Saturday, 20 October 2012

BBC world news features World's Largest Mid Day Meal Programme

India's largest Mid day meal programme run by the Akshaya Patra Foundation was featured in BBC world news.

The Feature kitchen in the Video is one of the largest Kitchens in Bangalore, This centralized kitchen being one of the largest out of many in India. This kitchen supplies food to more than 2 lakh children every day. The cooking process begins early in the morning around 3 am.

Children in the government schools are fed hot nutritious meal in the lunch time which is turns out to incentive for them to come back to school every day.

The world food bank estimates 67% of the children go to bed hunger every day.

Bangalore based IT companies are the major donors  for this Initiatives from Akshaya Patra.


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Friday, 19 October 2012

Akshaya Patra Kitchen started in Assam

The eighth state in India under Akshaya Patra’s light is Assam. We recently had a great Akshaya Patra inauguration at Guwahati, Assam.

It was a disused industrial shed, located about 1 km from the banks of the mighty river Brahmaputra which is now turned out to be the hygienic, technology-intensive Akshaya Patra kitchen. It was all because of the sincere efforts of Shri Janardhan Dasa,Akshaya Patra location Head, Assam, that the conversion took place in a record time of three months.

The Akshaya Patra kitchen has a capacity to cook for about 50,000 children.

The Governor of Assam, Shri Janaki Ballav Pattanaik graced the august occasion along with Shri Gautam Bora, Minister of Education and Dr. Himanta Biswa Sarma, Minister for Health, Family Welfare was also present at the august occasion. The Governor of Assam appreciated Akshaya Patra in his address, “…the best way to provide good, healthy & nourishing meals has been demonstrated by Akshaya Patra” the Governor and the Ministers sat with the school children and shared meals.

Shri Abhay Jain, Shri Ravindra Chamari and Shri Janardhan Dasa representing Akshaya Patra were also present.

Join hands with us to reach out to more and more children across all states in India.

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Thursday, 18 October 2012

Learning, with Lunch - Akshaya Patra Foundation

 
Akshaya Patra mid day meals, served to nearly 13 lakh school children in seven States, are an incentive to come to class and stay on course.

There are several heart-warming features about the Akshaya Patra scheme that brings fresh, hot, nutritious meals to the doorstep of nearly 13 lakh schoolchildren across seven States in India. But for me, the biggest one is that it has reduced dropouts in general, and more important, arrested the tendency of parents to pull out girls from school ahead of boys.

In Vrindavan in Uttar Pradesh, the massive kitchen located within the 100-acre campus housing an impressive ISKCON temple cooks meals for 1.69 lakh children, and 89,631 of these, or 53 per cent, are girls, says Suvyakta Narasimha Das, Unit President of the Akshaya Patra Foundation (APF).

The 36-year-old mechanical engineer, who is also the vice-president of the Hare Krishna Movement, Vrindavan, is celibate and oversees the entire operation of this complex which uses every day about 4-5 tonnes of vegetables and 3-5 tonnes each of wheat, rice and dhal! The meal prepared here includes roti, khichdi, dhal packed with vegetables (“if we give the vegetables separately children tend to put them aside,” sighs Das) and rice.

“Earlier we did try to give them sambaar but the children said dhal khatti (sour) ya kharab ho gayi hei; so now it's dhal and kadhi once a week.” he adds.

Akshaya Patra started in 2000 as a small idea. In 1997, when the ISKCON temple was inaugurated in Bangalore, its members were looking for a socially relevant activity. When Mohandas Pai, who recently resigned as HR Director of Infosys Technologies, met Madhu Pandit Das, Chairman of APF and a civil engineer from IIT Bombay, they discussed the idea of feeding children in government schools.

Such children often come to school without adequate nutrition and fail to imbibe much from their classes. “A wholesome mid day meal would give them both nutrition and incentive to come and remain in school,” says Das.

Free noon meals have been tried in India earlier, and have been a huge success in Tamil Nadu, for instance, and across the country the government was also giving 3 kg of foodgrains for a child every month. But there was no way of ensuring this wouldn't be sold during trying times.

