Annual Report 2013-14 - American India Foundation
Transcription
Annual Report 2013-14 - American India Foundation
2 MILLION VOICES OF CHANGE AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 1 AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 2 AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 3 Villagers in Seraikela district, Jharkhand attend an informational clinic held by the Maternal and Newborn Survival Initiative. (Photograph © Prashant Panjiar) TABLE OF CONTENTS FROM OUR LEADERSHIP IMPACT 2013-2014 2 4 A PATH TO OPPORTUNITY 6 LEARNING LOOKS DIFFERENT NOW 8 ABILITY-BASED LIVELIHOOD EMPOWERMENT 10 AN ENTREPRENEURIAL FAMILY 12 PRESERVING THE PAST, ENVISIONING THE FUTURE 14 THE POWER OF KNOWLEDGE AND TRUST 16 YEAR IN REVIEW 18 OUTREACH AND ENGAGEMENT 20 PARTNERSHIP AND REACH 24 FINANCIALS 30 PEOPLE 32 SUPPORTERS 42 © American India Foundation 2014. American India Foundation is a registered 501(c)(3) not-for-profit organization. The material and all information contained herein is solely owned by and remains the property of the American India Foundation. It is being provided to you solely for the purpose of disclosing the information provided herein, in accordance with applicable law. Any other use, including commercial reuse, mounting on other systems, or other forms of publication, republication or redistribution requires the express written consent of the American India Foundation. Cover Photo: Learning and Migration Program students in Nuapada District, Odisha wave from their school building. Back Cover Photo: Sameera Silveira, a visually impaired teacher who trained with Ability Based Livelihoods Empowerment (ABLE), now teaches ABLE students in Bangalore, Karnataka. (Photographs ©Prashant Panjiar) AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 4 INDIADevi, FOUNDATION • ANNUAL 2013-14 • PAGE 1 Rickshaw Sangh beneficiaries Ramesh Chauhan andAMERICAN his wife, Dhan with their children and REPORT their newly purchased rickshaw in Firozabad, Uttar Pradesh. (Photograph © Prashant Panjiar) FROM OUR LEADERSHIP Dear Friends, Mini, a new mother, clutched her healthy newborn tightly, relief and gratitude spreading across her face. Her baby had suffered a severe case of pneumonia, and Mini had been terrified that she might lose her newborn daughter, Deepika. Thanks to the quick thinking of local sahiya (community health worker) Sushma, who was trained by AIF, Deepika is now a healthy baby. Mini and Deepika come first to our minds when we think about the importance, the impact, and the potential of AIF. Their story (which you will find in this report) paints a small picture of the hope AIF has been able to instill in marginalized communities across India. Thanks to your generosity, we have now raised over $92 million, partnered with 248 organizations, invested in 23 states in India, and transformed more than 2.3 million lives. With a firm resolve to change lives, AIF will continue to grow – thoughtfully and with purpose. This year marked a number of successful new ideas, projects, and partners. AIF was the proud recipient of a multiyear grant from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation and Human Dignity Foundation, members of an international funding collaborative focused on improving secondary education – for the expansion of AIF’s Learning and Migration Program (LAMP) through a new initiative: Pathways of Light. The LAMP Pathways project will focus on ensuring that children who stay in primary school through LAMP continue their education through secondary school as well, with a special emphasis on retaining girls. We are also thrilled to report that the Maternal and Newborn Survival Initiative (MANSI) has demonstrated proof of concept, lowering the neonatal mortality rate in the Seraikela district of Jharkhand by nearly one-third. This success helped our partner Tata Steel win the prestigious Corporate Citizen of the Year award from Economic Times. We will now scale up MANSI within Jharkhand, with additional plans to expand to the states of Uttarakhand and Odisha. AIF’s other new initiative in Uttarakhand came about after flash floods from the ‘Himalayan Tsunami’ wiped out crucial infrastructure across the state last year. In partnership with the Uttarakhand Mandal of America (UMA), we are investing in several livelihoods projects that will regenerate the devastated region. The first project is being implemented through the Mount Valley Development Association (MVDA), and is empowering women along villages of the Kalimath Valley to build livelihoods through dairy and agriculture enterprises. We are also pleased to report the inspirational success of our work to assist persons with disabilities, highlighted by the multimedia Campaign VEER in India, in partnership with Coca-Cola, Network 18’s CNN-IBN channel, and Bollywood Actor Salman Khan’s NGO ‘Being Human.’ With a national television and digital initiative to raise awareness of the challenges faced by persons with disabilities, and advocate for their employment, AIF is on the forefront of inclusive development and advocacy for this highly marginalized group of people. As AIF’s reach in India grows, so does its community base in the United States. With new chapters in Orange County, California; Atlanta, Georgia; and Richmond, Virginia, AIF is poised to inspire new communities to expand and strengthen their ties to India. With Warm Regards, Lata Krishnan Chair Pradeep Kashyap Vice Chair Venkat Srinivasan Vice Chair M.A. Ravi Kumar CEO Our heartfelt thanks go out to every member of the AIF family – your dedication and support is what enables us to continue to reach the marginalized in India and offer the opportunity to change their lives. AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 2 Rafik Ahamath holds up his diploma