Meet the newest and 'smartest' looking member of our team

Earlier this month we were super excited to have a new team member join us …it’s so smart looking too! We cannot believe that we have been gifted a brand new ambulance. It’s a beautiful story … a local police superintendent, Mr. Kripal Singh, who used to work closely with Project help in Kotdwara, bought the ambulance in memory of his late mother, who sadly passed away during the COVID pandemic last year. His mother would have made it to hospital if the community had more ambulances at the time. He told us;

I bought it to use it for people in need, but being a police official I am too busy to be able to use it. So I give this ambulance to Project Help India as an offering to be used for the poor and needy people. I trust and respect Project Help and know they will use it well.

We have big plans for this ambulance, after it is registered we will particularly use it to assist people in the remote jungle villages where we work. Many of those who need urgent medical treatment simply cannot access transport to get to the city hospital, nor can they afford to pay. We could recount many sad stories about tragic situations that could have easily been avoided if only people had access to an ambulance.

Our new member of the team will play a vital role as we care for our community, and especially help those impacted by terrible poverty.

Now seeing clearly ...it's so good we checked!

Just this week, the teachers at our City Centre raised their concerns about some of the students who had challenges with their eyesight, concentration, writing and reading at school. So, some of the kids were taken to the Sitabpur Eye Hospital, in Kotdwara for a check-up. Many of these kids unfortunately have had issues since birth, but due to the circumstances of the family, living in poverty, the problems were ignored. Poverty is cruel, and when you are living below the means the adequately feed and care for your children, eye tests and glasses are simply not an option or priority.

Thanks to the intervention of Project Help two of the children were able to get the attention they needed. 7 year old Tannu, now wears glasses and says that it is amazing that she can now see and read and write at school. Ritik, a 10 year old boy from a very poor family, also received new glasses as well. Both kids may need eye surgery in the future (due to long term damage), so we shall continue to monitor their progress and take them for follow-up appointments at the eye hospital. These would not have had eye damage, had they received help and intervention at a much younger age.

We are so excited for Tannu and Ritik, that their learning can now progress and flourish. We acknowledge their teachers for their love, care and dedication to their students.

Check out their smiles, we are smiling too!

An exciting moment.



Three women reflect and share about SHINE Conference

Nazia, Aasma and Ritu share how they were impacted by our SHINE Conference this year. We are so thrilled that many women commented about how much they learnt. Thank you to our team and to each of the presenters for your dedication, hard work and commitment to making this happen. Thank you too, to our supporters whose generosity makes all of this possible.

Nazia …

I liked and learned from all the sessions and the speakers of all these sessions were also really appreciable. I learned many things about laws for women. The session about women's rights instilled a sense of dignity and strength in me. Being from a male dominated society, women like me usually live in fear and submission towards our male partner. From this session, my heart was filled with a sense of importance and strength. We are also not able to discuss about the many problems about women's health openly and many times we were afraid to disclose our personal problems to anyone even if it is our husband or doctor. But here at Shine Conference we were able to discuss these problems openly and were also provided with a satisfactory and effective solution for the questions.

I am really thankful to all the speakers and also to The Shine Conference.

Aasma …

I am really thankful to the Shine conference for enlightening me about the many topics that I never before had considered important. I specially liked the session on women's value and uniqueness from the speaker Mrs. Daisy Samuel. This session made me realise that I am also an important part of both the society and my family. I never considered thinking about it deeply but this session made me realise many things about myself.

I was also very much impressed by the session on women's hygiene and periods. I never thought that this menstrual cycle was also an important part of a women's life, and hence learned greatly from this session. I was literally unaware of periods and menstruation and thought that it was a disease through which all women suffer. But now I know the proper meaning of it, and its importance. So I can say that I learned many things, and it's all thanks to the Shine Conference.

Ritu …

I learned many things from each of the sessions in the conference and hence this conference was very fruitful for me. I learned many things related to women's personal health and hygiene and came to know about the many issues caused by improper sanitation. I was never allowed or was able to discuss about these things with anyone and hence this session was really helpful to me. Also I learned about women's rights, laws and many other rules for women. This has really helped to become self-aware about myself and also given me a sense of dignity. I really thank the conference for making me self-reliant.

SHINE 2022 - It was exceptional

Our SHINE Women’s Empowerment Conference is held at this time of year as we celebrate International Women’s Day 2022.

