap could have stalled the effort.
IAS Bhagyashree ensured coordinated action across all line departments, delivering a seamless, district-wide operation at a scale rarely attempted in such a short window. It was administration led from the front.
What 10,500 Girls Carry Home
Numbers tell only half the story. Behind the numbers are girls who discovered their own strength. For first-generation learners and students from Dhule’s interior and tribal belts, Veerangana offered something no textbook can,confidence rooted in skill.
With 250 certified local trainers now embedded across the district, the programme is no longer dependent on a visiting master or a one time camp. Dhule now owns its own self defence ecosystem, ready to be refreshed and scaled year after year. That is the difference between an event and an institution.
Veerangana is more than a headline; it reflects the administrative approach of IAS Bhagyashree Vispute in Dhule focused on measurable, replicable programmes rooted in everyday realities.
While conversations on women’s safety often end with assurances, this initiative delivered action on the ground, backed by scale and outcomes.
For 10,500 girls, Veerangana is no longer a word in a textbook, but strength in their own hands.
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