Lockdown Heroes: Present Action For Future Hope

A Kolkata-based non-profit is reaching out to thousands of families hit by the lockdown in the city

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A Kolkata-based non-profit is reaching out to thousands of families hit by the lockdown in the city

Future Hope, a Kolkata-based non-profit, has been providing the opportunity for a better life to thousands of children living on the streets of the city, through access to homes, education, and livelihood opportunities for more than 30 years now. In the wake of the nationwide lockdown, due to the coronavirus, the non-profit had no choice but to look beyond their work with children, well beyond the 300 studying in its school, and the 130 living in its six homes, to serve the wider community.

"Many of our students are day-scholars who live with their parents. All of them (the parents) are now without jobs as they were daily wage labourers. Initially we wanted to aid our students, but looking at the desperate situation, we decided to extend our support to their families and beyond," says Sujata Sen, the CEO of Future Hope.

With one of its trustees, the Maheswari Foundation and an independent organisation the Magma Foundation, coming forward with funds, a plan was put in place to reach out to more than 2,000 families in various parts of Kolkata, including Ballygunge, Dhakuria, and Sonagachi. The goal was to provide them with dry rations, consisting of rice, flour, pulses, masalas, tea, onions, potatoes, among others. "Each kit cost us around ₹800, and we packed and distributed them with the help of our students in the senior classes," says Sen.

The NGO did not limit itself to distributing the kits only among those it served initially. "We sought the help of the police and the councillor in our area to identify the really vulnerable families living in the slums so our rations could reach them," Sen says.

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