Why this work matters
More than 26 million Indians live with a disability. In the districts we work in, many have never been to school, never seen a doctor for their condition, and never been offered work that pays. Our programme is a slow, persistent attempt to change that — beginning with a child's first wheelchair and ending with their first salary slip.
What we do
- Early identification camps in partnership with our health programme — for hearing, vision, mobility, and developmental needs.
- Assistive devices at no cost: wheelchairs, hearing aids, white canes, prosthetics — fitted and serviced over the long term.
- Inclusive education support: home tuition, Braille materials, sign-language interpretation, and advocacy with neighbourhood schools.
- Vocational training in roles that are genuinely accessible — digital data work, handicrafts, food packaging, and customer support.
- Workplace placement with employer partners who commit to inclusive hiring and reasonable accommodations.
- Family counselling because change at home is often the hardest, and the most important.
What inclusion really costs
A ramp at a primary school: ₹18,000. A pair of fitted hearing aids: ₹14,000. An adolescent's first wheelchair: ₹9,500. Each of these is the difference between a life lived inside one room and a life lived in the world.
How you can help
Sponsor a single device. Hire one person from our placement pipeline. Donate skill — accessibility audits, sign-language teaching, or assistive-tech expertise are always in short supply.