 A woman draped in veil apparently reflects a faceless and voiceless image of Muslim woman, symbolizing her as marginalized, steeped into a tradition with no ability to fight her own battles. In Indian context, the image of Muslim women is supposedly considered as confined within the four walls of their homes. Their role is perceived to be only within the community and make news only when they are presented as problematic in the society. In our popular perception, we generally tend to oversimplify and assume reality to be static. However, in a fast and ever-changing society, the ground reality is far from the assumptions. Knowingly and unknowingly, the people around us who live in the surrounding environment have so much influence that we don't question if we are opposing something, why we are opposing that. Is there any justified reason? And that's what was happening. He always discussed things and people always discouraged them because the locality, the society we were staying in, the people around, they had never been into such fields I think 10-15% of girls working and that too just becoming teachers and nothing else. What really matters, I think is, one is definitely your upbringing and your family. What kind of support do you have from them? Because if they wouldn't have given me the wings to kind of spread out and fly, I probably wouldn't have been able to experiment with this and come to this stage. Basically, if a woman is educated, if a mother is educated, she brings about a lot of changes within the family and eventually in the society. I was the place where God was eternal. I was the place where the truth was separated. In front of my beauty, the sun was also shining. There were so many friends who had stopped. People recognized me, I was Mariam, I was Hava, I was Asiyya. I was standing in a corner every day. My name kept changing, but I was myself. In the sky and the earth, my journey was always the same.