Celebrating International Women’s Day 2022 in Northern India

What a day Shine 2022 was! It was exceptional and exceeded our expectations. Full of speakers including Rowena and Daisy, educating women to know their strength value and purpose. SHINE Conference is an important aspect of the 'Project Help India’s vision. Our aim is to empower all women in all spheres of life, sharing a message of dignity, strength, purpose and value. Across the day we talked about health, hygiene, awareness of trafficking in the community, family safety and how to empower our women to advocate and educate their children about sexual and physical abuse at home and at school. We shared inspirational stories about remarkable women including Daisy, our Director Secretary’s message that all women have a voice …not to mention we shared a delicious lunch together, we danced, sang, laughed, cheered, cried and shared joyful moments together. Tap on the link below to see the Kotdwara television news item about the conference. It really captures the atmosphere of the day.

SHINE on the Evening Television News

Many women including the staff members from Project Help were honoured for their work in the community. It was a day of celebration and we are so grateful. Now we can’t wait for next year.

The photos below are just some of the highlights from an incredible day.

The girls are ready to SHINE

Daisy, Rowena and the Project Help Team are working incredibly hard to prepare for a special experience for all of our delegates.

Our fourth Women's SHINE Conference will go ahead this Monday, 28th February! This annual event coincides with International Women’s Day which is celebrated on 8th March. We are so thankful that Doug and I (Rowena) have been able to travel to India to support the Indian team. This year SHINE has been affected because of Covid but it will still go ahead on a smaller scale. We are grateful and excited and full of anticipation. Preparations are in full swing. Buses have been booked to transport women from a number of towns, villages and slum communities. Registration for delegates is also underway, and there is certainly a sense of excitement as we meet and talk with women in the community.

Most of our delegates are women who live in slums, in poverty. These women can't afford to pay, so we are not charging them. 'Project Help India' covers all costs thanks to the generosity our donors and supporters.

Through our work at Project Help India we are providing hope through education and opportunities that many girls and women living in poverty, would never have thought possible.

Our conference aims to educate and empower women and in doing so, raise a new generation of women whose dignity, individual strengths, talents and purpose will create a strong, happy and healthy India. We want to give them an experience they will never forget.

AN URGENT REQUEST - can you help this family?

Sunita is a widow. She and 5 other family members live in this house. Their weekly income is $15 and we would like to help if we can by replacing their roof and making some other repairs.

We are seeking a donation of $1000 to cover the cost of an urgent replacement roof and other necessary house repairs for a slum family who are living in desperate circumstances. We would hope that the repairs be completed before the monsoon wet season in the middle of the year. This family of 6, known to us through our work in the slum community of Bijnor, live in a single room with flimsy plastic roofing, no door and basically no walls ...check the photos! Their weekly income is $15AUS which is significantly well below the poverty line. From an email received from our team this week;

On a recent visit to the Ladpura Slums Centre, Bijnor, by our General Secretary Mrs. Daisy Samuel, was approached by a woman named Sunita Devi who asked for help. She also gave us a formal application for help. We took her request in consideration and also gave her a visit. Her situation was really miserable.

Mrs. Sunita Devi resident of Village Ladpura is a poor widow woman. Her husband Late Mr. Virendra passed away 7 years ago. He was suffering from tuberculosis. Even after several months of treatment in the government hospital, one day due to a sudden pain in his chest he died at his house. He was a labourer by profession.

Mrs. Sunita Devi has 4 children. Hence a total of 6 members in her family because the mother-in-law lives with her. Mrs. Sunita is not even educated. The name of the eldest daughter is Neha and she passed 12th grade. From the age of six months, Neha has suffered from polio, and her both legs are disabled. The second son's name is Shubham and has only studied till 8th standard. We he can he works as a labourer. The third child is a girl named Kajal, who is a student in 12th standard. The fourth son's name is Vishal and has studied till 5th standard.

The room where the family lives is a single room and that also is very feeble. The room doesn't have any roof and is covered with plastic polythene. But even through that polythene, a lot of water comes seeps during the rainy season. There is no door in the room which causes many types of difficulties. She has to very hard work to make her ends meet. Mrs. Sunita Devi, does the work of washing utensils in people’s homes. Due to which her monthly income is only 3 thousand rupees ($60AUS a month). She is hardly able to meet the household expenses with this money. She is also under huge debt by people. The family is able to fill their stomachs with the rations provided by the government.

The family is helpless and miserable in many ways. In this winter also they faced many difficulties living in that open room and also suffered from cold. They have asked many people for help and were not given any response by them. Hence she have requested us for a tin roof to be given to them so that they can have proper roof for that room.

Please let us know if you can help, or simply make your tax-deductible donation by clicking the DONATE button in the banner of this page.

Thank you.

Our Honour and Privilege

A member of our team said “It fills us with great pride how people love and respect Daisy

We are pleased to share with you some great news in the life of Project Help India.

Honour

Our General Secretary, Daisy Samuel has received prestigious recognition for her work in the community, and she has been acknowledged as;

“the face of women’s empowerment for the people of Kotdwara”.