A small beginning

The scheme began with 1,500 children in four schools near the Bangalore temple, but soon requests came from other schools for such a meal. “Within six months we had a pile of letters and requests to feed 1 lakh children. The scale of the problem hit us; we were unaware so many children in Bangalore were going without food.”

Knowing that a few thousand meals wouldn't help, the civil engineer from IIT used his engineering skills to design a huge centralised kitchen to cook meals for 30,000 children. As equipment designers and manufacturers' experience was limited to hotel kitchens that could cook a few hundred meals at a time, the APF team had to design both the structure of the kitchen and cooking equipment.

This capacity had to be expanded soon to 1 lakh meals; next came a request from Jaipur and the APF set up a kitchen there for feeding 1.5 lakh children. For Krishna devotees, Vrindavan was a natural choice and the scheme was introduced here. But the South Indian meal of rice, sambaar, curd and vegetables did not work here. While only 5,000 children were being fed here in 2005, when Das came to the Vrindavan facility, rotis were made manually. But in Mathura district alone 2 lakh children needed a hot midday meal “and if we wanted to scale up to meet that number, we would need 6 lakh rotis every day, which was manually impossible,” he says. So the hunt began for a suitable roti machine.

Khichdi, a big hit!

At the Kanyapur Madhmik Vidyalaya, Asha Sharma, the principal, leads me to Class VIII, where about 25 bright-eyed girls are eager to give me their feedback on the Akshaya Patra food. Khichdi is clearly their favourite, followed by roti, dhal and rice. But they are sure of one thing; they don't like the kheer!

Now this will be a challenge for Das; in the APF kitchens in the south, sweet pongal is the weekly dessert, but in UP the children didn't have much of a liking for this meethi khichdi!

The principal is delighted with the quality of food and says the children love it. “The one big difference this food has made is that children don't go home for long lunch intervals. Earlier they would say they hadn't brought lunch because it wasn't ready in the morning!”

Another teacher agrees with Das's assessment that for many of the children this would be the only square, wholesome meal they have during the day — each meal is around 500 calories, more than the 350-400 calories recommended by nutritionists.

Asha adds that there is sufficient quantity of food for the children who bring their own plates, katoris or containers. “We give the children the first helping, allow them to come for a second and even a third one if they wish.” Some children, she says quietly, come with a much larger container with a lid. “If the food is left over they prefer to take it home, and we allow that.”

The annual budget of APF is Rs 100 crore. It has 18 kitchens in seven States, Karnataka, Gujarat, Assam, Orissa, UP, Rajasthan and Chattisgarh, and eight have ISO 22000 with HACCP (food safety) certification.

While about half of what they need comes through the foodgrains provided by the government, donations, both large ones from corporates and small ones from individuals, make up the other half. It is possible to donate through their Web site.
Important donors

Two of the biggest donations have come for the kitchens; around Rs 7 crore from Sudha Murthy — both from the Infosys Foundation and her personal funds — to build the Hubli kitchen, where she also supports the meals cooked. The Jindal group donated Rs 8 crore for the Bellary kitchen in Karnataka a few years ago. Then there are individual donors, such as Pai, who is on the APF board and “never misses a meeting”. Donations from devotees visiting ISKCON temples help too.

But a continuous supply of funds is a huge challenge, particularly for the smooth operation of the kitchens. With the government being a major partner, delays in sanctions or supply can derail the programme. “Six months ago we had to take a Rs 50-lakh bank loan to keep the programme running. How many charities would do that,” asks Das.

The average meal cost is Rs 6, and even when food prices had shot up last year — Rs 100 for a kg of toor dhal, not to mention onions — the huge scale of operations allowed Akshaya Patra to keep to its budget. “We have different sources, buy huge volumes during the season, keep it in cold storage and use substitutes when prices of a particular vegetable shoot up.”

At the end of the day the APF fulfils a vital part of the children's nutritional and educational requirements. One of its studies in Jaipur showed 8 per cent of children saying they wouldn't be in school but for the noon meal scheme. “Also, scientifically, it has been proved that with better nutrition children's cognitive capabilities improve. Also, the teachers tell us that before this mid day meal scheme sometimes the children would faint in class or show little interest in their lessons. Now their concentration levels have improved and they are brighter in class.”