upon graduating from AIF’s Ability Based Livelihood Empowerment (ABLE) training in Bangalore. (Photograph © Prashant Panjiar) OUR IMPACT 2013-14 EDUCATION PUBLIC HEALTH LEARNING AND MIGRATION PROGRAM (LAMP) DIGITAL EQUALIZER MATERNAL AND NEWBORN SURVIVAL INITIATIVE (MANSI) LIVELIHOOD MARKET ALIGNED SKILLS TRAINING (MAST) ABILITY BASED LIVELIHOOD EMPOWERMENT (ABLE) RICKSHAW SANGH SINCE 2001 $92 MILLION INVESTED LEADERSHIP WILLIAM J. CLINTON FELLOWSHIP FOR SERVICE IN INDIA AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 4 23 STATES OF INDIA 248 NGO PARTNERS 2.3 MILLION LIVES IMPACTED AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 5 A Learning and Migration Program (LAMP) student attends a support class at the Kusumjore government school in Nuapada District, Odisha. (Photograph © Prashant Panjiar) A PATH TO OPPORTUNITY Twelve year-old Rajeshwari Majhi’s family is one of millions in India who are dependent on seasonal migration for their livelihoods. Rajeshwari’s parents migrate 500 miles from Khamtarai village, Odisha to Hyderabad, Andhra Pradesh to work in brick kilns, taking their young children along. Rajeshwari and her older sister Bhuleswari would either idle their days away at the dangerous worksite, or be put to work themselves. In the vast informal economy of seasonal distress migration and labor, it is children who suffer the most. Forced to accompany their families to unsafe worksites, they leave behind their friends, communities, and most crucially, their schools. Worksite conditions lack basic infrastructure for education and healthcare, and in addition to missing school, children do not receive the proper nutrition and hygiene they need. AIF’s Learning and Migration Program (LAMP) provides an avenue to education as well as safe and clean accommodation, nutritional meals, and a nurturing community in which children can learn. LAMP works with some of the most highly neglected communities in India to ensure that the children of seasonal migrants have access to consistent, high quality, and age-appropriate education. LAMP’s Learning Enrichment Program (LEP) provides the tools and curriculum children need to learn basic skills like reading, writing, and arithmetic, and also helps them build new skills such as problem solving and critical thinking. Many parents refuse to leave their children behind when they migrate, citing safety concerns and often a disregard for the importance of education. Part of LAMP’s outreach involves forming village councils and training community members to improve school management, building trust between community leaders, parents, and families, and establishing a way for parents to realize the importance of education for their children. Although Rajeshwari’s parents were reluctant to leave their daughters behind, they could see that Rajeshwari and Bhuleswari were not getting the opportunities they needed, and were bored and unhappy at the kilns. They agreed to let the girls stay back in the village while they worked at the brick kilns, and Rajeshwari and Bhuleswari joined a LAMP hostel. Often, children starting LAMP classes have never experienced consistent learning, and the adjustement period can be challenging. To accustom children to regular schooling, LAMP uses bridge classes to bring students up to their ageappropriate learning levels. Meanwhile, children eat regular and nutritional meals, practice good hygiene, learn life skills by playing educational games with friends, and build ties to their communities. “Earlier, I used to be lonely in the kilns. Now that I’m in the hostel, I am with many friends who support me,” says Rajeshwari. “I’m getting to study and learn. I don’t want to return to the brick kilns because I feel lonely there.” Rajeshwari’s parents are tremendously proud of her progress in school, and hope that education will open up opportunities for their daughter that they never had. “I don’t want to work in the brick kilns – that is what illiterate people do,” asserts Rajeshwari. “I want to go to an office and make videos. I love to watch cartoons and other learning aids on the computer in the Resource Center.” “I will continue to study in the hostel. Whenever I miss my parents, I tell my teacher and he gives me his cell phone to speak with my parents. They are happy to hear my voice, happy to hear me greet them with ‘Namaste’, and they tell me to study well.” AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 6 “ Earlier, I used to be lonely in the kilns. Now that I’m in the hostel, I am with many friends who support me. I’m getting to study and learn.” AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 7 Learning and Migration Program student Rajeshwari Majhi at her seasonal hostel in Nuapada District, Odisha. (Photograph © Prashant Panjiar) LEARNING LOOKS DIFFERENT NOW At Akshay Pratishthan, an NGO-aided school outside of Delhi, the children have been tasked with making artwork for book covers utilizing user-friendly software. One stands out for its creativity, with an interesting monster on the front and back. The creation of Chintu Yadav, a Class 5 student, is unlike others in its imagination. 