Normally a politician would be invited but this year, Daisy was asked to be the Guest of Honour at a Hindu sacred moment, the re-enactment of the story of Rameela. About 430 people attended the performance, and the hall was full of people’s loud applause as Daisy entered the room. 

Daisy was honoured for bringing the Women’s SHINE Conference to Kotdwara, for the distribution of ration kits and other food supplies during the Covid lockdown, and for her service, without discrimination, towards children in need.

A lady, the wife of an auto rickshaw driver, said;

 “My family and more than a hundred families are alive today just because of Project Help India, else they would have died during the lockdown due to lack of food. Project Help India donated more than 100 ration kits to the families of auto drivers.”

Congratulations Daisy - we honour and celebrate you too

Our Privilege to help another 90 kids

It is always a privilege to help kids in need, and sadly there is increasing urgency due to the ongoing impact of the pandemic. Our Director in Punjab (where we currently educate and feed about 300 kids) was asked if we could take over another centre. ‘Door of Peace’ is a small project that helps about 90 children, 6 hours a day, 5 days a week. The children are from a community of labourers, and most would be involved in child labour (and at high risk of significant abuse) if they did not attend this place. They have no other school to attend. Due to donations from other sources stopping due to COVID, the centre will be forced close at the end of January. The school has operated for the past 8-9 years, is well resourced, has 3 teachers, a cook and a community liaison officer, and has established a very good reputation in the community.

Project help India has decided to pledge an initial commitment until the end of April, with monthly operational costs being $1400 a month. Thanks to our Australian supporters we can manage this sum in the short term. We will review our strategy and ongoing priorities early next month.

Some of the kids at ‘Door of Peace’ who we will now be helping for the next 3 months - perhaps longer.

Happy New Year - let's resolve to help others and in doing so, help ourselves

Happy New Year from the team at ‘Project Help India’. We are excited about 2022, knowing that whatever happens during this time of ongoing apprehension and uncertainty, we have purpose in coming alongside people and helping those who are in need. 

2022 is shaping up to be another very big year in the life of 'Project Help India'. We have many goals and we are ambitious about all we seek to achieve. We look forward to sharing these things with you over January. Our resources were certainly stretched in 2021, due to the impact of COVID but thanks to you and our amazing supporters we were able to achieve many wonderful things.

As you contemplate a new year, we hope that 2022 will be filled with personal success, happiness and fulfilment found in the achievements and surprises of life. Earlier this week I read a very helpful article - ‘My 5 Best Tips for Setting New Year’s Resolutions’ by Jessica Irvine (Senior Economics Journalist and Writer) in the Sydney Morning Herald.

“Some say they’re doomed to fail but science suggests there is real value in our annual commitments to do better.”

Jessica suggests that there has never been a better time for all of us to reset our goals, and to have better clarity and perspective in our decision-making, and simply to have a ‘fresh start’. Her 5 tips for successful new year’s resolutions are;

Have a mixture of goal timeframes. Don’t load yourself up with too many new daily habits. Try picking only one new daily habit, one weekly habit, a quarterly goal and one annual ‘‘ once-off’ ’ goal. Tell the world. It doesn’t have to be Instagram but accountability – to a friend or family member – can be an important motivator. 

What is your New Year’s Resolution?

Whether you chose to set new year’s resolutions or not, might you choose to be committed to supporting ‘Project Help India’ in 2022? We are an organisation that really is committed to making a difference in the lives of people. We hope you can see that we operate with great intentionality and integrity. Your donation goes directly to our projects with minimal admin fees. Your tax-deductible donation can be made following the donation links on our website. You can easily set up regular monthly or quarterly donations. 

Helping others helps yourself

I am confident in suggesting that a resolution to help others will ‘frame’ your 2022 with a perspective that sets you up well with less introspection, and with this, have better positive personal well-being outcomes. To support you, please know that it is important to us that you feel connected to our story, so that the stories of lives of people impacted by poverty in India, intersect with your story across the year. Please do not hesitate to contact me to discuss this further.

Again, here is the link, for the article which provides more specific research to ensure for successful goal setting.  Link here to full article. Thanks Jessica.

And speaking of making the world a better place…

Renu, who is one of our volunteers in India shares how she got through 2021 because of her volunteer work as a teacher. Read her inspiring story here.

“AT THE END, IT'S NOT ABOUT WHAT YOU HAVE OR EVEN WHAT YOU'VE ACCOMPLISHED. IT'S ABOUT WHO YOU'VE LIFTED UP, WHO YOU'VE MADE BETTER. IT'S ABOUT WHAT YOU'VE GIVEN BACK.”

Thank you also Moritz Knöringer for your fabulous image, which we used in this blog.