| HOME | SUBSCRIBE | NEWSLETTER | COVER GALLERY | EDITORIAL | ADVERTISERS | CONTACT US | SUPPLEMENT | CONTEST |
![]() |
| Current Issue | ||||
![]() |
| HOME | SUBSCRIBE | NEWSLETTER | COVER GALLERY | EDITORIAL | ADVERTISERS | CONTACT US | SUPPLEMENT | CONTEST |
![]() |
| Current Issue | ||||
| < Back To Article |
|
|
Food For All
|
| Text by Deepali Nandwani and Photographs by Lamya Bhatri | |||||||||||||
|
Published: Volume 14, Issue 6, November, 2006
|
|||||||||||||
|
A sticker on her office door proclaims proudly '19,000 children have stopped eating from dustbins....' Every day, hot meals cooked in the Ratna Nidhi Charitable Trust's kitchen satiate the hunger of street children and students in many municipal schools. Mumbai-based Asha Mehta spearheads an organisation that has initiated several laudable projects for the needy and downtrodden, says Deepali Nandwani
At her simple office in an old, art deco building at Khetwadi - a central suburb of Mumbai overrun by narrow gullies, from where Mehta runs her food programme - a sticker on the door proclaims, '19,000 children have stopped eating from dustbins....' Outside, two local women are cleaning the rice and separating the wheat from the chaff. In the kitchen a little distance away, hot veggies are being cooked in large kadais (utensils) and sheera (a sweetmeat) is being ladled into many dabbas (containers) that will vend their way to street children and those studying in municipal schools. Right now, the RNCT's food programme provides one nutritious meal, six times a week, to over 8,000 children, either through non-governmental organisations or municipal schools. "We always work through an NGO or a school because that makes our task easier. We don't have the required infrastructure to reach out to so many children," Mehta explains. At one time, they expected the schools and NGOs to send their own people to collect the meal, which comprises dal, rice, rotis, one green vegetable and sometimes, a dessert. "But we realised that the NGOs or municipal schools weren't equipped to pick up the food and often, their kids would go hungry." Now, the trust sends out tempos and vehicles to deliver the food, "though that's where our responsibility ends. Our field person checks that the food reaches the right mouths, but the onus of feeding the kids and cleaning up the dabbas rests with the NGOs or the schools."
She had two boys and life would have gone on pretty smoothly, except that the lady had a desire for 'social work'. It helped that her mother-in-law, Leelavati Mehta, was a benevolent woman, who set up the family trust that Mahendra, her son, took over in 1995. And he had asked Ms Galby, the former French director of Nirmala Niketan College of Social Work in Mumbai, if his wife could help in some projects. "She took me to the college and asked me to attend certain lectures. I was then 24 years old and a complete novice. I didn't begin working with my family trust because it was a very small venture and I didn't have any experience to take it to bigger heights," says Mehta. Posted at the college's family service centre, first as an administrative assistant and then as an activist, Mehta worked with them for 10 years, before taking a sabbatical as her mother-in-law was unwell and needed her. "The work at our family centre focussed on popularising adoption among childless couples and finding good homes for kids without one. It really helped me see the realities of life and stay grounded," says the simply dressed woman who barely looks like a diamond merchant's wife, with her plain gold earrings and simple chain.
In 1995, the duo established the functional, yet humungous kitchen for the food programme. Today, they work with 300 NGOs and schools across the city. "We used to reach children in other cities and states too, but since the time the European Nation Food Programme pulled out after India conducted the nuclear tests, we have had to stop the other city ventures." The food programme works in two ways: there are children in municipal schools who are given food free of cost, except that the educational institute has to pay Rs 3 per child as administrative costs. Then there is the food for savings programme via the NGOs working with street kids, where the children are asked to deposit Rs 2 to 3 with the social organisation (not the trust), which is then put into a bank. The kids develop the habit of saving and can withdraw the money whenever they want. "Most kids end up saving Rs 50 to Rs 200 every month," says Mehta.
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||
| Home | Subscribe to Verve | Cover Gallery | Advertisers | About Verve | Contact Us | |
| © Verve Magazine. Please read our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use |