11 year-old Chintu is an energetic student benefiting from the Digital Equalizer, AIF’s signature solution to improving public education through technology. His family migrated to Delhi in search of work from rural Bihar. Chintu is the first member of his family to be able to read, write and speak in English, a valuable skill in today’s global village. At school, Digital Equalizer provides him access to technology such as computers with language software like English Helper, which has been instrumental in helping Chintu hone and master his English proficiency. Hundreds of thousands of schools across India lack basic computer technology and face significant obtacles in preparing youth to succeed in the global economy. The gap between knowledge and skills needed to succeed in the real word and the outdated teaching methods in schools is contributing to nearly half of all students dropping out at the crucial ages of secondary school – a staggering dropout rate for a rapidly developing country. Digital Equalizer bridges this educational divide through technology, bringing access and resources like computers and internet connectivity to schools across India, and transforms teaching and learning into a dynamic, interactive process that engages students and teachers alike. Targeting under resourced government schools, Digital Equalizer helps teachers be more effective in pedagogy while motivating and inspiring students to see the connections between classwork and their own lives. Chintu, who is fascinated with all kinds of technology, can already repair a tubelight and will soon learn how to repair a fan. “I want to be an electrician when I grow up,” he says, “because I will be able to run my own electrical business and don’t need to work for anyone.” At home, Chintu’s confidence and command of English helps him serve customers at his mother’s tea stall, and he is able to help his parents communicate better as well. Digital Equalizer equips schools with a computer center to enhance student learning, and reaches approximately 400 students per site. Aimed at stimulating the academic interest of secondary school students in grades 6-10, the program trains educators in basic computer literacy, internet research, and creative teaching methods. These skills help students not only in the classroom, but in their extracurricular learning as well. Students who attend Digital Equalizer schools demonstrate improved learning outcomes in various core subjects, and increasingly utilize technology within their studies and project assignments. Digital Equalizer is impacting students even outside the classroom by showing them how to take charge of their education, stimulating their curiosity about the world, and providing resources for them to explore their own interests. Their parents see the visible results of higher grades, higher competencies, and valuable knowledge, and are increasingly supportive of keeping them in school. To ensure that Digital Equalizer’s benefits reach as many students and teachers as possible, AIF partners with state governments to scale and sustain the work over the long term, building the capacity of local governments to embrace and provide technology as a means to an educational culture of engaged learning and innovation. AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 8 “ Digital Equalizer is impacting students even outside the classroom by showing them how to take charge of their education.” AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 9 Digital Equalizer student Chintu Yadav shows off his Summer Camp project at Akshay Pratishtan school in Delhi. (Photograph © Prashant Panjiar) Ability-Based Livelihood Empowerment Diagnosed with retina pigmentosa at age eight, Samira’s eyesight continued to worsen as she grew up in Vasco da Gama, Goa, avoiding friends and neighbors out of shame and discomfort at not being able to recognize them or participate in everyday activities with her peers. Her parents took her to several doctors, but none of them could recommend an effective treatment, and Samira had to face the prognosis that by the age of 30, she would be completely blind. Thankfully, Samira’s academic achievement did not suffer. She completed high school and after graduating from Class 12, Samira earned a certificate in secretarial skills and joined the working world. Her job at a shipping company revived many of her old fears of inadequacy, and she confided in her doctor that her inability to use computers in her workplace made her feel incompetent. Upon her doctor’s recommendation, Samira and her father decided to travel to Bangalore so that Samira could explore her options for learning to use computers through AIF’s Ability-Based Livelihoods Empowerment initiative (ABLE). By providing comprehensive training for persons with disabilities that is custom tailored to fit the local economy’s market needs, ABLE was conceived out of AIF’s successful Market Aligned Skills Training (MAST) program equipping disadvantaged young people with the skills they need to find gainful employment. Building off the success of MAST, AIF launched ABLE to meet the needs of India’s persons with disabilities in gaining marketable skills and obtaining equal, inclusive and dignified livelihoods. ABLE builds the knowledge base and capacity of NGOs working specifically with persons with dis- abilities, developing curricula for employment fields that are accessible to persons with disabilities and leading advocacy in the private sector to prepare and encourage inclusive human resource practices within companies. “When I was in Goa, I would see my younger brothers using the computer and I would long to do it, but I just couldn’t see the screen,” explains Samira. “Through AIF, I learned career centric computer training. I even improved in my social behavior and could talk to people with confidence.” Using non-visual desktop access software, Samira was able to learn how to operate a computer system. ABLE enabled Samira not only to accept her disability, but also to practice positive thinking and self-advocacy. Armed with a valuable skillset and the confidence she never had as a child, Samira now looks forward to turning 30 as a milestone of all her achievements, rather than dreading it as the end of her opportunities. She declares, “After training, I have lost my fear.” Inspired and driven by her newfound self-confidence, Samira decided to help others by becoming a trainer