Sunday, January 27, 2013

TOUCHING HEARTS, IMPACTING LIVES An evening to honour India’s changemakers President To Be Chief Guest At TOI Social Impact Awards

They took the path less travelled, and on Monday it will lead a group of remarkable men and women to the stage for the second Times of India Social Impact Awards in association with J P Morgan. The awards are being given to changemakers within NGOs, corporates and government who have quietly worked to transform the lives of millions of marginalized Indians. 

    President Pranab Mukherjee will be the chief guest at the awards function. Joining him, and a power-packed audience comprising top achievers from diverse fields, will be beneficiaries of the organisations selected for the awards. 
    For some beneficiaries, this visit to the capital will 

mark the first time they have travelled beyond the boundaries of their district. Awards in 17 categories will be presented by the beneficiaries. 
    The awardees and beneficiaries collectively represent the very best of India in all its fascinating diversity. They range from nine-year-old Jyoti Prajapat from Ajmer district to 83-year-old Thokchom Ramani Leima from Imphal. Jyoti will join 10-year-old Ujala Kumari from Delhi to present the award for education in the NGO sector to Room to Read India, whose libraries gave both girls an abiding love for reading. Leima will take the stage with four other women members of Meira Paibi, the fearless group of women from Manipur who will share the Lifetime Achievement Award with the Naga Mothers Association. The two groups have battled social evils like alcoholism and drug abuse, and spearheaded the peace efforts in the insurgency-ridden region. 
    Among others who will present awards is Sarjubai Meena, a grandmother from Bhilwara who is known as the 
"woman with the turban". Sarjubai will present the award for Environment in the NGO category to the Foundation for Ecological Security, which helped her and others turn the village into a fertile, prosperous one, in which Sarjubai, a dalit woman, now feels she has earned the right to wear a turban. Hunt for real heroes began six months ago 
    Eleven-year-old twins Hiranya and Thiruvara Bhargavi who were born with cerebral palsy, will present the award for health in the Government category to the National Trust for the Welfare of Persons with Autism, Cerebral Palsy, Mental Retardation and Multiple Disabilities, whose pioneering insurance scheme helped them access life-saving surgeries. 
    The hunt for India's real heroes began in August last year when the Times of India invited applications from NGOs, corporates and government organisations in five categories: livelihoods, advocacy and empowerment, education, health and the environment. Online applications were accepted between October 2 and 30, 2012 through a dedicated website. A National Search Panel of eight eminent persons with long experience in the development sector was also constituted in early August, which identified 126 organisations worth consideration, who were then motivated to apply. 
    Facebook and Twitter pages helped answer questions about application procedures and kick-start a discussion. Finally, over 1500 entries were received, spanning the length and breadth of the country. The majority of applications were from NGOs. 
    The eight key parameters to evaluate the entries were significance of the issue addressed, scale, replicability, sustainability, finances, people's participation, innovativeness and promotion of equity. Every claim had to be backed up with documents and financial details had to be transparent. A specialist group consisting of philanthropy specialists from Dasra, GiveIndia and GuideStar India screened the entries and 20 sector-experts then evaluated these entries to prepare a final shortlist of 41 entries. TOI reporters conducted field visits of each entry. 
    An eminent jury comprising Unique Identification Authority of India chairperson Nandan Nilekani; Magsaysay awardee and National Advisory Council member Aruna Roy; former Cabinet Secretary Naresh Chandra; Magsaysay awardee and former Chief Election Commissioner J M Lyngdoh; Planning Commission member Syeda Hameed; former chairperson of Thermax Limited and Rajya Sabha MP Anu Aga; Centre for Science and Education director-general Sunita Narain and HDFC Bank chairperson Deepak Parekh spent an afternoon debating and discussing, before selecting the winners. The jury also nominated a Global Contribution to India award winner and a Lifetime Achievement award winner.



Library hour has returned to Byculla West Municipal School in Mumbai and many government schools in 10 states with Room to Read setting up libraries. The NGO is one of the winners in the Education category


Caring for shared resources and protecting the commons is the basis of Foundation for Ecological Security's work in Amaratiya village in Rajasthan. The non-profit is a winner in the Environment category


Association for Democratic Reforms works to publicize financial details and criminal records of political candidates. ADR is one of the winners in the Advocacy & Empowerment category


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