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Archive for the ‘Charity Donations’ Category

Husband and wife event raises funds and awareness

Sunday, February 24th, 2013

A GOOD time was had by all when more than 100 people attended a recent HEAL fundraising
dinner and dance at the VIP lounge in Edgware.

Rakhi and Ash

Organisers husband and wife Ash and Rakhi Dhanani said that all proceeds from the night
would be presented to HEAL and that a lot of awareness was raised of the charity’s work in
helping provide shelter, healthcare and education to underpriviliged children in India.

Guests arrived to a champagne reception and canapes and were then taken into the main room
where they watched an eye-catching performance by Love The Beat School of Dance.

Next came a presentation all about HEAL from Rakhi and Ash, before a buffet dinner and then
lots of dancing.

“From the feedback that we had everyone had a great night!” said Rakhi. “And in addition to
raising approximately £650, we created a lot of awareness of the great work being done by
HEAL.

“As well as the money raised on the night, one of our friends has said she will be making a
donation of £200 and although some people could not make it to the event, they have told us
they will also contribute directly to HEAL.

“Furthermore, one person who attended our event has informed us that he has decided to
sponsor a child and we had lots of interest from others, so hopefully our event will prompt
a few more people to sponsor children.”

For more information on how to make a donation or sponsor a child with HEAL please visit our
‘how to help’ page on our website: http://www.heal.co.uk/how-to-help.html

Fundraiser focuses on further education

Monday, February 11th, 2013

HEAL founder Dr Satya Prasad Koneru was delighted to attend a special fundraising evening in Boston, Lincs, where all money raised will be used to sponsor a young person through their higher education in Andhra Pradesh.

Many of the children in HEAL’s care, who are growing up to become young students, would like to go on to further education in order to help secure their futures.

'World of Colours'

Teachers within the HEAL Children’s Village school at Guntur assess those pupils who they believe are capable of going on to successfully further their education.

For £48 per month a student’s education can be sponsored through HEAL for 1-3 years at a higher educational facility.

Geetha Ramana, who organised the fundraising event in her home town of Boston, was keen to get involved in this programme and has asked Dr Prasad to put the money raised, £1,500, towards a child’s higher education.

During the fundraiser, children participated in a ‘World of Colours’ display and an attractive silk painting was auctioned off.

Geetha Ramana and her husband auctioned a silk painting at their fundraiser

“Both of my children have gone to university now and I know how very important higher education is for those young people in India,” said Geetha, who moved with her husband from their Andhra Pradesh home to the UK 16 years ago.

“I first met Dr Prasad and became aware of HEAL about 11 years ago when I attended one of the charity’s India Nights in Peterborough and I have been going every year since then.

“When I heard all about the new HEAL Paradise project I decided I wanted to do more than merely attend India Night and so in 2011 we held an event for more than 150 people in Boston and raised £3,000.

“This year we raised another £1,500 and I have been discussing with friends how we can come together to sponsor a child for three years through their higher education.

Children helping needy children in India

“I am going back to India in February to visit my mum and dad in Hyderabad and when I return to Boston I am planning to hold a coffee morning.

“I want to keep doing these events every year and see this as a long-term commitment to HEAL and the children in its care.”

For more information on sponsoring a young person in higher education please visit http://www.heal.co.uk/sponsor-a-child.html

HEAL children raise a glass to village choir

Thursday, November 8th, 2012

CHILDREN at the HEAL Village in Guntur are able to enjoy refreshing drinks from a newly-
installed water cooler, thanks to the generosity of a small village choir in Hampshire.

When the United Voices Choir, from Sandleheath, near Fordingbridge, raised £350 from their
first public performance in May, they contacted HEAL to ask how the money could best be
used for the benefit of the children at the Village.

Children at the HEAL Village in Guntur line up for a drink from their new water cooler

“We had already decided to give the proceeds to HEAL as one of our members had taken part
in Cycle India and it seemed such a good cause,” said choir spokeswoman Valerie Allpress.
“We wanted to know if there was some specific purpose which this money could be used for.”