More requests are pouring in; “we now have invitations from CMs… Maharashtra and Punjab and we are exploring Madhya Pradesh too,” adds Das. And when these States get Akshaya Patra kitchens, more Aartis, Sonams, Bhawanis, Ashoks, who come to school with barely a cup of tea and a toast – often not even that – will get, along with wholesome food and education, a future sans mere lip service for rural India.

A mammoth roti-making machine

When Akshaya Patra’s Vrindavan kitchen was looking for a giant roti machine, those available could make only 500 rotis per hour. So the biscuit makers of unjab were approached, given design and Rs 20 lakh — no manufacturer wanted to invest in a machine that might not work — to fabricate a machine that could take 10,000 rotis an hour.

The machine was installed but served the purpose only for a while. Giving me a tour of the totally automated, mammoth kitchen where the mere scale of the operations takes your breath away, Suvyakta Narasimha Das points to that machine which today is a relic but with great sentimental value. It served the purpose as long as this kitchen was serving only 60,000 children, but became irrelevant when more children were taken into the programme.

Now a machine that would roll out 40,000 rotis an hour was needed; tortilla manufacturers in the US and Holland were consulted and the kitchen got its present roti maker. Watching that operation in the wee hours of the morning — the kitchen springs to life at 9 p.m. and by 6 a.m. the cooking is completed — is nothing less than a major treat. The aata is made in the in-house chakki — “we are dealing with children and can’t afford any adulteration, so we make our own aata and masala powders” — and it’s awesome to watch the rotis being churned out by the machine.

A giant lump of aata fed at the top is spread by the rollers into a thin, flat, fabriclike sheet, from which round-shaped rotis are cut and passed through the oven with LPG burners. After one side is cooked, the rotis are automatically flipped to cook the other side, then fall onto a jaali-like surface where they puff up, as in millions of Indian homes. Next, oil is sprayed on the rotis to prevent their sticking together; a pair of gloved hands touch them only during packing. The wasted dough goes back to the machine to make more rotis.

Not only is the roti-making process automated, mechanised cutters chop vegetables. The containers, as can be imagined, are huge; there is a 150-tonne silo to store rice and another 100-tonne silo for wheat storage. The rice and wheat come from the FCI as the government is a partner in this programme. A grader separates the paddy and other foreign material from the FCI rice — the daily ration is 100 gm of grain for every child — and then further separates the full grain from broken rice; the latter is used for khichdi, and the entire consignment is passed through a de-stoner.

The aata is ground in-house to preserve the fibre content, which is lost when the mills remove the bran from the wheat. “Our nutrition experts have told us that it is essential to retain the bran so the children get sufficient nutrition,” explains Das, adding, “We also buy spices and grind them here to retain the flavour.” Surely enough, I can taste it in the piping hot, fragrant and spicy khichdi that is served to me at 6 a.m.! The rice quality is excellent and when I mention this, Das laughs: “We are very fussy about the quality of foodgrains and have in the past rejected FCI grain and bought our grains, so they are careful about our supplies.”

The kitchen is carefully designed so that the preparing, cooking and packing sections are at different levels and the force of gravity is used to transfer the cooked food into the containers. Pointing to a huge cooking vessel, Das says, “This uses steam and can cook rice for 1,400 children in about 20 minutes.” To deal with the frequent power cuts there is back-up through 300 and 200 KVA DG sets.

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Wednesday, 17 October 2012

Donate for Children - International Day for the Eradication of Poverty

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Today the 17th of October, we take a moment to analyse how poverty is affecting our children and how we can find ways to ensure that they are not affected.

World leaders in Millennium summit committed themselves to cutting by half by the year 2015 the number of people living in extreme poverty - people whose income is less than one dollar a day.

Akshaya Patra beneficiaries mid day meal schemeMany leaders argue that even a dollar a day might also be not sufficient to alleviate poverty. In such a case many Indians live below poverty line whose entire family income is much lower than 1 dollar a day. And it becomes essential for everyone in the family  to find a job, earn and fill their stomach at least once a day.

