$35,000 raised for rural Indian kids
A Correspondent in New York |
December 22, 2005 02:01 IST
Spread India, a social service agency based in Farmington Hills,
Michigan collected more than $35,000 through pledges and onsite
donations at its third annual fund-raiser.
The
special guests included Michigan state senator Hansen Clarke; community
leader and philanthropist Narendar Reddy from Georgia; Kiran Vissa from
Maryland, who is a director of AidIndia.org, and Bipin Patel from
Michigan who is the director of information systems at Ford Motor
Company.
More than 200 people
attended the Spread India event, held at Sts Peter and Paul Church,
Southfield, Michigan, at which the organization also celebrated Diwali.
Spread India is the acronym for Society for the Promotion of Rural
Environment And Development of India.
The
special guests, along with Spread India president Sridhar Patel and
board member Sudhakar Reddy, lit the Diwali lamps and inaugurated the
event. Young artists of Lasyapriya Academy of Cultural Arts performed
musical invocation to the gods.
Introducing
his core team members, Patel said the team has been working hard to
achieve its mission of providing underprivileged children with an
opportunity to gain the lifelong gift of education. They now help
hundreds of children, he said.
Senator
Clarke stressed the importance of education and congratulated Spread
India for offering the rural underprivileged kids all the resources to
get a good education and thus providing a channel and platform for
members of the Indian community to take part in building the rural
India.
Narender Reddy said Indians
are contributing towards the enrichment of US economy, but lagging
behind in philanthropy. Vissa appealed to the people to contribute to
the good cause of educating the rural children, a release said.
Patel said education will help rural Indian children open many doors.
Sudhakar
Reddy gave a Power Point presentation of Spread India's activities and
achievements. He explained Spread India's philosophy: 'We don't give
fish to a boy, but we teach him how to catch a fish. That will make a
lot of difference not only in his life but also in the lives of those
around him.'
He said that by skipping
an expensive dinner party at a hotel, or by avoiding an extravagant
shopping in the outlet mall, people can save a lot and contribute that
money to teach disadvantaged children.
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