HEAL sponsorship secretary Steve Sargent got to work and asked Children’s Village co-
ordinator Mrs Marudwathi how the money could best be spent for the comfort of the
children. She consulted with staff and a new water cooler was agreed upon.

The United Voices Choir perform at their fund-raising concert for HEAL

“The machine which was installed by a previous donor many years ago had been defunct for a
long time, so refreshingly cold drinks were not available,” said Steve. “Between April and
July the midday temperatures often reach 40 to 45 degrees so this item will be a real
benefit to the children and make their lives more comfortable.

“The smiling faces of the children lining up for a glass of cold water say it all. You
cannot imagine what a luxury this is for them. The chance of a drink of clean water,
cooled by the machine which the choir has kindly donated is a dream come true.”

Having started out with just a handful of singers and a pianist, the United Voices Choir
has grown over the past year and now has members of all ages, including mothers with young
children, grandparents and one great-grandmother.

After deciding to give a public performance on the eve of the Queen’s Jubilee, the choir
were joined by a local group of handbell ringers, while friends served cream teas and
cakes afterwards.

“To our amazement the church was packed and we raised £350 and, what’s more, everyone was
very complimentary,” said Valerie. “As it was just before the Jubilee, we finished our
concert with Rule Britannia with lots of flag waving.

A message of thanks from the children at HEAL Village to the United Voices Choir

“When we started the choir, we did not anticipate what a happy group it was going to be.
We have all made new friends and enjoy each other’s company.

“The choir have seen the photos of the children lining up at the water cooler and we are
all delighted that our singing has brought about an improvement in their lives.”

Donate a tree for HEAL Paradise Village

Monday, October 15th, 2012

WORK is well under way on the first phase of construction of HEAL’s eco-friendly
children’s village, named ‘Paradise’, which will provide a home for 1,000 orphaned
and underprivileged children from Andhra Pradesh and other parts of India.

The village, which is located in a beautiful rural setting at Thotophalli in the
Krishna District of Andhra Pradesh, will be a safe haven where children can be
nurtured in a self-sustaining and mutually beneficial community.

Using recyclable materials and ‘green’ technologies, Paradise will be made up not
only of a school and accommodation, but a health centre, a care home for the
elderly, an institute for the blind and facilities for sports and art.

But the village is not just about bricks and mortar. Those fortunate enough to
have visited the site nestled between the stunning expanse of Lake Brahmalingam, a
haven for wildlife, and canals providing irrigation for the local farming
communities, quickly realise where Paradise found its name.

Entirely self-contained and secluded from the busy highway that connects the
village to the city of Vijayawada, the site provides a perfect setting for the
harmonious growth and development of the children who will come to call it home.

An array of sustainable techniques and systems like solar and wind power,
Hydroponic vegetables gardens and solar cooking are incorporated within the site’s
design proposals, including the recycling of waste materials to create energy.

The village will have extensive green cover and planting of fruit bearing and
shady trees has already been started, increasing the scope for self-sustainability.

During a recent visit to the site, HEAL volunteers Becky Curbishley and Charlotte
Boardman were delighted to be asked to assist with the planting operation.

Volunteers Becky and Charlotte plant coconut trees during their visit to HEAL Paradise Village

“We were among the first volunteers to visit the developing Heal Paradise site –
and what a paradise it is, a perfect location in which to expand the Heal family,”
said UK medical student Charlotte.

“We felt extremely privileged to be asked to plant some of the first trees on the
site. Of course, we will now have to return in the future to see our flourishing
coconut trees!”

HEAL will build fruit and vegetable gardens on the Paradise grounds. This produce
will be used to sustain not only the village, but any surplus can be taken to a
daily market and sold to the locals as both fair and organic.

Keen to encourage local wildlife and offer shade from the hot sun, HEAL will also
be planting hundreds of trees around the site and this gives an opportunity for
donors to come forward and help cover the cost of this operation.

Anyone wishing to donate £100 towards the cost of planting and maintaining a tree
will have a plaque with their name on it placed alongside the tree.

The vision for Paradise Village is that it will be fully self-sustaining,
embracing green technology wherever possible. Therefore, HEAL is also looking for
donors to help purchase 40 solar street lights at a cost of £350, or $600, each.
Every street light will have a plaque mounted on it thanking the donor.

