The Akshaya
Patra Foundation has won the ABP News Positive Award 2015 for being a symbol of
positive change in society. The organisation received the award in a ceremony
conducted in New Delhi on 10 December.
The ABP News
Awards recognise the notable work individuals or organisations do for the
welfare of the society. The awards were
presented in 11 different categories. From each section, five contestants were
chosen for the final rounds. The finalists were then judged by a panel of five members.
The ABP
News Positive Award 2015 was carried out mainly through three stages- inviting
entries, compiling a list of top 50 entries and finally selecting winners by
the jury. While choosing the final
winner, public voting was also taken into consideration.
To get the full coverage on the latest NGO news awards, tune into
the ABP news channel at 7.p.m. on 19 December, 2015.
It’s been many
years since the empowerment of women became a global issue. But we still a long
way to go before women truly have equal standing in society.
Empowerment of
women should start from childhood, and education is the best way to achieve
this. An opportunity to attend school
can instil confidence, improve intelligence and provide independence to girls.
However, the
reality is, unlike boys, girls are not getting the opportunity to attend
schools.
The steps taken
by Indian Government to make education a fundamental right for all children, has
helped improve the situation and has also helped provide education for girls. This
was how programmes like National Program for Education of Girls at Elementary
Level’ (NPEGEL), Mahila Samakhya Program’ and ‘‘Kasturba Gandhi Balika
Vidyalaya Scheme’ were introduced in India.
NGOs too have worked
relentlessly to empower women in India. The Akshaya Patra Foundation, a top NGO
in India has always stood for the welfare of girls and women. The Mid-Day
Meal Programme, run by the organisation has helped bring millions of
girls back to school. Besides this, the organisation provides employment to
hundreds of women across its 24 units, thereby giving them regular income and
higher standing in society.
Like Akshaya Patra, each one of us can also make
a change in lives of our girl children.
We can make a small contribution to send our daughters to school. With
this small effort we can transform the lives of entire generations of women.
"To deny people their human rights is to challenge their very
humanity. To impose on them a wretched life of hunger and deprivation is to
dehumanise them.”
---- Nelson Mandela
Happy Human Rights Day!
December 10 is Human Rights Day. It is on this day; 63 years back
the United Nations General Assembly adopted the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights (UDHR). Though the Human Rights Day was an outcome of the World War II, protecting
human rights still remains to be one of the main focuses around the world. This
is thanks to the non-profit organisations that have dedicated their time and
work to expose different issues affecting humans and initiated actions to
protect and support human rights all these years.
Human Rights Day 2015 is dedicated to the 50th
anniversary of the two main covenants on Human Rights- International Covenant
on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR) and the International Covenant
on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR).
While the 2014 theme of Human Rights Day - ‘Human Rights 365’ or
celebration of ‘every day as Human Rights Day’ is still going on, the focus this year will be spreading awareness about
the four freedoms – freedom of speech, freedom of worship, freedom from want
and freedom from fear. These freedoms
form the basis for the International Bill of Human Rights.
This year, the United Nations is also conducting events to honour
the memories of its two major advocates Franklin D. Roosevelt and Eleanor
Roosevelt. The four freedoms were first voiced by President Franklin D.
Roosevelt in 1941 and his wife Eleanor helped add these rights into documents.
In India, protecting rights of children has been taken up
enthusiastically by a non-profit organization called The
Akshaya Patra Foundation. Delivering nutritious mid-day meals since 2000, the
organisation tries to protect children from poverty, hunger, malnutrition and
illiteracy.
Starting the efforts with feeding 1,500 children 15 years ago, the non-profit
organisation now feeds free mid-day meals to over 1.4 million children in 24
locations across 10 states. However, the
non-governmental organisation wants to reach 5 million children by 2020.
The menu is designed to include all the nutrients for children’s
growth and also to suit the local palate. The organisation has custom designed
meal distribution vehicles to keep the meals warm and fresh till they were
delivered to the children.
These measures have helped improve school enrolment, class attendance
and children’s performance. Studies have also shown that children were able to
concentrate better in class after they started eating the Akshaya Patra
meals. This initiative has helped bring
hope to over a million underserved children in India.
The work that Akshaya Patra has undertaken shows the ongoing efforts
to secure children their basic rights in India. This Human Rights Day, let us
stand together and fight the issues that Indian children are still facing.
On this occasion,support human rights; support our
children’s rights. Serve a filling meal to children on this Human Rights Day and
help them to reach their goal.
Nearly 20 million young children in the world are malnourished and more
than one third of all child deaths come from malnutrition.In India, efforts have been going on to
tackle this problem. This was how The Akshaya Patra Foundation, a NGO
implementing the mid-day meal programme, was born. Starting its work as a NGO
in Karnataka back in 2000, the organisation is now spread across 24 locations
in 10 Indian states and feeds 1.4 million underserved children. The stories of hope
revealed by Akshaya Patra beneficiaries show the importance of food and
education in life and are also good enough to be converted into inspirational moral
stories for children.The initiative has received wide recognition and
people from different parts of the world have come forward to support the cause
and donate to NGO.
Most of these children come from low income families and the free
lunches have helped make a huge difference in their lives.While talking to the Akshaya Patra, NGO
in Karnataka, children have revealed how the nutritious meals have
helped them to concentrate in studies and set high goals in life. Having high
aspirations in life, these young students have served as inspirations for moral
stories for children.
Akshaya Patra beneficiaries have revealed their readiness to serve
the society as teacher, police officer or soldier. Sakshita, an 8th standard student
of Zilla Parishad High School in Patancheru, is a topper in her class and wants
to teach rural children; while Darshan, a 14-year-old student of the Government
Lower Primary School in Dasrahalli, wants to join the Indian Army.Harsha, a class IX student at The Government
High School in Shivnahalli, who lost his mother at a young age, wants to become
a police officer and help society. Though these children have acknowledged the role
of Akshaya Patra’s mid-day meal in making a difference in their lives, the
organisation attributes its success to the people who donate to charity
generously.
The organisation provides innumerable options for people who want to
donate to NGO.Most
importantly, donating online can help save tax. A contribution of ₹ 500 or more
can get 100% tax exemption in India. Feeding a child a year costs only ₹ 750
and the organisation also accepts donations in the form of a kitchen equipment
or meal delivery van.
The NGO in Karnataka operates in six places and feeds 463,682
children from 2,629 schools.Two
kitchens- HK Hill and Vasanthpura are located in Bengaluru, while the other
four kitchens function in other parts of Karnataka like Ballari, Hubballi,
Mangaluru and Mysuru.Akshaya Patra
takes extra care to ensure that school children get all the nutrients needed
for growth. To make the meal more appealing, these kitchens have designed
special menus for Karnataka which include sambar, rasam, dal and rice.
The Akshaya Patra Foundation wants to serve more
school children in India so that classroom hunger will disappear for good and
all we get are goodmoral stories for children from all locations we serve at.