Hunger, malnourishment, under nourishment, etc are the many that hinders the life of such families. Hunger itself accounts for more deaths than any other disease in India. The children become the most vulnerable category. The numbers of child mortality in India is heart breaking. Many children have no option but to fight for food, by means of labour, and sometimes even by anti-social activities.  Such is the state of millions of children in India.

The World Bank estimates that India is ranked 2nd in the world, of the number of children suffering from malnutrition. The prevalence of underweight children in India is among the highest in the world, and is nearly double to that of Sub-Saharan Africa with dire consequences for mobility, mortality, productivity and economic growth. The UN estimates that 2.1 million Indian children die before reaching the age of 5 every year – four every minute!! *

And all this is because of poverty. How do we solve such a massive problem? Who is responsible? Aren’t we all? There are many solutions and the problem needs to be tackled through various measures at the same time.  And it is important that everyone steps in.

We at Akshaya Patra, believe that children have the right to food and right to education, which are both essential for tackling an issue like poverty.  And hence this became our vision!  “No child in India shall be deprived of education because of hunger.”

We serve mid day meals at government schools ensuring that children not only get one full meal that is nutritious everyday but also get an opportunity to attend school. We have been serving children for 12 years and we have seen that food does become an incentive to many children and they attend school. Where we serve, we have seen that there is increase in enrolment  attendance and there is decline in drop-out rate. We continue to serve the children that the health and education leads to better employability of children in years to come and that they will achieve better standard of living.

Today we reach over 1.3 million children. By 2020 we hope to reach 5 million and then even more…

We need every support possible to attain our vision, join us! Indeed join a cause that brings resolve, that alleviates poverty, that gives life to many children, that gives better opportunities to all.

International Day for the Eradication of Poverty - Donate for Children  

Tuesday, 16 October 2012

2012 World Food Day - Food for Education | October 16,2012

World Food Day was declared by UN in 1945 to be observed on 16th of October every year. With an important goal of spreading awareness on issues behind poverty and hunger, every year UN adopts a theme for this day in order to highlight the areas that needs for action to provide a resolve to the situation related to poverty and hunger.

The theme for the current year being “agricultural cooperatives – key to feeding the world” recognizing the role agricultural cooperatives play in improving food security and contributing to the eradication of hunger. An FAO document gives a complete account of how cooperatives contribute and their importance. Please click the link for same.

Adopting many measures as per the themes such as ‘food and nutrition’, ‘the right to food’, ‘united against hunger’ are quintessential for India due to the hunger crisis in the country. 2011 hunger statistics declare India in state of emergency yet again and India’s score is same as it was in 1996, even though there has been overall decline, decline itself is marginal. There are many initiatives adopted by the government and by philanthropic organization in India to over come the issue.  However, this obviously is not sufficient.

Akshaya Patra started in 2000 with a simple thought that children must get education and hungry children cannot really focus on education and it works against physical and mental abilities of the child to sit in classroom when hungry. It was decided that Akshaya Patra will feed children in schools thus attracting more children to school and retaining them in school through regular one hot nutritious meal on every school day.

Today Akshaya Patra serves mid-day-meals to over 1.3 million children and envisions feeding 5 million children every day by 2020.

We really wish that many more initiatives are taken up by the government and every individual in the society as it is our social responsibility to ensure that our fellow men have their rights assured. We extend our hands to organizations that need support in running services similar to Akshaya Patra.

We really hope that we as a nation see a light of the day when hunger has been eradicated in India and we hope that our service is not even required by 2030!!

Join such causes, support Akshaya Patra and be the catalyst.  Donate today and do your bit on World Food Day!!

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Monday, 15 October 2012

Akshaya Patra | Mid Day Meal Program in the Mining District

Ramesh and Anjali have been studying using a mobile torch. They have just two zero voltage bulbs in the house, but that too is rendered useless because of the frequent power cuts. Ramesh is studying in grade 10 and Anjali is studying in grade 8. They both are toppers in their school; what makes their achievement laudable is the fact that they are financially disadvantaged. The fifteen year old works as a cleaner during the holidays so that he can fund the stationary and other expenses that is incurred at the school.