If you are interested in further information, please click on the ‘Donate Online’
button at the top of the website www.healparadise.org and one of the trustees of
HEAL UK will contact you to discuss your donation to the HEAL Paradise Village.

Taking up the challenge for HEAL

Friday, October 12th, 2012

HEAL would like to thank and congratulate some of its intrepid supporters who have
recently completed challenging events to raise well over £4,000 to help hundreds
of disadvantaged children in India.

Our charity relies heavily on the support of people who invite family, friends and
work colleagues to donate to HEAL by way of sponsorship for an event or challenge.

Most do this by creating a fund-raising page online at justgiving.com, where the
addition of gift aid can greatly increase the value of donations to charities like
HEAL.

HEAL is gearing up again for Cycle India 2014

Of course, fund-raising can come in all shapes and sizes, and HEAL has benefitted
through everything from bedroom clear-out sales to biking across India over the
past 20 years.

Car washes and cake sales are great ways for young people to get involved, while
planning is already going ahead for HEAL’s next major Cycle India event early in
2014.

People do the most amazing things to raise money for the causes they love and
among the more adventurous over the summer months have been challenges undertaken
for HEAL by the likes of Yashu Shah, who embarked on a tracking adventure in
Nepal, and another trio of travellers who have incredible tales to tell of their
journey across northern India.

Back home in the UK, Karen Rhandawa successsfuly completed the Ealing Half
Marathon, while our good friends at private jet charter firm Air Charter Service
have once again been pushing themselves to the limit by competing in the Great
River Race on the Thames.

No Plane, No Gain - the ACS Great River Race team

“HEAL is in its 20th year of helping underprivileged children in Andhra Pradesh by
providing them with shelter, healthcare and an education and we are marking this
anniversary with our biggest project to date for which we are urgently seeking
funding,” says HEAL founder Dr Satya Prasad Koneru.

“HEAL already looks after hundreds of children in Guntur and elsewhere through our
poverty trap projects, but now work is already well under way on Paradise Village,
which will become home to another 1,000 severely disadvantaged children very
soon.

“So the efforts of our supporters who who help to raise money in whatever way they
can are more important to HEAL than ever.”

Yashu Shah, a patient at Dr Prasad’s clinic in Peterborough, said: “I have just
come back from my trip of a lifetime. I managed to climb up to 5,200 metres and
although it was very tough, the whole thing was a fantastic experience. Raising
money for HEAL along the way made it even more special.”

Tracking through Nepal

Karen Rhandawa admitted that the many donations to her justgiving page had kept
her going as she trained for her first half-marathon. “It was one of my most
challenging achievements. I was proud to run the Ealing Half marathon for HEAL
because they do such wonderful work in taking children out of poverty. And I made
it round in a good time of 2:13:27 too!”

And there is still time to sponsor medical student Amrit Dhadda, who this weekend
will run the Cardiff Half Marathon on behalf of HEAL. His justgiving page can be
found at www.justgiving/amrit-dhadda0

Thirteen of Air Charter Service’s fittest athletes, glorying in the name No Plane,
No Gain, took to the Thames to row a staggering 21 miles. Last year they managed
to raise £3,168 towards an IT classroom at the new HEAL Paradise Village. And they
are hoping to better that figure this year to pay for a library, with ACS
promising to match what their staff raise.

Our heartfelt appreciation goes out to the ACS Great River Race team of Christine
Echeverria, Nakita Ogugua, Nicklas Danko, Oli Stravrakakis, Brendan Toomey, Joe
Gallimore, Joel Fenn, Chris Mansell, Ben Dinsdale, James Clark, Ella Melhuish, Amy
Irwin and Thea Goalen.

Last, but not least, well done to Chatty, Jamie and Olivia, whose attempts to
travel across India in a second-hand auto rickshaw may not quite have gone to
plan, but still benefitted their chosen charity, HEAL.

