Friday, 24 August 2012

CRY NGO


Child Right Action

CRY's Vision & Mission

Vision
A happy, healthy and creative child whose rights are protected and honoured in a society that is built on respect for dignity, justice and equity for all.
Mission
To enable people to take responsibility for the situation of the deprived Indian child and so motivate them to seek resolution through individual and collective action thereby enabling children to realise their full potential. And people to discover their potential for action and change. To enable peoples' collectives and movements encompassing diverse segments, to pledge their particular strengths, working in partnership to secure, protect and honour the rights of India's children. 

At A Glance

Name : CRY - Child Rights and You. (CRY changed it's name from Child Relief and You to Child Rights and You as on April 1, 2006.)
Status : Non-Government Organisation (NGO)
Address : CRY - Child Rights and You, 189/A Anand Estate, Sane Guruji Marg, Mumbai 400011.
Telephone : +91-022-2309 6845 / 2306 3651 / 3647.
Fax : +91-022-2308 0726. Email : cryinfo.mum@crymail.org
Branches : Bangalore, Chennai, Delhi, Kolkata
Tax Status : All donations to CRY are eligible for tax exemption - 50% tax exempt under Section 80G. CRY also offers 100% tax exemption under Section 35 AC or 80GGA. For more information, write to the CRY office nearest to you.
Registration No. Public Trust Reg.No.F-5208 (Mumbai)
 for more info visit the link...http://www.cry.org

Sunday, 12 August 2012

NGOs in INDIA


HELP AGE INDIA

HelpAge India is secular, not-for-profit organization registered under the Societies' Registration Act of 1860. We were set up in 1978, and since then have been raising resources to protect the rights of India's elderly and provide relief to them through various interventions.
We voice the needs of India's 90 million (current estimate) "grey" population, and directly impact the lives of lakhs of elders through our services every year.
They advocate with national & local government to bring about policy that is beneficial to the elderly.
They make society aware of the concerns of the aged and promote better understanding of ageing issues.
They help the elderly become aware of their own rights so that they get their due and are able to play an active role in society.
AS A HELPING HAND AND TO SUPPORT JUST VISIT THE LINK BELOW

Sunday, 5 August 2012

OLD AGE HOMES IN KOLKATA



Ananda Ashram Old Age Home 
389, Janaki Nath Basu Road, Kalabagan, Subhasgram, Kolkata, West Bengal 700147
098 30 887580 ‎ · anandaashram.co.in
B
Tollygunge Homes http://maps.gstatic.com/intl/en_in/mapfiles/transparent.png
186, N S C Bose Road, Regent Park, Kolkata, West Bengal 700040
033 2471 0707 ‎
C
Mahila Seva Samity http://maps.gstatic.com/intl/en_in/mapfiles/transparent.png
Government Place, Kolkata, West Bengal 700062
033 2248 3005 ‎ · mahilasevasamity.org

Nava Nir http://maps.gstatic.com/intl/en_in/mapfiles/transparent.png
1/2, Shyam Bose Road, Chetla, Chetla, Kolkata, West Bengal 700027
033 2479 6078 ‎E
Siddharth United Social Welfare Mission http://maps.gstatic.com/intl/en_in/mapfiles/transparent.png
Baguiati, Chinar Park, Chinar Park, Kolkata, West Bengal 700059
033 2570 9495 ‎ · suswm.org
Muslim Orphanage http://maps.gstatic.com/intl/en_in/mapfiles/transparent.png
2, Shariff Lane, Park Street, Park Street, Kolkata, West Bengal 700016
033 2229 8705 ‎
Bulbulir Basa http://maps.gstatic.com/intl/en_in/mapfiles/transparent.png
370a/B, M G Road, Thakurpukur, Thakurpukur, Kolkata, West Bengal 700063
033 2438 3222 
Little Sister Of The Poor http://maps.gstatic.com/intl/en_in/mapfiles/transparent.png
2, A J C Bose Road, A J C Bose Road, Kolkata, West Bengal 700020
033 2282 5552 ‎
Eastern India Cinetel Welfare Trust http://maps.gstatic.com/intl/en_in/mapfiles/transparent.png
Baburam Ghosh Rd, Kolkata, West Bengal
033 2481 8452 ‎J
Mary Cooper Home http://maps.gstatic.com/intl/en_in/mapfiles/transparent.png
4/2, D H Road, Kidderpore, Kidderpore, Kolkata, West Bengal 700023
033 2479 2694 ‎

ATMA ORGANIZATION














Atma addresses the lack of capacity in India to effectively provide Quality Education  to all children. 
Consider these statistics:
20% of India’s poor have no access to education. 86% have no access to technical and vocational training; 45% drop out before eighth grade. By 2015, 65% of Indian population will be youth.By 2050, 50% of  the world’s illiterate will be in India.
In the face of these startling statistics, Atma aims to bridge the education gap through collaborative partnerships.