herself, and now teaches a class of about 30 students. “I enjoy training candidates from urban as well as rural backgrounds. I feel the greatest happiness if a candidate grasps what I’m imparting in the class.” Samira also offers her guidance and counselling to any disabled candidate to deal with problems at the workplace, and accompanies demo teams on visits to corporate offices to build awareness of the possibilities and value of hiring persons with disabilties. AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 10 “ After training, I have lost my fear.” AMERICAN • ANNUAL REPORT • PAGE 11 at India’s Lake Systems centre in Bangalore. Sameera Silvera, a visually impaired trainer who benefitted fromINDIA ABLE,FOUNDATION now teaches visually impaired ABLE 2013-14 participants herself, (Photograph © Prashant Panjiar) An Entrepreneurial Family Mayaram Singh Gautam, originally from rural Agra, worked for years as a farmland laborer. Poverty forced him to migrate with his wife and son to the urban area of Sewla Sarai, in the hope that he would earn more. Mayaram found a job in the brick kilns, which, when added to earnings from his eldest son, made up enough to get by. However, the family tragically lost their eldest son to illness soon after – an unexpected blow both emotionally and financially. The family’s earnings were no longer enough to cover their cost of living, housing, and school fees for their daughters. As a result, the girls did not attend school. Mayaram’s wife, Sharada Devi, urged him to find out more about the Rickshaw Sangh program she had heard about, and suggested he try to get a trolley rickshaw. AIF’s Rickshaw Sangh helps rickshaw drivers become asset owners through a combination of access to financial services and a suite of social benefits. Through the program, drivers organize into joint-liability collectives and are able to access credit, largely thanks to the First Loss Default Guarantee (FLDG) underwritten by AIF, which reassures banks that they will not lose money. Rickshaw Sangh also provides benefits such as ID cards, licenses, permits, insurance, and uniforms – all key components of legitimizing and building social respect for this informal industry. Marayam and Sharada are paying off their trolley rickshaw, which they co-own through the program’s emphasis on joint spousal ownership. Since the program started, approximately 70% of Rickshaw Sangh assets have been jointly loaned to both driver and spouse, promoting a more egalitarian approach to household finance, as well as enabling families to share responsibilities. Mayaram’s new license and uniform lend him cred- ibility, and several small businesses in the leather goods and brick industries have reached out to him for their transportation needs. Mayaram now earns two to three times as much as he previously did, and Sharada stays closely involved in the family’s finances. Mayaram has the freedom to chose his business partners and work on his own schedule, which he finds tremendously motivating. “As soon as I can pay for this rickshaw, I will take another loan and start a business,” he says. “I don’t want to be a rickshaw puller for life. Poor people aren’t privileged enough to harbor aspirations – we earn and spend on our daily living expenses – but if I start a business, I can rent out this trolley rickshaw. We can send the girls to school now”. Many rickshaw drivers are migrants from rural areas, hoping to find better paying work in cities. Because they come to the city with so little, owning an asset can seem like a daunting and impossible goal, and they ultimately fall into the hands of loan sharks in order to pay the rent on their borrowed rickshaws. This cycle of poverty is nearly impossible to escape without help, forcing millions of people into sustained debt. AIF’s Rickshaw Sangh is succeeding in transforming the industry by providing a safe, honest, and formalized way for drivers to pay off loans and own their own vehicles. The result is rickshaw drivers and families who can make informed decisions, control their futures, and lead empowered lives. Mayaram’s family can now build up their savings, and is inspired by their newfound freedom. “We will open a shop, and I will run it,” says Sharada. “Earlier, my husband was not earning much and sometimes he wouldn’t work at all. Then I suggested to him that we should get the rickshaw, and now we are much better off.” AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 12 “ If I start a business, I can rent out this trolley rickshaw. We can send the girls to school.” AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 13 Rickshaw Sangh beneficiary Maya Ram and his wife, Sharda, with their two daughters and newly owned rickshaw in Agra. (Photograph © Prashant Panjiar) Preserving the Past, Envisioning the Future Why do we tell stories? Stories have the power to inspire, inform, and connect communities. It was his father’s stories about India’s Partition that first sparked Zain Alam’s interest in India, and the act of collecting stories that Zain devoted himself to as one of AIF’s William J. Clinton Fellows for Service in India. than willing to share. “Some of them haven’t told [their story] in years, and you can see their sense of relief that someone is there to hear their story,” Zain observed. “Partition still has a trauma that lives on today with families that are on both sides of the border and can’t see one another. The generation that saw that will be gone in the next ten years.” After his first trip to India interviewing family members for his honors thesis, Zain wanted to return to the subcontinent and further explore the history that intrigued him. He was accepted to AIF’s Fellowship program and perfectly matched with the 1947 Partition Archive in New Delhi. Zain was thrilled