"Restless for justice. Grounded in the belief that strength means showing up for others"
About
I am an inquisitive, restless person who questions things by default and believes that real strength is demonstrated through service. I am joining law school with a deep interest in gender rights, bodily autonomy, and the quieter, more insidious ways that systemic inequality operates in everyday life. Beyond the academic, I write — on controversial topics, on things people find uncomfortable to say out loud, on the gap between what the law promises and what people actually experience. What I bring to the Aawaj Movement is not just analytical ability or legal awareness, but empathy that goes beyond sympathy. I have the instinct to step into someone else's reality completely — to understand not just what happened to them but how it felt, what it cost, and what they actually need. In legal aid work, where the person across the table is often navigating the most difficult moment of their life, that is not a soft skill. It is the most important one. I am here because justice should not depend on who you know or what you can afford. And I intend to do something about that.