The Atma Model is a three phase relationship-based intervention which helps organisations move beyond their day-to-day resource constraints.
Atma helps NGOs to break the cycle of insufficient  funds, staff and time. This allows Atma Partners to deliver more Quality Education to the children and young adults they serve. The Atma model is defined by four key services: consultancy, skilled volunteers, training and advocacy.
Consultancy
Consultancy helps Atma Partners to take a step back from day-to-day challenges and think about long term goals. Atma helps partners break big goals into small, achievable steps. In this way, big dreams become manageable.
Skilled Volunteers
Every organisation requires experts across areas of finance, product design or sales. This is true for businesses and NGOs alike. Atma provides Atma Partners with skilled volunteers to do specific projects that result in concrete, measureable results. These skilled volunteers support Atma Partners in taking on the challenges faced in running and growing an organisation.
Training & Workshops
Atma Trainings and Workshops are offered based on the unique needs of Atma Partners. These trainings are generally focused at the management and staff of an NGO, to build skills and competency within that organisation. Workshops and trainings are for Atma Partners and other NGOs.
Advocacy
Atma’s advocacy services focus around creating a platform for awareness, resource-sharing and exchange between NGOs.

Wednesday, 25 July 2012

OLD AGE ABUSE



Elder abuse is a bit like AIDS in India.
We know it’s a big problem; we’ve even heard it’s a crisis. But most of us, especially in middle class India, insist it doesn’t happen in our families.
Oops, we lost grandma
Yet a nine-city HelpAge India survey of elders  released last month claimed more than one-fifth of the elderly surveyed have experienced some kind of abuse or the other, usually from family members, especially bahu-beta. Bangalore tops the list, followed by Hyderabad. Physical abuse is the highest in Patna.
But most of our lives seem strangely untouched by it.Part of the problem is almost all the elderly, nearly 98 percent, chose not to file legal complaints.
But the other part of the problem is when all these studies come out, the stories you always hear are the most extreme ones.
For example, elder dumping.  That’s right, take grandma from her home near Kingsway Camp in New Delhi and leave her out in Ghaziabad to fend for herself. It happens, says Matthew Cherian of HelpAge India. HelpAge had had to reunite these lost seniors with the rest of the family. But can you really “reunite” someone with the very children who dumped them in the first place?
Well, the law is pretty strict about elder abuse. But also this is India, says Cherian. There are social pressures. “All the neighbours say, ‘Oh, look at those children, they left the parent on the road.’” So they take grandma back.
Hidden in the back bedroom
Go to any old age home in India and you’ll hear these kinds of horror stories.  At Naba Nir, a home for older women in Kolkata, I met Gauri Nandy, an anxious looking widow in her seventies. She says she moved here after her sons and daughters-in-law assaulted her. She had refused to sign over the title of her house to them after her husband died.
“They pushed me down,” she says softly. “I hurt my leg badly. I had to go to the hospital. There was blood in my stool.” Now she shares a blue-washed dormitory room with a dozen other women. There’s a garlanded black and white photograph of her late husband on her nightstand, a picture of Hanuman and a small potted plant. She misses her old garden, she says. She used to have lotus, jasmine, bel.
“Now I don’t know who looks after them,” she says.
These stories shock us. But in a way they also insulate us from the real problem which is far more ubiquitous.
Not everyone is pushing their old mother down the stairs. But we brush older people aside in ways we don’t even realise. A survey from the Agewell Foundation in New Delhi found that 87 percent of elders in the 70-80 age group complain of isolation. And that happens even when they are living with family, at home. They just find themselves shunted off to the back bedroom.
In 2050 400 million people will be over 80 all over the world. 48.1 million of them will be in India. That doesn’t mean India will become a sea of grey. The median age of Indians will still be only 38. But 48.1 million people can’t be shoved into the back bedroom either.
Of Pashmina shawls and government commissions
The paradox is in some ways we’ve gotten what we wanted. For example, a child abroad was often a badge of pride for parents. But now they are also paying the price.
Ruprekha Chowdhury, who studied old age homes in West Bengal for her doctorate, recalls walking into a plush retirement community near Calcutta. One resident sized her up immediately.
“The old lady said ‘Hmm, where are you from? My son lives in Arizona. See this shawl. It’spashmina wool. He gave it to me,’” remembers Chowdhury.
The elders left behind by migration might have expensive shawls. But they are also dealing with their own kind of abandonment.
The answer to this quandary is not going to be more government commissions. The well being of seniors is already written into the Indian constitution. There is a National Policy for Older Persons. It’s been there since 1999. There’s an inter-ministry commission set up to implement it. “It met only four times in ten years,” says Cherian of HelpAge India. The harsh truth is infant mortality will always be higher priority than geriatric care. Even if our Prime Minister is pushing 80.
The answer is also not going to be about forcing children to take care of their elders. That’s already written into the law as well. Gauri Nandy tells me she did her best to raise her children properly. One works for the local electricity board. Another works at a tanning factory. “If sons act like this what can we do?” she says. “Elders need to be respected. Do we now have to teach that?”
Perhaps not. But what we might need to teach ourselves is that old age isn’t just about our children and what they will or won’t do for us.

