In their 17th year, life is tough already for Tamanna, Manju, and Rosna. Their sisterhood isn't founded upon familial ties; it finds its binding in poverty. In hardship. In struggle. Tamanna's family toils on a patch of land that provides them less than Rupees 40,000 a year. The other two are marginally better. Daughters of farmers, rickshaw pullers, and daily wage earners, their families seek to find additional means to stay afloat by employing themselves as maids and domestic helps wherever they can. Their villages are nearly forgotten spots on the map of India. A few houses and a few people. Tamanna's village for instance is less than a square kilometre in size and houses less than 300 people the last time the government took a census. These are those nameless and faceless places along borderlands that have inherited loss of identity, stagnation, and a leaking population that migrates to the urban centres for better pay, if not better lives. But dreams interplay with reality. Even in the harshest of conditions. And while it is easier to talk about feeding the right wolf in our mind for it to take over and steer the course of our life, when we are forced to drop coaching courses for the lack of money, or take up odd jobs to stave off an existential threat like hunger, survival matters for the most of us, the right wolf in ours mind doesn't. It is only in rare cases that we come across fighters that dare to think beyond their present and into the future. Only in rare cases do we bump into dreamers that are wired to see through the maze of poverty and hunger of a future that is better; a future that only they can build. A breed of rarity separates these girls from the most of us. Tamanna is a School Final district topper with 99%, while Manju and Rosna follow her close behind at 97% and 96% respectively. Their dreams have not only interplayed with their realities, they have triumphed. They have laid claim to the first milestone in what could be an incredible journey for these teen youngsters. But with the pandemic disrupting the regular school hours, these girls were suddenly looking at an uncertain future. Schools were the only deep root that helped hold their dreams. They do not have the money to take tuitions; schools are their only saviours. And when these schools shut down, and eventually went online - reaching out to students through mobiles and tablets, internet and wifi - Tamanna-Manju-Rosna looked at a future that was far removed from the path they had been fighting for since they were kids. Prayatna Foundation knows how challenging life could be. We know how Tamanna-Manju-Rosna trio, and scores of others like them would need all the support that they can muster to continue on their courageous, and quite incredible chosen path. That is why we have affirmed to do as much as we can for these young champions. There is another reason for this too. While we have been active to the best of our ability to minimise social injustice towards women and children, we have reached out to Tamanna and a hundred students like her, because we too, like these girls, are young. We have just a few years behind us with many more to go. There is a synergy in our resolve. We have sought each other to make this incredible journey worthwhile. So in October 2021, in what is the first of our many future initiatives we distributed e-learning devices to 100 girls like Tamanna around Dakshin Dinajpur, West Bengal to help them tide over the uncertain times that are the result of Covid-19. Now Tamanna-Manju-Rosna can connect not only to learn from their school, but they also have access to the internet where they can get all the academic help that they require for continuing to score and grow well.