Dear Sameer,

 

Thank you for sharing this powerful compilation from Feminism In India. It is 
an incredible list of achievers, and I am in awe of the spirit of these women 
who have consistently pushed beyond the structural limitations imposed upon 
them.

 

What strikes me most about these stories is the shift in narrative—moving away 
from the "inspirational" trope and focusing instead on the hard truth: that the 
barrier isn't the individual, but the inaccessible infrastructure and the 
"implementation gap" in our policies.

 

The work being done by leaders like Dr. Anjlee Agarwal and Sminu Jindal to move 
the needle from "charity" to "Universal Design" and "economic imperative" is 
exactly what we need to see more of. Similarly, Sheetal Devi dismantling binary 
frameworks in sports is a masterclass in why specialized categories shouldn't 
always be a boundary.

 

As I’ve been navigating my own recent frustrations with digital accessibility 
on major platforms, reading about Virali Modi’s stance on "aesthetic ableism" 
and the right to the city really resonates. It’s a timely reminder that 
accessibility is a constitutional right, not a conditional privilege.

 

I hope that in 2026, we see the government and the private sector move from 
"recognizing" these stories to actually fixing the flawed foundations they 
expose.

 

From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On Behalf 
Of Sameer
Sent: Monday, December 22, 2025 9:29 PM
To: Access India <[email protected]>
Subject: [AI] 8 Women With Disabilities Who Made Headlines In 2025

 

 

8 Women With Disabilities Who Made Headlines In 2025

>From winning world cups to campaigning for social justice, these 8 women with 
>disabilities redefined accessibility as a fundamental right.

Vishal Sharma, Dec 22, 2025

 

2025 was a year when the country finally recognised the need to hear the 
stories of people with disabilities and saw some significant changes in the 
narratives

on disability. The country seemed to recognise the urgent need for 

accessibility

and the fact that immediate action is the need of the hour. However, needless 
to say a lot is yet to be done by both the government and society as a whole

for true inclusion and accessibility.

 

The year 2025 turned out to be one when women with disabilities not just made 
big achievements but broke many glass ceilings. They made news headlines

in sports, innovation, and activism. From winning inaugural world cups to 
breaking records in able-bodied categories, the achievements of our female stars

once again proved the fact that disability lies in the inaccessible 
infrastructure, in the binary systems and discriminatory attitudes and not the 
people

themselves.

This list celebrates 8 trailblazers of India who with their resilience and 
spirit, have not only realised their own dreams and the dreams of a community

long relegated to the margins of our country, but also sought a just and 
accessible living environment that would be built for every Indian citizen.

1. Sheetal Devi (Archer)

Source: Olympics

At the 2025 World Para Archery Championships, Sheetal Devi, 18, secured 
individual gold, but her glass ceiling moment was when she was selected for the

able-bodied 

national team

for the Asia Cup in Jeddah.

 

Born without arms, the archer began shooting using her legs and shoulders. By 
competing with 60 able-bodied sportspersons in the compound women category

and securing the qualification, Sheetal Devi not only made a mark in the 
history of the country’s sports but also effectively dismantled the binary 
frameworks

of the sporting world, which historically have prioritised able-bodied people 
and reduced disabled sports to secluded para sports.

 

At the 2025 World Para Archery Championships, Sheetal Devi, 18, secured 
individual gold, but her glass ceiling moment was when she was selected for the

able-bodied 

national team

for the Asia Cup in Jeddah.

 

‘Hume kisi ko jawab nahi dena… humara arrow jawab dega (We don’t have to 
explain, our arrow will do that)’ – her coach’s remarks became a motto for the

young archer making her sporting journey in the world.

 

2. Nidhi Goyal (Comedian & Disability Rights Activist)

Photo: UN Women/Susan Markisz

Nidhi Goyal is a pioneer female disabled 

comedian

and a disability rights activist. Nidhi Goyal introduced her 
‘Feminist-Disabled’ framework through the International Purple Fest and her 
leadership at

Rising Flame in 2025.

 

She has shown the world that comedy can be an effective tool against ableist 
and gendered norms, can help us to reach out to people and build bridges that

empower the people who have long neglected. By tapping into the gap between art 
and policies as a public speaker and comedian, Nidhi has opened up important

conversations about consent, desire and leadership of 

disabled women.

 

3. Dr. Anjlee Agarwal (Policy Architect)

Dr. Anjlee’s website

With her leadership at ‘Sugamya Yatra‘, Dr Anjlee Agarwal made efforts to 
incorporate disability inclusion in India’s urban transformation, by demanding

that ‘Universal Design’ be the baseline for India’s rapidly growing cities.

 

As a member of the NITI Aayog CSO Committee, her work has focused on the 
disability laws’ ‘implementation gap‘ – a space where progressive legal 
protections

often fail on the ground in making any significant improvements in disabled 
people’s lives.