that he would be returning to India to preserve the memories of Partition – memories that drew him to India in the first place. Zain admits that the Fellowship was often challenging, but explains that his experience helped him develop a new patience and endurance in his everyday life. “There might not be a lot of money [in] the fields we are working in, but there is a lot of kindness,” he says. “If you know how to harness it and pay it forward, that energy will stay in you and in the project for longer than you think.” The AIF Fellowship pairs skilled young professionals from the United States and India with grassroots and under-resourced NGOs and social enterprises across India to support social and economic projects that are scalable, impactful, and sustainable. Through ten months of service, Fellows gain extensive knowledge and firsthand experience of India’s development space. AIF’s Fellows return from their service with new experiences, knowledge, and ideas. Together, they form a forward-thinking community of socially engaged, global citizens who will become the leaders of tomorrow. Alumni of the AIF Fellowship are leaders in international development, academia, entrepreneurship, and many other fields. Collectively, they are a force for sustainable change in India. As a Story Scholar for the 1947 Partition Archive, Zain interviewed Partition survivors all over the country, adding to a collection of oral histories that document the challenges and traumas that marked the birth of modern India. He collected close to 150 oral histories from Partition witnesses in Delhi, Lucknow, Mumbai, and Hyderabad. As Zain discovered, not everyone is willing to open up. For some, just mentioning Partition can elicit immediate negative and emotional reactions. Many people told him not to call again. Others were more “It’s going to be very difficult, and incredibly testing, and trying of your patience, but you will grow so much from it,” Zain says of the Fellowship. “You’ll be in a group of amazing, driven people. And the fact that the Fellows are both Indian and American is in itself an incredible bridge between two societies and cultures. [It creates] friendships that will last very long – friendships from which you might actually see some incredible projects and NGOs result, that nobody would have envisioned before this Fellowship – but are now possible.” AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 14 “ The fact that the Fellows are both Indian and American is in itself an incredible bridge between two societies and cultures.” AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 15 AIF Fellow Zain Alam interviews the Dutta family at their home in Gurgaon, Haryana, to collect stories for the Partition Archive. (Photograph © Prashant Panjiar) The Power of Knowledge and Trust Born without complications in the hospital, baby Deepika and her delighted mother, Mini Gop, went home after three days. During Mini’s pregnancy, she had depended on the guidance of her trusted sahiya (community health worker) Sushma, who received training through AIF’s Maternal and Newborn Survival Initiative (MANSI). Sushma accopmanied her to the MANSI Clinic on several occations, advised a nutritous diet, and provided her with calcium and iron supplements. A week later, Mini noticed that Deepika had a high temperature, and informed her husband, Rakhal, of her concerns. That evening, they called Sushma, who took Deepika’s temperature (101°F) and also noticed umbilical cord abscess – a possible sign of sepsis, a bacterial infection that is a leading cause of death in newborns and requires immediate action. Upon recognizing the symptoms, Sushma insisted that the parents call a Mamta Van to take the baby to hopsital, but Rakhal refused. He was worried that the cool evening temperatures would do the baby harm, and did not feel that Deepika’s symptoms merited the long and arduous trip to the hospital. Due to a lack of health education in Jharkhand, sahiyas often face resistance from families to new treatments and hospital visits. In addition to increasing regular hospital care to ensure healthy pregnancies and deliveries, a core element of the MANSI approach is equipping sahiyas with the knowledge and ability to provide care for newborns in the home. This creates trust in the community, enhancing the ability of sahiyas to further educate the village’s mothers and families about safe health practices – an approach which has resulted in a 32.7% decrease in the neonatal mortality rate. Caught in a difficult situation between Mini, who desperately wanted Deepika to receive medical attention, and Rakhal, who refused to make the trip, Sushma refused to leave the baby’s chances to fate. When Deepika’s temperature went up to 105°F, Sushma asserted that she would have to intervene in order to save the baby’s life. Moved by her persistance, Rakhal signed the consent form allowing Sushma to treat the baby. Through the training provided to her in MANSI, Sushma sterilized the enviornment and began to administer antibiotics to Deepika. She returned several times a day, closely monitoring the baby’s progress and symptoms while advising Mini on safe care practices. After seven sleepless days, much to the family’s relief, Deepika finally responded to the treatment and began to drink milk regularly, gaining weight and returning to full health. “I trust the sahiya,” says Mini. “She would come every hour to check my baby’s temperature. Since my baby was responding to the sahiya’s treatment, we did not need to take her to the hospital. Sahiyas do good for the village.” Through a public-private partnership, MANSI provides resources and training for sahiyas, empowering the community and improving access to healthcare. Sushma has been regularly attending MANSI trainings since 