An Auto Rickshaw Across India

You can read about some of their adventures on their unusual 12-day trip,
including entries such as Stowaways on a Train and Sleeping on the Streets of
Pushkar, in their blog at www.travelblog.org/Bloggers/AnAutoRickshawAcrossIndia/

Child poverty motivates Cardiff student’s run for HEAL

Saturday, October 6th, 2012

A CARDIFF medical student says that every step he runs in next weekend’s Cardiff Half Marathon he will be thinking of the children who stand to benefit from him taking part.

Amrit Dhadda, a 20-year-old student at Cardiff University, completed last year’s half marathon in Wales’s capital city in around two hours and is looking to shave 20 minutes off his time from 12 months ago.

But his real motivation, he says, is raising funds for HEAL (Health and Education for All), after being inspired by the charity’s work in placing severely disadvantaged children in India into education for the past 20 years.

Amrit Dhadda, competing in last year's Cardiff Half Marathon

“HEAL’s mission is to give orphaned or underprivileged children shelter, healthcare and an all-important education, in an effort to break the vicious ‘poverty trap’ cycle,” says Amrit.

“More than a third of the world’s malnourished children live in India – and the UN has estimated every year more than two million children die before reaching the age of five – mostly from preventable childhood diseases.

“Living in the UK, it’s so easy to take for granted the opportunities that we are given, and to go through life encountering the problems which are thrown in our path which seem so huge whilst we’re going through them – when in reality many are so minor compared to the millions of underprivileged children living in places like India.

“All the money raised goes directly to projects in India as all staff involved in the administration of HEAL are volunteers.

“Running this Half Marathon is going to be tough – but it’s going to be incomparable to what millions of children in places like India are going through.

“I will be wearing a HEAL t-shirt during the run so I hope people will notice me and perhaps make a small donation – even if it’s not much it will do a lot to these children who have nothing.

“I am so honoured to run for such a worthwhile cause. When I came across HEAL I knew instantly that this was the charity I wanted to support and run for – the great work that the charity does is so inspiring and every step I run I will think of the children that will be better off.

“Doing the degree I do I understand how invaluable good healthcare is and how small interventions can make such a difference, as well as the fact that my heritage is from India, makes this charity personal for me.”

Donations to HEAL can be made through Amrit’s fund-raising page at www.justgiving.com/amrit-dhadda0.

Family tragedy sparks charitable act

Tuesday, August 7th, 2012

A BIRMINGHAM doctor will dedicate a new institute for the blind to his son when he travels to his native India to lay a foundation stone at HEAL Paradise Village later this year.

Dr Dhanum Chunduri, a GP at the Sparkbrook Community Health Centre, where his wife Vijaya and daughter Jyothi also work, has donated £71,000 towards the building of the Phanendra Chunduri Institute for the Blind at the village, being constructed by the UK-based charity HEAL (Health and Education for All).

Dr Chunduri’s 22-year-old son Phanendra died in 2000 after contracting fulminant viral hepatitis while studying medicine in Debrecen, Hungary.

Daughter Jyothi suffered from glaucoma since childhood and lost her eyesight eight years ago, and the family were inspired to create an institute for the blind in India after visiting a rehabilitation centre in Peterborough, the city where HEAL founder Dr Satya Prasad Koneru works as a GP.

The Chunduri family

“I first met Prasad in 1982 when Heal was just in its infancy,” said Dr Chunduri. “He was distrbuting leaflets at a function and we were very impressed with his charitable activities and used to help wherever we could.

“My family originally supported an educational college in India and set up the Phanendra Chunduri Memorial Trust in my son’s name. We donated nearly £100,000 for the construction of lecture halls, and a science laboratory at Noble College in our native Machilipatnam, where one room was allocated as a museum for the Trust.

“My daughter has been blind since contracting glaucoma in 2004, so we thought of setting up an institute for the blind, something Indian people are desperately in need of.

“When Prasad came to me and told me about HEAL Paradise we decided to fund an institute for the blind there. We wanted to do something for the public, as there is very little help from the government for blind people.”

Phanendra Chunduri

Paradise Village, at Thotapally in the state of Andhra Pradesh, is the brainchild of Dr Prasad and will become home to 1,000 orphaned and destitute children when it is completed next year.