The seven-member family which includes Ramesh, Anjali and their three younger siblings live in a small shed-like structure. A few years ago Ramesh’s father worked in the nearby mines and the housing facility was provided by the mining giant. But now, with the mines being closed, the family has been told to evacuate. Since they have no where to go, they continue to live in a shed like structure.  The children explain that they have to walk a few kilometers to be able to even get access to drinking water.  The family stays along with 30 other families in the area. With hardly any amenities or infrastructure all the families have the same tell-tales to present.

The Bellary district is a mining hub in the state of Karnataka. The major occupation of the district was agriculture till a decade ago. The mining industry boom saw many people abandoning agriculture and seeking employment in the mines. However, in 2011 the Supreme Court of India ordered a ban on mining in Bellary due to allegations of rampant corruption and illegal mining. This affected thousands of families whose livelihood depended on the mining industry.  Ramesh and Anjali’s father who worked in the mines had to look out for other means of livelihood.

Today the children’s father is a quarry worker. He is the only earning member in the family and his earnings vary from Rs. 30 to Rs. 200 per day. His father leaves home at 5:00 AM since the quarry is about 17 kms away from their house.  Ramesh shares, “The months which see good rainfall is tough for the family. Though it benefits the region, it proves fatal for those of us whose livelihood depends on the quarry. The rocks refuse to crack in those months and hence we have very limited earnings.” It is in this context that the mid day meal programme has proved to be a blessing for the family.

The teachers at the Rural High School P K Halli, say, “Though most of the children come from low economic groups, it has proved extremely beneficial for children like Ramesh and Anjali. It is during the growing years that children need good nutrition. If the children are hungry, how can they concentrate on the studies?”

The siblings love the mid day meal. In unison they say, “We are able to concentrate better after we have the Akshaya Patra lunch.” Ramesh is not only the school pupil leader but also is the captain of the Kabbadi team.  Ramesh recently led the school Kabbadi team reach the finals of the taluk-level sports meet. Ramesh wants to become a police officer and Anjali wants to become an engineer. The teachers are confident that they will achieve their dreams. The teachers are hopeful that Ramesh will top the school in the 10th grade public examination this academic year.

Every afternoon as Ramesh and Anjali enjoy the mid day meal along with their friends, a commitment for a brighter tomorrow is getting stronger, a dream for a better future is slowly turning into reality!!

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Saturday, 13 October 2012

Mid day Meal Distribution Vehicle Sponsored by Bank of Baroda


Bank of Baroda has donated a meal distribution vehicle to The Akshaya Patra Foundation. This is second meal distribution vehicle that the country's first largest public sector lender has donated to Akshaya Patra to fulfils their shared vision of creating a brighter future for the deserving children.

The custom-designed vehicle donated will be used to distribute mid-day meals to children in government schools across Bangalore. Akshaya Patra is currently feeding more than 1.3 million school children every day in 20 locations in 9 states across the country. The meal delivery vehicle will help transport hot, nutritious meals from the centralized kitchens to about 4000 children every day. Mid day meals gives the children an incentive to go to school, stay in school and provides them with the necessary nutrients they need, to satiate hunger and to focus on learning.

Commenting on the occasion, Sri Chanchalapathi Dasa, Vice Chairman, Akshaya Patra Foundation, said “We are very happy that Bank of Baroda has partnered with us. Education is one key for India’s growth. We cannot benefit if our future generation is uneducated. With an objective to boost education and bring an end to classroom hunger, the mid day meal programme is being run in partnership with the Government of India and various state governments. With the support of many corporate philanthropists like the Bank of Baroda, we will continue the good work.”

Madhava Madi Reddy, General Manager, Karnataka & A.P Zone, Bank of Baroda, flagged off the vehicle at a ceremony held at Akshaya Patra’s corporate office in Bangalore. Commenting on the occasion, Mr. Reddy said, “Bank of Baroda is committed to the noble cause that Akshaya Patra has been working towards.  We will continue to be associated with the Foundation in our future CSR activities as well.”

Bank of Baroda is a nationalized bank based in Vadodara, India. It is the country's first largest public sector lender in terms of annual profit. The Bank is ranked 715 on Forbes Global 2000 list.