 

As a member of the NITI Aayog CSO Committee, her work has focused on the 
disability laws’ ‘implementation gap‘ – a space where progressive legal 
protections

often fail on the ground in making any significant improvements in disabled 
people’s lives. Through her advocacy, she has been trying to ensure that new

infrastructure projects, from metro stations to government buildings, should be 
built aiming at providing dignity to all citizens

 

4. Virali Modi (Public Speaker and Model)

Source: YourStory.com

Virali Modi, a renowned motivational speaker, is making history by using her 
visibility to bring down the ‘aesthetic ableism‘ of urban cultural spaces

in India. By her regular capturing of daily navigation of accessibility in a 
country rampant with new infra projects, she exposes the flawed foundations

of modern development which totally ignores the basic needs of millions of 
citizens. In one of her reels, she put it effectively: ‘we don’t need your 
sympathy,

we need ramps, accessible washrooms, and footpaths. Disability is not the 
problem, 

inaccessibility

is.‘

 

Her activism on Instagram and social media this year promoted the right to the 
city – to exist, to access the essentials – as a non-negotiable political

right.

 

5. Dr Rajalakshmi S.J. (Dentist and Pageant Winner)

Source: X

Dr Rajalakshmi S J is a dentist, educator, and wheelchair pageant winner. Her 
NGO, SJ Foundation works for the visibility and representation of persons

with disabilities. Rajalakshmi personally brought down the ableism prevalent in 
medical fields that long barred disabled bodies from high-precision professions

like surgery. Her work in 2025 has continued on her established path of 
disability advocacy and seeking further steps towards real empowerment.

 

6. Indian Women’s Blind Cricket Team (Cricketers)

Source: Female Cricket

The Indian Women’s Blind Cricket Team became the first world champions in 
November 2025 by winning the inaugural 

T20 World Cup.

Their journey began with tough training days. Led by captain Deepika TC, India 
defeated Nepal by seven wickets in the final played in the Sri Lankan capital 
Colombo. This massive feat by disabled cricketers in an environment that is not 
accessible at all, is hoped to give visibility and the much-needed 
infrastructure to sportspersons with disabilities in the country.

 

The 

champion squad

included 3 categories of players, which were: B1 Category: Simu Das, P. Karuna 
Kumari, Anu Kumari, Jamuna Rani Tudu, Kavya V. B2 Category: Anekha Devi,

Basanti Hansdah, Simranjeet Kour, Sunita Sarathe, Parbati Marndi. B3 Category: 
Deepika T C (Captain), Ganga S Kadam (Vice Captain), Phula Soren, Kavya

N R, Sushma Patel, Durga Yevle.

 

7. Sminu Jindal (Industrialist)

Source: Conscious Carma

Sminu Jindal is an Indian industrialist and an economic architect of inclusion. 
She is the Founder-Chairperson of Svayam, an initiative for accessibility

rights. In 2025, Sminu Jindal helped mobilise the 

National Summit on Accessibility,

where she successfully shifted the discourse from “social welfare” to an 
economic imperative, identifying accessibility as a trillion-dollar growth 
driver for India’s future development goals.

 

8. Preethi Pal (Athlete)

Source: Olympics

Preethi Pal hails from a farming community in a village in Uttar Pradesh’s 
Muzaffarnagar. Now a star Olympian, Preethi, as a child, faced immense 
challenges

since she could 

barely walk.

She received the honour of becoming India’s flagbearer for the World Para 
Athletics Championships in 2025. A Paris Paralympic double bronze medallist, 
Pal faced and overcame barriers in her journey from battling cerebral palsy to 
becoming a sports icon for women in the country.

 

A Paris Paralympic double bronze medallist, Pal faced and overcame barriers in 
her journey from battling cerebral palsy to becoming a sports icon for women

in the country.

 

With the outgoing year, these barrier-breaking stories dismantled the global 
frameworks that are ableist and exclusive in their very nature and called

out India’s flawed development model. These pioneering women, with their 
resilience, have given encouragement to other women and made efforts to provide

platforms to millions in the country. As is often said, their achievement came 
not because of the system, but despite the system. They are finally being

heard and receiving the visibility that they deserve. The one thing common in 
all these stories is that accessibility is not a privilege, nor a request

but a democratic and constitutional right which every single Indian citizen 
deserves and is a prerequisite for any modern and equitable society.

The spirit we need to adhere to for the approaching year should be: the right 
to move, the right to equal participation and above all, the right of 
accessibility,

which cannot be conditional and negotiable for any citizen, no matter where 
they stand in the ableist social hierarchy.

 

https://feminisminindia.com/2025/12/22/8-women-with-disabilities-who-made-headlines-in-2025/#google_vignette

 

 

-- 
 
Regards
Sameer Latey

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