Kolkata Sanved (Kolkata Sensitivity), a GFC grantee partner since 2007, promotes dance as a therapeutic tool for street children, victims of trafficking or violence, children of prostitutes, youth living in slum areas, and other at-risk children.
South Asia
Our partners in South Asia serve some of the poorest and most marginalized children and youth in the world. They address a wide range of issues, including the specific needs of street children, child laborers, children living in slums, child waste-pickers, and children and youth belonging to marginalized groups and tribal populations.
We currently invest in over 50 grantee partners in South Asia, in the following countries: Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka. To date, we have awarded 923 grants totaling $5,745,957 to 105 organizations in 7 countries in South Asia.
Over Lunch
- By: Vineeta Gupta on March 19th, 2012
- Category: Blog
Washington, DC–Over lunch, Bharati Chaturvedi, the director of Chintan Environmental Research and Action Group, and I shared our excitement at what lies ahead for her organization. Chintan, a Global Fund for Children grantee partner in Delhi, India, had just received the first Innovation Award for the Empowerment of Women and Girls for training and organizing [...]
Film Based on ASF’s Work Wins Oscar
- By: Vineeta Gupta on February 29th, 2012
- Category: Blog
Washington, DC – I sat with my eyes glued to the screen for the 84th Academy Awards, anxiously awaiting the announcement of the best documentary short film. On the edge of my seat, I jumped up in excitement when Saving Face, directed by Daniel Junge and Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy, was announced as the winner. The documentary [...]
To Shoot or Not To Shoot
- By: Monica Grover on January 30th, 2012
- Category: Adobe Youth Voices
Hyderabad, India—Rafia, the program manager for Mahita, a Global Fund for Children grantee partner in Hyderabad, took me on a journey back to three years ago, when her team faced this Muslim-minority community’s initial reaction to girls’ involvement in Mahita’s video storytelling program, introduced by GFC. Girls’ mobility in this community is often restricted, Rafia [...]
Raising Their Voices
- By: Monica Grover on January 15th, 2012
- Category: Adobe Youth Voices
Hyderabad, India–Today, on the first day of GFC grantee partner Mahita’s digital media workshop* in Hyderabad, India, 17-year-old Shakeela mentioned that she wanted to create a video story that addressed the issue of girls being bullied. She said that girls are often bullied on their way to school, and she wanted to create a story [...]
Shaishav Trust Visits The Global Fund for Children
- By: Farah Anwar on November 22nd, 2011
- Category: Blog
Washington, DC – Parul Sheth, the executive director of Shaishav Trust, a GFC grantee partner located in Bhavnagar, India, was able to visit GFC’s office to share Shaishav’s incredible work in ensuring children’s rights. Parul is currently in the US as a Hubert H. Humphrey fellow—a fellowship that GFC helped her to get. At GFC’s [...]
Schools, Not Guns: Courageous Leadership in Afghanistan
- By: The Global Fund for Children on November 16th, 2011
- Category: Featured
“Many times I have told the story about the boys with guns in their hands, stopping our car and wanting to talk to me,” says Sakena Yacoobi, director of the Afghan Institute of Learning (AIL). “Although I was afraid, I got out of the car.”
Yacoobi was used to fear—since 1995 she had been bringing educational opportunities to women and girls in Afghanistan, and for years she operated directly in conflict with the Taliban government.
Channeling Solutions in Bangladesh
- By: The Global Fund for Children on September 16th, 2011
- Category: News
In the height of monsoon season in northern Bangladesh, a young girl runs to the riverbank near her village. Her regular school building is closed due to floodwaters, but a different kind of classroom awaits her—one that floats.
“A boat school is the combination of a school bus and schoolhouse,” says Mohammed Rezwan, executive director of Shidhulai Swanirvar Sangstha and the social entrepreneur behind its mobile boat schools.
Education Comes Knocking in India
- By: The Global Fund for Children on August 16th, 2011
- Region: South Asia
They live in slums, on train platforms, and on the streets. They work on fishing docks and in marketplaces and as domestic servants. They are migrants, moving with their families between villages and the city. These are Mumbai’s uncounted and undocumented children, and they are everywhere—except in school.
Door Step School is trying to change that.
Sana’s Digital Dream
- By: Monica Grover on July 18th, 2011
- Category: Adobe Youth Voices
Washington, DC – She said her mom was her inspiration to pursue an education when education for girls was looked down upon. In 2004, along with a few of her peers, Sana Sohail founded GFC grantee partner Chanan Development Association (CDA), a youth-led organization in Pakistan dedicated to supporting the active participation of youth and [...]