<\/a><\/p>\nIn 2012, an unexpected visitor arrived in her village. Yuwa Foundation, an NGO, was looking for local kids for a football program aimed at empowering girls<\/strong>. Seema, only nine years old, didn\u2019t hesitate to join the program. It was a decision that sent ripples through her conservative community. Between fetching buckets of water from a well and attending the local government school, she carved out time to join the team. What started as a simple game became a life-changing journey.<\/p>\nFootball took her places. She played in local tournaments, then national championships, and eventually, international programs where she saw a world beyond Jharkhand. For her, football was more than a sport. It was a passport to possibility. “I just wanted to play. I never thought it would take me so far,”<\/em> she once said in an interview.<\/p><\/blockquote>\nWhile excelling in football, Seema had another battle to fight – education<\/strong>. Her class had 70 students, and learning felt distant and impersonal. Recognizing the potential of girls like Seema, Yuwa Foundation opened a school in 2015, reducing class sizes and bringing in teachers from across India and the US. For the first time, education felt personal, and the prospect of a brighter future felt real.<\/p>\nDetermined to steer life to that future, Harvard\u2019s Seema Kumari started working tirelessly. She became a football coach and paid her school fees from the salary, balancing academics and training with unwavering dedication<\/strong>. \u201cThere was the pressure of dowry and the cost of weddings in the village. Girls are a burden on their parents. You don\u2019t get to live your education,\u201d<\/em> she had once admitted. But she gritted her teeth to change this narrative.<\/p>\nIn 2018, she was selected for a summer program at Washington University and in 2019, she attended another at the University of Cambridge in England. Following Cambridge, she was one of the 40 students selected for a one-year exchange program in the United States. These experiences exposed her to new horizons, new cultures, new possibilities, and the epiphany that she was capable of much more than she had ever imagined.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
Seema Kumari’s academic journey from India to USA culminated at Harvard University<\/strong>. It wasn\u2019t even on her radar until one of her teachers encouraged her to apply. Seema hesitated. But with the support of her mentors, she took the leap and secured a full scholarship to Harvard. A divine blessing for a village girl for whom education is a luxury. Seema became a part of Harvard’s Class of 2025, majoring in Economics.<\/p>\n“I remember when I got the acceptance letter,<\/em> I was happy, but my parents\u2026 they didn\u2019t know what Harvard was. They had never heard of it.”<\/em> She revealed in an interview. She became the girl who defied traditions and landed where no one from her village had ever dared to dream- the prestigious Harvard University in the USA.<\/p><\/blockquote>\nWhen the news broke, it wasn\u2019t just her village that celebrated. The world took notice<\/strong>. Actress Priyanka Chopra Jonas congratulated Seema. News outlets flashed her name. For the first time, Seema wasn\u2019t just a village girl with a dream. She became an inspiration. “It was overwhelming. People I had never met before were talking about me. But deep down, I knew this was just the beginning,”<\/em> she said.<\/p>\nAs she prepares to graduate this year, she is thinking beyond herself. Seema doesn\u2019t want to be the exception. She wants to be the start of a revolution<\/strong>. “I want to go back and create something for the girls in my village,”<\/em> she says. “A place where they don\u2019t have to fight to learn, where they don\u2019t have to choose between dreams and expectations.” <\/em>She envisions an organization to empower girls and women in villages through education and financial independence.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"\u201cBorn into struggle, raised in limitations, but destined for greatness.\u201d This sums up Seema Kumari\u2019s journey from a remote Indian village where girls\u2019 education is a taboo and child marriage is still in practice to a prestigious Ivy League university. Unlike the protagonist Anuja in the Oscar-nominated Anuja short film, Seema made it to Harvard […]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":35041,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":[],"categories":[4],"tags":[],"yoast_head":"\n
From Fetching Water in Village to Studying at Harvard: Seema Kumari Rewrites Her Life<\/title>\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n\t \n\t \n\t \n \n \n \n\t \n\t \n\t \n