Three days later, an email arrived. Not from Rashmi, but from her assistant. No PDF attached. Just a short note: “Rashmi read your email. She says: They slept terribly. But they woke up anyway. That’s the dream. Keep going. And here’s a coupon for a free copy on the publisher’s site—use it before it expires.” Arjun didn’t cry. But he did order the paperback. It arrived in six days. He read it in two nights, underlining madly with a stolen pen from his PG’s front desk.
And that dog-eared copy of I Have A Dream sits on his desk, right next to the first ration card they successfully digitized. He never lends it out. Instead, when a young stranger messages him on LinkedIn asking for a “free PDF,” Arjun replies: I Have A Dream By Rashmi Bansal Pdf Free Download
The irony wasn’t lost on him. He was trying to build a social enterprise. And the book he needed— I Have A Dream —was a collection of exactly such stories. Hanumant and Jitendra who started Goonj for cloth as a resource. Chetna Gala Sinha who built a bank for rural women. Stories that weren’t theory. They were a manual for surviving the abyss of self-doubt. Three days later, an email arrived