n the narrow bylanes of India’s slums, in villages where buses come once a day, and in chawls where every rupee counts — thousands of people dream of starting a small business. A tea stall, a tailoring unit, a mobile repair shop, a cattle shed. But for the poor, these dreams die quietly — not for lack of ambition, but for lack of support.
And R. R. Pandayan Saheb refuses to stay silent.
For him, self-employment is not a backup — it is dignity. It is the foundation of self-respect, especially for youth, women, and daily wage families who want to stand on their own feet.
That’s why he has launched a bold protest movement:
Udyog Adhikar Andolan — the right to start your own business, with support from the government.
📢 A Protest for Opportunity — Not Sympathy
Across Maharashtra, thousands of young people are unemployed not because they are lazy — but because the system gives them no tools to start their journey. Banks refuse loans without collateral. Government schemes are too complex. And when help does arrive — it’s too late, too little.
R. R. Pandayan Saheb is changing this narrative.
With his Udyog Adhikar Andolan, he is demanding that the state and central governments immediately provide zero or low-interest business loans to:
- Unemployed youth from SC, ST, OBC, and minority communities
- Single women and widows wanting to start home-based work
- Street vendors, artisans, and skilled laborers who lack registration
In a powerful statement during a protest in Navi Mumbai, he declared:
“If the government can give big companies thousands of crores, why can’t it give ₹50,000 to a poor man to start his own shop?”
🧾 What the Protest Demands
R. R. Pandayan Saheb’s campaign isn’t just noise—it’s policy-focused, structured, and people-backed. He has laid out clear demands in letters to the Ministry of Finance, the Maharashtra Chief Minister, and local district officials. His core demands include:
- A dedicated ₹500 crore state fund for micro-entrepreneurship
- Zero-interest loans up to ₹1,00,000 for poor families
- Simplified forms for loans under PMEGP, Mudra Yojana, and State Udyog schemes
- Udyog Facilitation Centers at taluka level for application help
- Training and digital marketing workshops for small traders
And this is not theory — Pandayan Saheb is already helping people apply, protest, and persist. He walks with them to the bank. He calls officials. He turns "no" into "yes."
💬 Real Stories, Real Impact
In Pune, a young Dalit boy named Ramesh wanted to start a bike repair shop. Banks kept rejecting him. Pandayan Saheb personally wrote to the district loan board and got him sanctioned under the SC loan quota.
In Nashik, a widow named Sharda Devi wanted to open a tiffin center. With help from Saheb’s team, she received a ₹50,000 interest-free loan and today feeds 70 customers daily.
These are not stories—they are proofs. Proof that when the system fails, leadership like Pandayan Saheb’s becomes the bridge between aspiration and action.
👥 Building a Movement, Not Just a Moment
The Udyog Adhikar Andolan has now reached multiple districts:
- Rallies in Thane, Nashik, and Nagpur
- Signature campaigns with over 15,000 names submitted to the CM
- Camps to help slum residents fill Mudra loan forms
- Street vendor license drives in partnership with local panchayats
Saheb often says:
“Rozgar nahi milta toh rozgaar banana hoga. Sarkar ko yeh samajhna hoga ki berozgaari ka jawab yojna nahi, sahayata hai.”
(If jobs are not available, we must create our own work. The government must support that process.)
📈 A Vision for the Future || RR Pandayan
R. R. Pandayan Saheb’s long-term goal is not just giving loans — it is building a culture of entrepreneurship among the oppressed.
He is working to:
- Set up Udyog Saathi Centers in each district
- Partner with NGOs for financial literacy and digital payment training
- Advocate for monthly business startup grants for SC/ST youth
- Introduce a policy for “Self-Employed First” procurement in government departments
His vision is clear:
“Every basti should have 10 shops, not 100 jobless youth.”