
Rupali, Parent
When my husband passed away in 2004, my world fell apart. I was alone, with no one at home, and I had to learn how to be strong for my children. Through all the struggle, I held onto one belief: education would be their way out.

Vimal, Grandmother
I have seen the changes in this family like a slow sunrise, turning darkness into light. When I look at Om and his siblings, I don't just see children; I see the future that we dreamed about but never had.

Jayshree Oberoi, Sr. Director, Multiply Initiative
From a drought-stricken village in Maharashtra to the forests of India and classrooms of Boston, Jayshree Oberoi's journey is one of courage, integrity, and an unshakeable belief that every child deserves to be seen.

Dhanalakshmi, Teacher, Akanksha Foundation
My name is Dhanalakshmi, but by now, even I respond more to 'Didi' than to my own name. For over two decades, her classroom has been a place where presence, noticing, and small kindnesses build the kind of humans no grade can measure.

Chitra Vishwanath, Senior Program Specialist, High School — Akanksha Foundation (22 years)
Chitra Vishwanath has known Sajida and Sabiha since they were toddlers. Today one works in marketing, the other in climate tech — and they still call her their adopted mom. A story of 22 years, 100% pass results, and the quiet, persistent work of changing minds.

Nalini Panday, Volunteer, Akanksha Foundation (22 years)
A young barista at Starbucks recognised Nalini and insisted on giving her his employee discount. He was an Akanksha student. That quiet act of pride — earned through 22 years of her showing up — is why Nalini Panday keeps coming back.

Divya Daulat Gajare, Office Helper, Akanksha HQ
At 40, after a 24-year gap, Divya returned to school — attending night college after a full day of work and household duties, proving that education has no age limit.

Durga Nilkanth Tambe, Hindi and Marathi Teacher, Grades 1–3, Lakshmi Nagar School, Khar West, Mumbai
I started as a helper — shy, underconfident, unable to take an auto alone. Akanksha didn't just give me a job. It gave me a degree, a classroom, and a dream I never thought I could have.

Rakesh Ghone, Senior Manager, Social Work Department, Akanksha Foundation
I don't feel like I need to go to a temple in my old age. My work gives me my happiness. For 19 years, this community has been my faith.

Shalini Sachdeva, School Founder & Principal, Akanksha
My life in schools began with dogs. In ninth grade, I was angry at cruelty, at neglect, at how easily people looked away. Years later, I realized that same anger was really about children — and the wasted potential we had normalised as a nation.

Surendra Waghmare, Staff & Parent, Kasarwadi School
I was born in Kasarwadi. I went to school on this same campus. When my daughter walked into the very classroom where I had once studied, I felt something I cannot fully describe — like I was coming home again.

Prashant Shivram Dodke, Social Worker, DN Nagar
When I was young, my Didis and Bhaiyyas protected me. Now it is my turn.