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Akshaya Patra Mid Day Meal Brought us Back to School!! - Raiji & Uday

It is Wednesday. There is unusual silence in the school; the students are busy writing their half-yearly examinations.  As the time inches towards  1 ’O’ clock, a few students trickle out of the examination hall, and in a matter of minutes the ringing of the school bell ensures the children flood out of the classrooms.

The teachers are ready. They have opened large steel vessels of rice and sambar. The children begin to queue up for their share of the mid day meal. There are friendly pushes as each child is eager to get his share faster than the other. G. Shahabuddin, a teacher who has been teaching at the Government Higher Primary School Boovanhalli, says, “The children have benefited from the mid day meal programme. Parents of most children leave early for work and return only late in the evening. So not every child is able to get lunch, hence it is this mid day meal which ensures that children don’t go hungry.”

A chat with the teachers reveals that children drop out of school due to various reasons. They say, “The trend is not surprising in spite of the fact that in the last few years parents have understood the need for education. They explain that because of the poor economic conditions in the family, the parents are forced to send the child to work or take care of the younger siblings at home.”

The efforts of the teachers are making a huge difference. In the last few years, they have constantly  attempted to bring these children back to school. Renuka, a kannada teacher at the school says, “During the census when we find that there are considerable number of children who are school drop outs, we conduct a summer camp called ‘chinnara angala’.  We ensure that we talk to the parents and convince them that in spite of the difficulties at home, it is their responsibility to ensure that the children attend school. We also tell them about the mid day meal programme and the other facilitiefacilities extended in the government school.” Children like Rajeshwari, Ashok and Uday stand as testimony to the teachers’ efforts.

Raji comes back to school


Rajeshwari’s father owned a meat stall and her mother set up a small dosa stall outside the house to supplement the family income. Raji as she introduces herself was then studying in grade 1, dropped out of school to take care of the younger siblings. With complete innocence, she admits, “I used to tender change at the cash counter. My mother’s business did very well because her dosas were very tasty.” It’s just about a few months now that Raji has been able to get back to regular schooling. She now studies in grade four.


 Uday comes to school again


Ashok and Uday too have similar stories to share. Ashok has got back to school after a gap of five years. Uday has returnedto regular schooling after two years.  Ashok was sent to his sister’s house to take care of his niece. Uday was in grade two when he lost his mother and that forced him to quit schooling and play a role of a care taker at an age when he himself would have needed parental care and affection. And now, they are back in school. Ashok is a good athlete who has brought laurels for the school and Uday is brilliant at studies and tops the class. The teacher says, “Apart from our efforts, the mid day meal has ensured that children like them could get back to school. Parents have one hungry stomach less to feed. But without the mid day meal, these children could not have realized their potential.”


It is the cumulative effort of schools like this that has resulted in the increase of literacy rate of nearly 10% from 57% in 2001 to 67% in 2011* in the district of Bellary in Karnataka. The school’s enrolment data shows that 900 children are studying this academic year, 443 girls and 457 boys attend school regularly. A few will drop out of school by the time they reach grade 10, but there will be many who will continue to study. Most will opt to continue their studies in ITI and Diploma courses. The teachers of this school in Toranagallu will continue to praise the students who have passed out of the school and today are role models for their juniors.

For many of them, Akshaya Patra meal has been the most filling and nutritious meal of the day.  mother and that forced him to quit schooling and play a role of a care taker at an age when he himself would have needed parental care and affection. And now, they are back in school. Ashok is a good athlete who has brought laurels for the school and Uday is brilliant at studies and tops the class. The teacher says, “Apart from our efforts, the mid day meal has ensured that children like them could get back to school. Parents have one hungry stomach less to feed. But without the mid day meal, these children could not have realized their potential.”

What makes the meal special? In their words, “sudta ide”, which translates into the meal, that is always “piping hot.”

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Thursday, 11 October 2012

Akshaya Patra - Celebrating International Girl Child Day on Today, Oct 11,2012


 
Celebrating International Girl Child Day , Today, Oct 11,2012.

Safa Farooq  is a grade 2 student at the Government Higher Primary School in Bengre Kasba located in the city of Mangalore. She eagerly waits for the mid day meal served at the school every day.

