Pankhudi has no employees and every individual associated with it works only as a volunteer
Pankhudi was founded in April 2005 by Shahzad Wakeel, who had then just passed out of IIT Mumbai. The foundation started as an Orkut community comprising young professionals with day jobs who were keen to contribute to society’s well-being. Pankhudi has no employees and every individual associated with it works only as a volunteer. Volunteers with the foundation in other cities work towards the education and health of street children and children living in slums.
Most volunteers with the foundation learnt of its existence through friends already working with it, or have chanced upon its website (www.pankhudifoundation.org). Volunteers in a particular city are encouraged to keep in touch via group mail or email. If a volunteer shifts to another city where Pankhudi is present, she just has to send an email to pr @ pankhudifoundation.org and she will be put in touch with local workers.
If you want to volunteer
Volunteers can teach, organize activities for the children, contribute towards the Pankhudi newsletter, or just choose to help during collection drives such as the recent Bihar flood relief drive. Pankhudi invites volunteers in seven different cities (Bangalore, Delhi, Mumbai, Hyderabad, Pune, Kolkotta and Chennai) to teach and work on health care drives in slums. For those who want to make contributions in kind to SRMAB, the school needs computers, headphones, sports equipment and tape recorders. They can teach or organize activities for the children.
Full article at Live Mint - Wall Street Journal.
Saturday, October 25, 2008
Thursday, October 23, 2008
Your Last Chance to win $10000 and expand your Social Venture
Only few days left to apply for the Best Buy @15 Challenge to win $10,000! The Application Deadline is Monday, October 27th.
For more details, check out http://www.genv.net/bestbuy or contact 1-866-788-1628 / bestbuy15@youthventure.org
For more details, check out http://www.genv.net/bestbuy or contact 1-866-788-1628 / bestbuy15@youthventure.org
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Saturday, October 4, 2008
TED Prize » 37 Photographs. 3 Minutes. Millions of Lives to Save.
For the past 18 months James Nachtwey has documented the resurgence of tuberculosis in seven countries around the world. He has captured the lives of both patients and health care workers in the struggle against this ancient disease which still remains very much a part of the present. Not only does TB remain a killer disease in its most recognizable form but it is mutating into even more deadly forms: multi-drug resistant (MDR) and extremely drug resistant (XDR) TB. While still a small subset of the TB cases, these new strains pose a grave global health threat.
In the words of James Nachtwey:
Normal tuberculosis, if treated diligently, is very inexpensive and doesn’t take very long to cure. But if normal TB is not treated, it mutates and becomes 100 times more expensive, requires a two-year cure and a long stay in the hospital, which many of those infected cannot afford.
The thought of XDR getting out of control is truly frightening.
Today the TED Prize and James Nachtwey, along with our visionary partners, launched a world-wide series of events and an internet movement to build awareness of this forgotten plague.
Check out another slide show of his photos on WIRED.com
Share the story. Stop the disease.
Welcome To Ashoka (India)
Welcome To Ashoka Video screened at the new Fellow Orientation in India - Sept 08.
Friday, October 3, 2008
Pankhudi Foundation "Theme Song" launched
Want to help underpriviledged children, visit us at www.pankhudifoundation.org
or email us - join @ pankhudifoundation.org
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