Lessons In Giving

 Teaching children how to give may just result in a more compassionate world 

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 Teaching children how to give may just result in a more compassionate world 

There is little to deny that giving is the currency of compassion and kindness, but it is in the act of giving that we receive something far more valuable—a full, happy heart. DaanUtsav, started in 2009, celebrates just that. Unlike most philanthropic campaigns geared to achieving certain specific metric-driven goals, this annual week-long festival that runs from 2 to 8 October—celebrates the joy of giving by creating a platform through which millions in India from all walks of life come together to donate whatever they can—skills, resources, time—to help those less privileged. Such has been its impact that it has travelled to India’s hinterlands prompting a change in its name from The Joy of Giving Week to the more relatable DaanUtsav. 

The Reading Revolution, part of the 2021 chapter of this festival of fellowship, is an effort to include children as active participants in the act of giving. Says 38-year-old Ashish Shrivastava, founder of Shiksharth, one of the host organizations of this initiative, “The idea driving Reading Revolution was to explore how can children celebrate giving, primarily in rural and tribal areas. People, mostly see them as beneficiaries and never as contributors. We believe we could change that narrative.” Shiksharth joins forces with Swatantra Talim—a group that co-creates learning spaces for children with children—and SwaTaleem—an NGO that provides education to minority girls all over India. 

Despite the unassailable fact that the healthy development of children is crucial to the future well-being of the world, children are rarely acknowledged as individuals. Primarily viewed as their guardian’s property or reduced to objects of char...

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