Her mother shares “Considering the family’s economic condition the mid day meal is a blessing for Safa. The child often talks about the variety in the menu. By her explanations, we know that she likes the Payasam and the Pulao the most. Not even once has she complained about the food.”

Safa is too young to understand the family’s economic condition or the impact of the mid day meal on her health. But the smiles, healthy features, and her enthusiasm to attend school, are what stands as a testimony to the success of mid day meals by Akshaya Patra.


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Wednesday, 10 October 2012

Success story of Akshaya Patra Foundation


On a recent business trip to India, a fellow Silicon Valley business executive was impressed by the management philosophy of the companies we visited. “The founders stay long after the companies become successful… They bring in family members to take part… Social causes and philanthropy are a key part of everyday business…”

This socially-responsible management style which I call, “Spiritual Capitalism” is not unique to India. However the country’s dramatic social challenges do tend to spur a significant amount of philanthropic action by its countrymen and women.

As we celebrate Thanksgiving, SandHill.com spoke with two of I.T.’s business leaders – and active philanthropists – Infosys Technologies co-founder Narayana Murthy and Sycamore Networks co-founder and chairman Desh Deshpande – about their success with the Akshaya Patra Foundation, a non-profit devoted to feeding and educating underprivileged children.

The leaders explain the success of Akshaya Patra, how they became involved in their philanthropic efforts and how other technology executives can find a way to increase their practice of social capitalism.

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Akshaya Patra Expands its Kitchen Facilities

It needs no introduction. An entry into Limca Book of World Records; appreciation from none other than US President Barack Obama and its work as a case study at Harvard University! The latest addition to its achievements — churning out 40,000 rotis for children in just one hour.

Akshay Patra Foundation, which runs the world’s largest school-meal programme, has improved its kitchen services by increasing the number of rotis produced to meet the requirement of children. The ‘roti machine’, which was first introduced in 2004 in Brindavan, had a massive task ahead of them. The foundation, which reaches 11.86 lakh children across the country, had made thousands of rotis for kids in North India.

Roti machine“In that part of the country, children asked for rotis instead of rice. And preparing so many rotis requires more manpower. So we bought the unique machine,” said Vyomapada Das, who is looking after the kitchen at Bhilai.

After Das and his colleague found that the roti-making machine in Amritsar was expensive, they decided to hunt for a similar machine at a reasonable rate. Luckily, they came across a person who could make ‘desi’ style rotis. After negotiation, they paid Rs. 12 lakh for it.

But there was a problem. The machine produced 10,000 rotis per hour while the requirement was to feed 5,000 children. “We tried to solve the problem, and we found out we needed six such machines within a space of 10,000 sqft. It would cost us between Rs. 60-70 lakh,” said Narasimha Das, who is in charge of Brindavan kitchen.

When the team contacted the same machine supplier, the latter couldn’t improve the production count. “Then we contacted companies in the US and Holland. A firm in Holland suggested to increase the width of the oven from 0.9 m to 1.2 m and to increase the speed to 12 m per minute. The oven portion was also extended so that rotis can be fully cooked,” said Narasimha Das.

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Monday, 8 October 2012

Akshaya Patra - Build a Healthier Tomorrow


Akshaya Patra means inexhaustible vessel which can continuously supply food to the needy. I feel that hunger is the most dreadful disease faced by children in our country.

Hunger leads to malnutrition and effects the physical and mental growth and development of a child. Can we not make a Hunger free nation? I strongly believe that each one of us can make a difference to a child’s life by joining hands with The Akshaya Patra Foundation- world’s top NGO run school meal program.

Last month I visited one of the Government schools near Kengeri (Doddabasti) to donate water filters as part of our Corporate Social Responsibility program. To few of our inquisitive questions about the school, performance and attendance of children the Principal of that school informed us that after Akshaya Patra Foundation started providing mid day meal in that school the number of students have drastically increased .The school has 630 children which is highest in that zone.

I feel if one meal can bring such wonderful results we should all join our hands with The Akshaya Patra Foundation and contribute towards a hunger free nation.

