Reshma Thakkar was a 30-year-old lady operative in medical IT in Chicago when she became impressed by a clarity that her life was blank something.
Though she was professionally successful, Reshma felt that her personal and devout lives were lacking. As a Hindu woman, she felt as if she should be “married and have dual kids” already, though during a really least, a daily grub of focusing so most on work didn’t seem like it was God’s plan. So, Reshma quit her job, pronounced goodbye to her family and done a tour to India, her devout homeland, to find what she was looking for. The documentary “Belief”
Reshma’s timing was no coincidence; she designed her outing to arrive in India for a Kumbh Melaand
“A lot of people come here for a blessings, a healing, a community,” Reshma said. “For them, it’s a personal countenance of their faith.”
Reshma was looking for a loyal spirituality that she knew intellectually though longed to feel low in her heart. As she wandered a riverbank one day during a festival, something unusual happened.
“It was a eyes that this male had that only drew me to him. They were comfortable and amatory and only really gentle,” Reshma said.