2011, and it was there that she learned how to recognize sepsis and treat it in time. “I am really ecstatic that the MANSI training was so useful in saving this baby’s life,” says Sushma. “The villagers trust me now, and call me whenever they need me. I immediately call for the Mamta Van and rush them to the hospital. I have eleven mothers due in the next three months and I’m looking forward to their deliveries.” AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 16 “ The villagers trust me now, and call me whenever they need me.” AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL • PAGE 17 baby, Deepika, after a checkup. Sushma Gop, a sahiyya who trained with AIF’s Maternal and Newborn Survival Initiative, leaves theREPORT home of2013-14 Mini Gop and her (Photograph © Prashant Panjiar) YEAR IN REVIEW 2013-14 LEARNING AND MIGRATION PROGRAM (LAMP) • Girls’ Education & Secondary Education: Received 3-year grant from The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation and Human Dignity Foundation, two members of the Partnership to Strengthen Innovation and Practice in Secondary Education (PSIPSE), to improve the access to and quality of secondary education in Kutch, with a specific focus on ensuring that girls complete their education. • Sustainability: School Management Committees (SMCs) facilitated by AIF are receiving direct funding from government sources in Odisha. AIF was invited to provide technical support in training educators and monitoring the progress of the 124 new hostels in 4 districts, keeping 4,437 children in school. • New Partnerships: Formulated new partnerships with Unnati – Organisation for Development Education, and Shikshan Ane Samaj Kalyan Kendra to expand the program to new districts and build wider advocacy in Gujarat. • Community Building: Guided the formation of SMC Federations in 7 Blocks in Gujarat – the first such initiative in the state – to help promote better governance and community ownership over education, and provide support to the individual SMCs to take village-level issues forward. DIGITAL EQUALIZER • Flipped Classroom: Piloted a new methodology of classroom instruction in government schools, utilizing technology to implement video instruction for lessons. Class time is spent instead on discussion and analysis, group work, and teacher support, creating an interactive learning experience. • “Tab Labs”: Created tablet laboratories in schools to provide a digital platform for interactive learning. Assess- ment tools are built into every tablet to monitor and evaluate student progress. Embedded sign language in Tab Lab classroom content in the Tablab, making DE curricula inclusive and accessible to hearing impaired students. • English Helper: Implemented innovative multi-sensory language software into curricula, increasing English proficiency, reading comprehension, and writing skills. RICKSHAW SANGH • Expansion: Expanded program to Uttarakhand and Madhya Pradesh, and forged new partnerships with financial institutions Bhartiya Mahila Bank, UCO Bank, and Bank of Maharashtra. • Rain Basera: Initiated a project in partnership with the Municipal Corporation of Muzaffarpur that provides basic shelter for rickshaw drivers during storms, including a safe place to sleep, rickshaw repair services, and a canteen. • Health Education: Launched a campaign to educate rickshaw drivers and their families about positive health practices, using the traditional performance art medium of puppetry. The initiative also provides medical checkups for rickshaw drivers and their families. AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 18 MARKET ALIGNED SKILLS TRAINING (MAST) • Campaign VEER: In partnership with Coca-Cola, media conglomerate Network 18, and Bollywood actor Salman Khan’s NGO Being Human, AIF launched Campaign VEER – a national television and digital initiative to raise awareness of the challenges faced by persons with disabilities, and advocate for them to have equal, dignified employment opportunities. • Financial Literacy: Developed two mobile applications to teach financial principles to program participants through support of Citi Foundation. The apps teach youth basic financial literacy skills such as how to open a bank account, use online banking, get a loan, and learn about investment options. • Virtual MAST: Completed the first year of the Virtual MAST pilot, designed to provide an ‘on the job’ training experience for MAST candidates. In collaboration with Anudip Foundation, Virtual MAST uses technology to provide advanced quality training that is adapted to employers’ needs to ensure that candidates have long-term employment opportunities. • Informal Sector Workers: MAST has expanded its training benefits, in partnership with Saath Charitable Trust, to ensure more secure livelihoods for informal sector workers in fields like electrical work, plumbing, and masonry. As a result, 80% percent of these workers have seen at least a 10% increase in income. WILLIAM J. CLINTON FELLOWSHIP FOR SERVICE IN INDIA Fellows contributed to economic and social development in fields from education to public health to youth development. Their projects included: • A Focus on Inclusion: Fellow Angela Kohama collaborated with three Fellows to author “Just Like You,” a children’s book about disability, which will be accompanied by a manual on inclusive education and lesson plans for educators. • Transcribe: Fellows Ilana Millner and Ned Dostaler are producing a multimedia project and exposé about India’s hijra (transgender) community. • Education: Developing a girls’ education curriculum, “Her Voice,” for VOICE 4 Girls in Hyderabad, and promoting effective Corporate Social Responsibilty in education at Central Square Foundation in New Delhi. • Livelihoods: Developing mobile metrics