Support our work
Donate
What your money does, how we handle it, and how to give.
Ways to give
Monthly support is the most useful thing for us, because the costs it covers arrive every day.
Give monthly
The most useful thing you can do. Residential care is a daily cost, and a predictable monthly income is what lets us commit to a person for years rather than months.
Give in kind
Provisions, bedding, books, uniforms, and equipment — often more useful than cash, and always acknowledged. Ask us what is actually needed this month before buying.
Give your time
Tutors, drivers, medical professionals, and people willing to do the unglamorous work of a weekly delivery round. Skills matter less than showing up consistently.
Partner with us
For companies and institutions: CSR funding, in-kind supply, employee volunteering, and interview access for our trainees. We will report back on what your contribution did.
Specifics
What each program needs
If you would rather fund something concrete than give unrestricted, these are the real gaps.
Residential Care
- •Recurring monthly support — this is a daily cost, and one-off gifts cannot cover it
- •Groceries and provisions in bulk
- •Bedding, mosquito nets, and mattresses
- •Volunteer doctors and nurses for regular visits
Hunger Relief
- •Rice, dal, oil, and staples in bulk
- •Support for a month of kits for one household
- •Volunteer drivers for delivery days
- •Kitchen equipment and gas
Education & Skills
- •Sponsor a child's school year
- •Books and uniforms before the school year starts
- •Volunteer tutors, especially for maths and English
- •Employers willing to interview our trainees
Accountability
Where your money goes
Donors are entitled to know what happens to their money. Here is our approach; for the actual audited breakdown, ask us and we will send the most recent statement.
- Programs first
- The overwhelming majority of what we receive goes directly into the three programs on this site — food, care, and education. [[Add the actual program-vs-administrative split from your audited accounts, with the financial year attached.]]
- Some overhead is real
- A trust that claims zero administrative cost is either not counting properly or not functioning. Somebody keeps the books, files the returns, and answers the phone. We would rather show you that cost than hide it inside a program line.
- Restricted gifts stay restricted
- If you give for a specific purpose — a child's school year, a month of rations for one household — it is spent on that. If we ever cannot use a restricted gift as intended, we will come back and ask you before spending it on anything else.
- You can ask, and we will answer
- Any donor can ask what their contribution funded and get a specific answer rather than a brochure. If we cannot answer that, our record-keeping has failed and we want to know.
How to give
[[No online payment channel is connected yet. Before this page goes live to donors, add a verified donation route — bank transfer details in the trust's own legal name, or a payment processor account registered to the trust — plus your 80G receipt process if you promise tax receipts. Do not publish account details you have not double-checked: a typo here sends donations to a stranger.]]
In the meantime, write to us and we will arrange it directly:
[email protected]Prefer to give time or goods instead? Volunteer with us or ask what's needed.