Dr Chunduri, who has four brothers and three sisters, will be accompanied by younger brother Krishna Babu when he revisits Paradise in November. Krishna Babu, a neurologist based in Dallas, Texas, has donated funds for the building of a vocational centre at the Village and will also lay a foundation stone on the same day.

For more information on HEAL Paradise Village and how to make a donation, please visit www.healparadise.org.

Dallas doctor donates vocational centre to Paradise Village

Wednesday, June 6th, 2012

AN Indian-born Dallas doctor is appealing for more like-minded professionals in America to join his crusade to give impoverished children in his homeland a start in life.

A college reunion four years ago brought him back in contact with former classmate Dr Satya Prasad Koneru, founder of the UK charity HEAL (Health and Education for All), and since then Dr Chunduri hasn’t looked back.

Dr Krishnababu Chunduri, left, with HEAL founder Dr Satya Prasad Koneru

He took part in a gruelling event, Cycle India 2010, to raise funds for HEAL’s projects and was so moved after meeting some of the children in the charity’s care that he knew he had to do more to help.

“When I was young my father died and my two brothers took care of eight of us. I always felt so much in their debt,” said Dr Chunduri.

“And when I first became involved with HEAL I saw this as a way of ‘paying my dues’, but after seeing the kids at the Children’s Village in Guntur I knew that I was going to be involved forever.

“I also remember during Cycle India 2010 seeing these people from the UK, some of who were barely able to cycle for one reason or another, but they carried on regardless and I thought ‘Why are these guys putting themselves through this?’.

“This, too, inspired me and left me feeling that my involvement with HEAL would be on-going, not just for the one time as I had imagined. I salute them for doing this for other human beings.”

Dr Krishnababu Chunduri, left, with fellow US cyclists at Cycle India 2010 and HEAL founder Dr Satya Prasad Koneru, right,

A family bereavement prevented Dr Chunduri from participating in Cycle India 2012, but he was determined to be involved and flew to India to make a personal donation to HEAL’s ambitious new project, Paradise Village, which will soon become home to 1,000 orphaned and underprivileged children.

“I met up with the cyclists after their ride and I told Prasad that I would like to donate $100,000 towards a vocational centre for the Paradise Village and a further $20,000 to build a guest house cottage there, too.

“I saw this as my destiny – it was something I felt I had to do – and I hope I can do more in the future.”

An artist's impression of the school block at the HEAL Paradise Village, under construction in Thotapalli

Now Dr Chunduri is hoping to reach out to other like-minded people in America to support HEAL’s good work.

“The sad situation in India is that there are super-rich people, but others are so poor you cry when you see them. The rich people don’t care about the poor people,” he said.

“There are only a few of us in HEAL USA right now and we need to recruit more people. There are a huge number of people like myself who left India to come and work in the States.

“Many of them are already donating to other charities, or projects such as temples and colleges back home in India, but HEAL needs help to give these unfortunate children a future by putting them into education.

“The beauty of the charity is that they have no paid staff and no administrative offices, so the money raised and donated goes directly to where it is needed most and I have seen the difference it makes with my own eyes.

“We are already looking at the possibility of holding a Cycle India event in America to raise awareness of HEAL and will be actively seeking more sponsors to support the Paradise Village project.”

After serving his internship in India, Dr Chunduri took up residency at the VA Medical Center in Brooklyn, New York and currently runs his own practise in Fort Worth.

Explaining his reasons for supporting a vocational centre, Dr Chunduri said that there was a need to encourage training in trades where skills were often learned on the job.

“There is an abundance of high-end technical people, but there is a need for mid-level technical people,” he said. “Some people work as machinists with no training and only hands-on experience. They need proper training and this vocational centre will encourage that.”

He added, “I talked to several kids separately at the HEAL Children’s Village in Guntur and asked them what they want to be. Only one said ‘engineer’. Almost all of them said, ‘I want to help people like me here at the HEAL Village’.

Krishnababu Chunduri, a 61-year-old neurologist from Fort Worth, Texas, was born and brought up in southern India and took his medical training in Guntur, Andhra Pradesh, during the 1970s.

“It gave me a lot of encouragement that many of the kids are going to help with HEAL in the future. It is definitely going to make a difference that these children are going to go on to help people, which means that HEAL’s good work will be continued in the future.”