Child Molestation


Child sexual abuse is a form of child abuse in which an adult or older adolescent uses a child for sexual stimulation.Forms of child sexual abuse include asking or pressuring a child to engage in sexual activities (regardless of the outcome), indecent exposure (of the genitals, female nipples, etc.) with intent to gratify their own sexual desires or to intimidate or groom the child, physical sexual contact with a child, or using a child to produce child pornography.
The effects of child sexual abuse can include depression, post-traumatic stress disorder, anxiety, propensity to further victimization in adulthood, and physical injury to the child, among other problems. Sexual abuse by a family member is a form of incest, and can result in more serious and long-term psychological trauma, especially in the case of parental incest.
The global prevalence of child sexual abuse has been estimated at 19.7% for females and 7.9% for males, according to a 2009 study published in Clinical Psychology Review that examined 65 studies from 22 countries. Using the available data, the highest prevalence rate of child sexual abuse geographically was found in Africa (34.4%), primarily because of high rates in South Africa; Europe showed the lowest prevalence rate (9.2%); America and Asia had prevalence rates between 10.1% and 23.9%. In the past, other research has concluded similarly that in North America, for example, approximately 15% to 25% of women and 5% to 15% of men were sexually abused when they were children. Most sexual abuse offenders are acquainted with their victims; approximately 30% are relatives of the child, most often brothers, fathers, uncles or cousins; around 60% are other acquaintances such as 'friends' of the family, babysitters, or neighbors; strangers are the offenders in approximately 10% of child sexual abuse cases. Most child sexual abuse is committed by men; studies show that women commit 14% to 40% of offenses reported against boys and 6% of offenses reported against girls. Most offenders who sexually abuse prepubescent children are pedophiles, although some offenders do not meet the clinical diagnosis standards for pedophilia.
Under the law, "child sexual abuse" is an umbrella term describing criminal and civil offenses in which an adult engages in sexual activity with a minor or exploits a minor for the purpose of sexual gratification. The American Psychiatric Association states that "children cannot consent to sexual activity with adults", and condemns any such action by an adult: "An adult who engages in sexual activity with a child is performing a criminal and immoral act which never can be considered normal or socially acceptable behavior.


Next To Gurudwara, Mahakali Caves Road, Andheri East, Chakala, Mumbai - 400093
022 2836 4187
Sankli Street, Ashadham Colony, Nagpada, Mumbai, MH 400008
022 2309 3591
Godbole Marg, Bhandup East, Mumbai, MH
022 2578 2958 ‎ · vatsalyatrust.org
Father Angel Ashram Band Stand, PB No: 6656, Bus Stand, Bandra West, Bullock Road, Reclamation, Bandra West, Mumbai, MH 400050
022 6711 4000 ‎ · frcrce.ac.in
Daulat Nagar, 9th Road, Borivali (east), Mumbai, MH 400066
022 2894 6463 
1103, A, Lt Dilip Gupte Marg, Mahim, Mumbai, MH 400016
022 2593 0412 
Opposite Shankar Matham, Shradhanand Marg, Matunga East, Mumbai, MH 400019
022 2401 1197 
C-2, Gilbert Hall, Triveni, J P Road, Andheri(W), Mumbai - 400058
022 2670 4304 ‎ · voiceofchildren.org
Category: Orphanages/Old Age Homes
Grant Road Emporium, 3/4Mahavir, Bldg, Mumbai, MH 400007
022 2388 1098 ‎ · childlineindia.org.in

Gandhi Market, Antop Hill, Mumbai, MH
022 2407 1553