Rani Durgavati, who remembered as a warrior-queen, still speaks to a nation of women who are re-shaping public life, business, science and civic affairs.
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Centuries before India’s ministries, policies and flagship programmes were ever imagined, a young queen rode to the frontlines and chose honour, courage and duty over surrender. Rani Durgavati — remembered across central India as a warrior-queen and a paragon of valour — still speaks to a nation of women who are re-shaping public life, business, science and civic affairs. On her 501st Birth Anniversary, we are reminded of her story and the values it embodies which form a living thread from the battlefields of the 16th Century to the Policies that shape Modern India.
A Portrait of Courage
Rani Durgavati’s life became a legend because she refused to be a passive figure in history. Faced with invading forces, she took up the responsibility of defending her realm and people. That image of a woman who led, decided and sacrificed — transformed her from a regional ruler into a national symbol. Today, whether remembered in stories, memorials or local culture in cities such as Indore and across Central India, she is cited as proof that leadership is not confined by gender.
From Symbol to Policy: How India answers the call
Modern India’s architecture of women’s welfare and empowerment championed by the Ministry of Women and Child Development and allied Departments takes inspiration from exactly that blending of agency and public purpose that Rani Durgavati represented. Where the queen defended territory and people in her time, today the Government aims to defend and enlarge women’s rights, access and opportunities across multiple fronts:
Education and Social Parity: Programmes designed to improve girls’ education and reduce gender gaps address the long-term foundations of agency because leadership grows where schooling, confidence and aspiration grow.
Economic Empowerment and Entrepreneurship: From skill-building initiatives to credit and market access, these measures enable women to step into leadership in Commerce and the Professions which are the modern equivalents of ruling and decision-making.
Safety and Legal Protection: One Stop Centres and Helplines have strengthened legal frameworks to secure women’s bodily autonomy and civic participation so that fear does not limit vocation or voice.
Health and Maternal Care: Schemes for maternal health and nutrition invest in women’s wellbeing, enabling sustained public engagement and leadership roles.
Grassroots Governance and Representation: Efforts to expand women’s participation in Panchayats and Urban Local Bodies echo the political agency that Rani Durgavati exercised in her realm.
Progress measured in lives and milestones
The last few decades have seen unmistakable gains: rising female literacy and workforce participation in certain sectors, growing numbers of women in elected office, rapidly increasing female entrepreneurship, and more public conversation about safety and equal opportunity. These shifts are not just statistics; they are the modern manifestations of the same principle Rani Durgavati’s life taught that when women are equipped and empowered they reshape society.
Rani Durgavati’s Legacy as a Foundation
What makes Rani Durgavati’s example especially valuable is its dual character: moral and practical. Morally, she stands for dignity, courage and responsibility. Practically, her example normalises women as decision-makers and protectors of public welfare. That dual legacy has been part of India’s civic imagination for generations, helping to create the social soil in which policies for women’s empowerment can take root.
A New Lens for “Viksit Bharat”
As India pursues its vision of a developed nation — the “Viksit Bharat” the country aspires to become — it needs a fresh lens: view development through the scale, depth and equality of women’s agency. A “women-centred Viksit Bharat” would treat women’s full participation not as an add-on but as a central development indicator. Practically, that means Measuring progress by women’s leadership across sectors (boards, public service, community institutions), not just by headline welfare indicators.
By also designing infrastructure and urban spaces that enable safe mobility and economic participation for women. Investing in lifelong learning and reskilling so women can access tomorrow’s jobs and technologies.
Thus the focus being of prioritising policies that reduce unpaid care burdens - childcare, eldercare and community support — to unlock women’s time for public and economic spaces.
When these choices are made, the nation honours the spirit of leaders like Rani Durgavati in the most meaningful way: by ensuring every woman has the capability to lead, protect and build.
Thus linking the past courage to future promise, Rani Durgavati’s story is not a relic; it is a living argument for what India can become. Her courage was an assertion of women’s right to shape public destiny. Today, India’s ministries, civil society and citizens are tasked with converting that assertion into everyday reality — through schools and hospitals, through laws and livelihoods, through safe streets and equal boards. If the pulse of a Viksit Bharat is measured by the strength of its women, then honouring Rani Durgavati means making that strength universal.
In the end, the queen’s finest legacy may not be a monument of stone but a nation where millions of women lead from every podium life offers – be it at home, in the markets, in science and in governance carrying forward a tradition of courage and stewardship into the 21st century.
Savitri Thakur
Minister of State for Women and Child Development, Government of India