Community partners
Traduction à suivre
Sangam community partners are
Anand Gram
Anand Gram means ‘village of joy’. The institution started in 1964 to reach out to the victims of leprosy by Dr. Indutai Patwardhan. Read more…
Mobile Crèche
The construction industry is the second largest employer in the country, but the workers who toil ceaselessly to build modern India are virtually invisible. Read more…
Doorstep school
Doorstep School was founded in 1988 by a group of professional social workers, both academics and practitioners. The idea of forming an organisation fully devoted to education was born through experience of working with the public school system and the slum communities in urban areas. Read more
Deep Griha

Deep Griha, meaning “Lighthouse”, was registered in 23 July 1975 to address the health and welfare needs of the poor and neglected inhabitants of the urban slums. The Society began its work from one small dispensary but rapidly expanded as the needs of the community it served increased. Read more…
The Muslim Girls Orphanage
The Muslim Girls Orphanage was established in 1925 with the aim of providing an institution for the maintenance and education of orphaned Muslim girls. Read more,…
Maher
Maher provides a home and community for women and children in distress. Read more…
C. R. Ranganathan school for deaf
This residential school for deaf children was started by Mr. C.R. Ranganathan in 1993 with just five students. Today the school houses 108 children from Pune and surrounding villages ranging in age from 5 to 18 years. For most of the children, their hearing impairment is a congenital condition – they were born with severe or total deafness. Thus, speaking is a challenge that many of the older students are working on. Read more…
SOS Children’s Village
“Most people ask “What can I get out of life?”
Hermann Gmeiner asked “What use can I be in life?”
(Karl G Gossele)
The first SOS Children’s Village was founded by Dr Hermann Gmeiner in Austria in 1949, to provide needy children with a family life, care and education. By 1988 there were 52 SOS Children’s Villages in 46 countries, 40 Hermann Gmeiner schools and 27 vocational training centres worldwide, providing for 50,000 children and supported by 70,000 sponsors. It is the welfare of orphaned, abandoned and destitute children that is of paramount importance in the SOS philosophy and this is achieved by providing loving home where those children can develop naturally. There is no discrimination on grounds of race, religion or creed. Read more....
Arya Tara Mahila Trust
Adolescent Girls Programme
Arya Tara Mahila Trus focuses on the overall development of adolescent girls. As future mothers, they are valued as an important part of society. Therefore it is important to build and improve their capacities in such a way that they can stand independently and face the future. Read more…