Dr Chunduri’s elder brother Dhanumjay is a GP based in Birmingham, England, and his family is sponsoring the creation of the Phanendra Chunduri Institute for the Blind at the Paradise Village in memory of his late son.

“Our own mother had zero education,” said Dr Chunduri. “It was frustrating for her when she wanted to read or write letters and had to depend on other people. But she still encouraged us and was our inspiration to get a good education.

“My brothers went on to do well in life. My father died when I was small, but my mother was so instrumental in educating us. That is why the vocational centre will be named after her.”

HEAL puts a smile on Sirisha’s face

Tuesday, March 6th, 2012

WORK on the HEAL Paradise Village may not be complete, but the good news is that the project
is already having a positive impact on the local community in Thotapalli.

Steve Sargent, a HEAL volunteer who has spent time at the Paradise site overseeing the early
stages of development, heard about the plight of a local schoolgirl with type-1 diabetes
whose family were unable to meet the cost of her medical treatment.

Eleven-year-old Sirisha attends the local government school, but did not qualify for a
disability allowance to cover the cost of regular check-ups, lab tests, insulin and
syringes.

With the help of HEAL India’s Dr K Jagan Mohan Rao at Nagarjuna Hospital, Steve was able to
establish the cost of meeting Sirisha’s medical needs and a sponsor from England was quickly
identified to assist.

As our pictures show, she is now able to draw insulin from a pharmacy thanks to the money donated every month by a family with a diabetic daughter of the same age.

HEAL have also assisted a five-year-old boy, Aravind, who attends the same school as
Sirisha.

Aravind has a mild form of cerebral palsy and has difficulty walking, so HEAL were happy to
help arrange for him to have a specially-made shoe after consulting with local medics.

Children attending the local school can also be seen carrying their smart, new HEAL bags as the charity does its best to forge strong links with the community.

Paradise itself, when complete, will not only provide vital schooling and a home for a thousand underprivileged children, but will offer much more to local people, including an institute for the blind, industrial training, a health centre and a junior college.

Bala Kuteer library’s welcome gift

Tuesday, March 6th, 2012

THE new Bala Kuteer School library used by pupils at the Heal Children’s Village added another title to its shelves during the recent Cycle India visit to Guntur.

Welsh author Cathy Farr, who sponsored her friend Jem King, one the UK cyclists on the fundraising visit to India, asked him to personally deliver signed copies of her children’s fantasy novel Moon Chase during the trip.

Librarian Lalitha, right, and 15-year-old student Anusha with the signed copies of Moon Chase

Jem was delighted to hand over the books to librarian Lalitha and 15-year-old student Anusha Vajja, the child Jem sponsors at the Heal Village, on Cathy’s behalf. Lalitha said that she was particularly pleased to receive the gift as the library was in need of more story books to fire the children’s imaginations.

“I know Cathy is keen to promote reading whenever and wherever she can, so I was happy to take some new reading material along with me,” said Jem.

“They have a magnificent new library at the Village and it was a pleasure to be shown around by Lalitha. They have a good selection of books for younger children in particular, but I understand they are still in need of more story books so I will be looking to see if I can help with that.”

Cathy, who, like Jem, hails from the Vale of Glamorgan, is currently finishing off her second novel loosely based on her Irish wolfhound, Finn.

“Moon Chase is a fantasy adventure about the Fellhounds of Thesk, aimed at teenage readers, although I enjoyed it too,” added Jem.

“I’m looking forward to Cathy’s second book in the series and I’m sure we will be certain to send a few copies off to the Heal Children’s Village once it’s published to help keep their library up to date.”

The new library on opening day

The library, given the name Deepthi (bright flame), was donated to the Chetana Charitable Trust in memory of Mrs Pramila K Tummala, who worked as a librarian for more than 20 years at the Kansas State University in Manhattan, USA.
The new building was officially opened by Prof Krishna Kumar Tummala on New year’s Day, two years to the day after his wife’s passing.

Mrs Tummala had been unable to fulfill her dream of returning to India to work with Dr Manga Devi at Chetana following her retirement, so her husband and children decided it would be fitting to donate the library in her name.