Article written by one of our Akshaya Patra Facebook fans by Hema Latha

Friday, 5 October 2012

Churning out Nutrition


  
A public-private venture, the Akshaya Patra Foundation’s mid day meal programme is providing food to under-privileged students and employment to women

 It may be just one hot meal for a child but it has a huge cumulative impact in building a strong, educated, egalitarian India. If mid day meals protect children from ‘classroom hunger’ — a great deterrent to education — it also provides employment to a large number local people, particularly women who make a substantial contribution in the preparation of nutritious food.

The Akshaya Patra Foundation’s mechanised kitchen at Vrindavan which serves over 1.63 lakh children enrolled in over 1,600 government primary schools in Mathura district employs 32 women as part of the entire process of food preparation.

The Akshaya Patra Foundation’s mid-day meal programme — the largest mid-day meal programme in the world that has crossed the one billion mark —works on a public- private partnership mode with the Central and State governments; the Foundation has expanded its footprint across the country to cover over 1.3 million children in eight States and one Union Territory.

That what started as a meal programme a decade back today not only addresses hunger and need for education but also has need-based interventions such as health and life skills.  

Kamlesh has been working at the Akshaya Patra kitchen since 2006. She gets Rs. 5,000 per month for working from 9.30 a.m. to 6 p.m. Her job involves cutting vegetables and rolling chapattis for the staff. Bishakha Rani Haldar has been employed here since the past four years. In addition to the salary, she gets Provident Fund and health facilities.

Women are only put on daytime duty and are mostly involved in chopping vegetables, washing utensils and rolling chapattis for the staff. Everything else is done mechanically to maintain the highest quality of hygiene and maintain nutrition levels.

Employment:Women SHGs are trained to set up the kitchens. The women employees are given blue uniforms to impart a sense of equality and health check-up every three months, including dental check-up, is part of the package which is in accordance with the labour laws. If there is a health emergency, they are immediately rushed to hospital. “We have never faced any kind of harassment here and we feel similar food should be served to children across the country,” the women speak in chorus. “Our children are grown up but it gives a great sense of satisfaction to feed small children,” they add.

Women’s self help groups are trained to set up and run decentralised kitchens in Rajasthan, Odisha and Mathura. By providing employment to local women, the programme enhances their socio-economic status. Importantly, environment-friendly methods are adopted to sustain the community and offer a means of livelihood.

The mid day meal programme ensures that children deprived of nutritional security, are provided meals with the right nutritional profile to ensure full cognitive development. Over the years, the scheme has helped improve school enrolment and attendance, thus, contributing to every Indian child’s right to education.

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Thursday, 4 October 2012

Akshaya Patra Celebrates Joy Of Giving Week (2nd-8th Oct 2012)



Akshaya Patra Celebrates Joy Of Giving Week (2nd-8th Oct 2012).

‘Experience the Joy of Feeding a Child for a Whole year with Akshaya Patra.’

Akshaya Patra is the largest NGO run Mid Day Meal Programme providing Joy by feeding 1.3 Million school children every day in 9 states through its 19 kitchens. Help Enhancing this joy through your contribution .

Your donation can feed the child and let him go to school with happiness without worrying for the pangs of hunger. What much joy we can derive?

Donate for children through Online Donation here..

Wednesday, 3 October 2012

Value Add to the Mid Day Meal - Biscuit Micronutrients Bakery Unit at Jaipur Kitchen


 
September 25, 2012 was a big day for the Akshaya Patra's Jaipur Kitchen. The day saw the launch of the country's first ever bakery machine for mid day meal programme

Addressing the gathering at the launch , chief guest Mr. Pratap Singh Khachriyavas, MLA, announced a donation of Rs. 10 lakhs for Akshaya Patra. He said that the money was donated from his MLA fund which can be utilised for any of the kitchen's activities. 

He also congratulated Akshaya Patra for launching ‘Akshaya Thali’ schemefor the benefit of the school children. Speaking on the occasion, Shri Ratnangadha Govind Dasa, Unit President – Jaipur, said that local students can now savour nutritious biscuits as part of their mid day meal. 

 The machine is capable of producing 30,000 biscuits a day.The machine has been launched to add taste and variety in the mid day meal menu.

Visit more Akshaya Patra Kitchens at Rajasthan

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