for solid waste management at NGO Waste Ventures, and building technology-based job training solutions with Anudip Foundation in Kolkata. • Public Health: Leading training initiatives in comprehensive health and hygiene for hillside villages in the Darjeeling area with Broadleaf Health and Education Alliance/CHAI. MATERNAL AND NEWBORN SURVIVAL INITIATIVE (MANSI) • Survey findings demonstrate that MANSI has: •Increased the percentage of pregnant women receiving at least 3 antenatal medical checkups from 41.3% to 91.3%. •Increased the percentage of safe and clean hospital de- liveries (as opposed to home deliveries) from 20.7% to 79.2%. •Reduced the neonatal mortality rate by 32.7%. AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 19 OUTREACH AND ENGAGEMENT NEW YORK WASHINGTON, DC Honoree Dr. Amarjit S. Marwah, AIF Trustees Tania and Dinesh Mirchandani, and hosts Ravi and Radhika Achar celebrate Mother’s Day with an outing at Malibu Wines. AIF Supporter Ranvir Trehan hands Honoree Congressman Gerry Connolly his award at the Annual Washington D.C. Gala. BAY AREA Gala Honorees AIF Advisory Council Chair Amartya Sen, MasterCard President & CEO Ajay Banga, and NDTV Executive Cochairperson Prannoy Roy discuss India’s development at the Annual Spring Awards Gala in New York. AIF Vice Chair Pradeep Kashyap; AIF Board members Harit Talwar and Ash Lilani; Consul General of India Shri N. Parthasarathi; AIF Trustee Ajay Shah; AIF Chair Lata Krishnan; and AIF Trustees Diaz and Usha Nesamoney, Suniti and Sanjay Subhedar, and Christina and Deepak Kamra at the Annual Bay Area Gala. NEW ENGLAND CHICAGO AIF Board member and Trustee Venkat Srinivasan; Gala Honoree Laurene Sperling, President of the Sperling Family Charitable Foundation; AIF Trustee Vandana Sharma; AIF Board Chair Lata Krishnan; AIF Trustee Vivek Sharma; Gala Honoree Scott Sperling, Co-president of Thomas H. Lee Partners, L.P.; Massachusetts Congressman Joseph Kennedy; Hawaii Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard; AIF Board member and Trustee Raj Sharma; AIF Trustee Nalini Sharma; and AIF CEO Ravi Kumar at the Annual New England Gala. LOS ANGELES Gala Chairs AIF Trustee Reena Talwar and AIF Trustee and Board member Harit Talwar with AIF CEO Ravi Kumar, Gala Emcee and AIF Senior Supporter Rohini Dey, and AIF Senior Supporter Sajal Kohli at the Annual Chicago Gala. AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 20 ORANGE COUNTY VP of Corporate Affairs And Chief Serendipity Officer Of WaterHealth International Jacqueline Lundquist, Emcee Rohit Shukla, Former Governor of Ohio Richard F. Celeste, AIF Orange County Chapter Leader and Trustee Tinnie Grewal, and AIF William J. Clinton Fellowship Alumnus Charles Ianuzzi at AIF’s Inaugural Orange County Gala. ATLANTA Congressman Hank Johnson (second from left) and Chair of Atlanta Leadership Council Amitabh Sharma (right) with CEO Ravi Kumar and Vice Chair Pradeep Kashyap at the chapter launch event in Atlanta, GA. AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 21 OUTREACH AND ENGAGEMENT CAMPAIGN VEER – INDIA Bollywood star and Campaign VEER Brand Ambassador Salman Khan at the launch of Campaign VEER – a national television and digital initiative to raise awareness of the challenges faced by persons with disabilities, and advocate for their employment. INDIA LEADERSHIP TRIP AIF partner Anudip welcomes AIF Leadership to their iMerit centre in Baripur, Kolkata – part of the yearly visit to see AIF’s work in action. The Leadership Trip provides AIF friends and supporters an opportunity to experience the work of AIF and its partners on the ground, as well as to experience the rich diversity and culture of the Eastern India region. AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 22 Sarvesh Devi, disabled beneficiary of AIF’s Rickshaw Sangh with her husband Shahshipal•Singh (alsoREPORT disabled),2013-14 mother-in-law and daughters Kajal (in yellow dress) and AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION ANNUAL • PAGE Shakuntala, 23 Payal, at their handcart in Agra. (Photograph © Prashant Panjiar) PARTNERSHIPS AND IMPACT APRIL 1, 2013 - MARCH 31, 2014 LEARNING AND MIGRATION PROGRAM (LAMP) 35,138 CHILDREN 285 TEACHERS 1,085 VILLAGES 18,287 GIRL STUDE STUDENTS 16,851 DIGITAL EQUALIZER 144,094 132 SEASONAL HOSTELS LEARNING ENRICHMENT BRIDGE SCHOOLS TOTAL COVERAGE 323,414 SINCE INCEPTION: CHILDREN PARTNERS: Aga Khan Rural Support Programme • Gujarat Cohesion Foundation Trust • Gujarat Lokadrusti • Odisha Nidan • Bihar St. Xaviers Non-Formal Education Society • Gujarat Shikshan ane Samaj Kalyan Kendra • Gujarat Swadeep Shikshan Vikas Sanstha • Gujarat Unnati - Organization for Development • Gujarat Urjaghar • Gujarat Quest Alliance • Karnataka AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 24 416 GIRL GIR RL STUDENTS STUDENTS 1,002 SCHOOLS BOY STUDENTS 86,441 57,653 BOY STUDENTS 18,734 TEACHERS FULL ULL SERVICE MODEL SCHOOLS 3 FU 3 LARGE SCALE PROGRAM SCHOOLS 354 115 5 DELL CONNECTED CLASSROOMS 9 CENTRES OF EXCELLENCE 92 508 CENTRALIZED TRAINING 24 DE LITE 6 DIET SCHOOL CONNECT ADOBE YOUTH VOICES 2,385 188 92 AYV STUDENTS AYV TEACHERS AYV SCHOOLS & SITES TOTAL COVERAGE 870,000 56,525 3,207 SINCE INCEPTION: STUDENTS TEACHERS SCHOOLS STATES: Andhra Pradesh • 19 Districts Delhi NCR • 4 Distrcits Haryana • 4 Districts Karnataka • 11 Districts Odisha • 6 Districts Punjab • 16 Districts Tamil Nadu • 2 Districts AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 25 PARTNERSHIPS AND REACH APRIL 1, 2013 - MARCH 31, 2014 RICKSHAW SANGH MARKET ALIGNED SKILLS TRAINING (MAST) 4,189 YOUTH 2,112 WOMEN O TRAINE TRAINED ED 2,077 MEN TRAINED TRAINED 21,933 17,845RICKSHAWS TROLLEYS 3,137 ASSETS LOANED 951 PUSHCARTS 93% CO-LOANED WITH SPOUSE 50% AVERAGE PERCENT INCREASE IN INCOME TOTAL COVERAGE 67,259 70% SINCE ASSETS CO-LOANED INCEPTION: LOANED WITH SPOUSES PARTNERS: Bhartiya Micro Credit (BMC) • Uttar Pradesh Centre for Rural Development (CRD) • Assam Centre for Rural Entrepreneurship and Technical Education (CREATE) • Uttar Pradesh Jeevan Jyoti Kala Kendra (JJKK) • Bihar Patiala Foundation • Punjab People’s Forum • Odisha AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 26 TOTAL COVERAGE 109,930 75% SINCE YOUTH YOUTH INCEPTION: TRAINED PLACED 4,189 YOUTH 2,112 WOMEN O PARTNERS: TRAINE TRAINED ED 78% YOUTH PLACED 78% YOUTH Dream and Beauty Charitable Trust • Punjab Aide et Action • Tamil Nadu & Punjab TRAINED SAATH Charitable Trust •PLACED Gujarat Amarjyoti • Delhi MEN TRAINED Sant Nishchant Singh Foundation • Delhi & Haryana Anudip • West Bengal WOMEN MEN TRAI TRAINED NED 459 2,077 72 92% TOTAL WITH COVERAGE 109,930 75% PEOPLE YOUTH YOUTH YOUTH DISABILITIESSINCE387 ABILITY-BASED LIVELIHOOD TRAINED INCEPTION: MEN TRAINED TRAINED PLACED PLACED EMPOWERMENT (ABLE) TOTAL COVERAGE 3,222 55% SINCE YOUTH YOUTH INCEPTION: TRAINED PLACED 459 72 WOMEN MEN TRAI TRAINED NED PEOPLE WITH DISABILITIES TRAINED MEN TRAINED 387 TOTAL COVERAGE 3,222 55% SINCE YOUTH YOUTH INCEPTION: TRAINED PLACED PARTNERS: Enable India • Karnataka NAB Center for Blind Women and Disability Studies • Delhi Noida Deaf Society • Uttar Pradesh AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 27 92% YOUTH PLACED PARTNERSHIPS AND REACH APRIL 1, 2013 - MARCH 31, 2014 MATERNAL AND NEWBORN SURVIVAL INITIATIVE (MANSI) 1,727 1,856 WOMEN SERVED NEWBORNS 8,670 CHILDREN UNDER 5 YEARS WILLIAM J. CLINTON FELLOWSHIP FOR SERVICE IN INDIA CLASS OF 2013-14 20 W WOMEN 13 FELLOWS MEN 33 23 AMERICAN 10 INDIAN 31 PARTNERS 196 167 SAHIYAS TRAINED VILLAGES 243 MOBILE AND OTHER CLINICS PARTNERS: NAZ Foundation Trust • Delhi Society for Education, Action, and Research in Community Health (SEARCH) • Maharashtra Tata Steel Rural Development Trust (TSRDS) • Jharkhand AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 28 11 WITH GRADUATE DEGREES 8 7 NORTH EAST 8 10 SOUTH WEST 154 TOTAL COVERAGE 331 SINCE INCEPTION: FELLOWS PARTNERS PARTNERS: Anudip Foundation • West Bengal SwitchON - ONergy • West Bengal Central Square Foundation • Delhi Ashram Paryavaran Vidyalaya (APV) • Uttarakhand Shaishav • Gujarat Community Health and Advancement Initiative (CHAI)/ ICICI Foundation • Maharastra Broadleaf Health & Education Alliance • West Bengal Infrastructure Leasing & Financial Services Limited PBK Waste Solutions • Karnataka (IL&FS) • Delhi Nidan • Delhi Waste Ventures • Andhra Pradesh iMerit • West Bengal Jagori Rural Charitable Trust • Himachal Pradesh Aravind Eye Care System • Tamil Nadu Khamir • Gujarat Utthan • Gujarat Swades Foundation • Maharashtra Pravah • Delhi The Banyan Academy of Leadership in Mental Health • Office to the Advisor to the Prime Minister • Maharashtra Tamil Nadu Pudiyador • Tamil Nadu Sujaya Schools • Karnataka Aangan Trust • Maharashtra Healing Fields Foundation • Andhra Pradesh Wadhwani Foundation • Karnataka Purbanchal Maitri Development Society • Assam VOICE4Girls • Andhra Pradesh Apnalaya • Maharashtra Hippocampus Learning Centres • Karnataka Babajob.com • Karnataka 1947 Partition Archive • Uttar Pradesh AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 29 REVENUE 2013-14 FINANCIALS APRIL 1, 2013 - MARCH 31, 2014 STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL POSITION 2014 2013 Assets 2014 Cash & Cash Equivalents 1,612,466 1,841,457 Contribution and Grants 1,852,906 2,685,894 Investments 4,050,450 3,808,532 Benefit Events Income (net) 4,341,940 Prepaid Expenses & Other Assets Property & Equipment (net) Total Assets 1,117,517 534,734 Investment and Other Income 135,722 213,270 Total Support & Revenue 61,837 74,121 6,977,992 6,472,114 Liabilities and Net Assets 352,676 163,716 Other Payables 235,750 15,350 Total Liabilities 588,426 179,066 Net Assets 4,208,235 51,370 138,703 6,246,216 7,032,832 1,008,067 CONTRIBUTIONS 29% 1,852,906 858,252 Livelihood 738,110 1,891,548 Public Health 232,178 633,700 Digital Equalizer 1,658,011 TOTAL: $6,246,216 1,354,502 Clinton Fellowship 527,936 471,594 Education, Awareness & Engagement 558,773 418,715 3,103,409 2,594,379 Temporarily Restricted 2,686,157 3,098,669 Total Program Expenses 4,723,075 5,628,311 Permanently Restricted 600,000 600,000 Management and General 516,468 430,658 Total Net Assets 6,389,566 6,293,048 Fundraising Expenses Total Liabilities & Net Assets 6,977,992 6,472,114 Total Expenses 910,155 963,389 6,149,698 7,022,358 THIRTEEN YEAR REVENUE AND UTILIZATION OF FUNDS SUPPORT & UTILIZATION TREND Financial Year 2001 $10,000,000 $8,000,000 $6,000,000 $4,000,000 $2,000,000 2002 revenue 2003 2004 2005 2006-07 (15 months) FUN 910, Program Expenses Unrestricted 2001 INTEREST INCOME/OTHER 1% 51,370 UTILIZATION Education Accounts Payable & Accrued Expenses PRO 4,72 2013 SUPPORT & REVENUE Unconditional Promises to Give EVENTS (NET) 70% 4,341,940 STATEMENT OF ACTIVITIES 2008 (FY ending March 31) 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 Support & Revenue $6,566,682 UTILIZATION 2013-14 Utilization $3,221,916 EVENTS (NET) 70% 3,393,706 4,341,940 2002 4,906,374 2003 3,397,630 2004 INTEREST INCOME/OTHER 1% 5,627,337 5,422,258 51,370 2005 7,913,760 PROGRAM SERVICES 77% 4,723,075 3,213,441 FUNDRAISING 15% 910,155 6,875,704 CONTRIBUTIONS 29% 10,168,280 1,852,906 2006-07 10,029,646 2008 9,251,271 2009 9,584,062 2010 6,121,050 6,534,403 2011 7,364,056 7,140,853 2012 7,123,923 7,176,917 2013 7,032,832 7,022,358 2014 6,246,216 6,149,698 9,782,873 TOTAL: $6,246,216 8,675,947 MANAGEMENT & GENERAL 8% 516,468 TOTAL: $6,149,698 100% OF YOUR CONTRIBUTIONS GO TOWARDS OUR PROGRAMS our overhead is covered THANKS to the generosity of AIF’s Board of Directors and Council of Trustees 2014 utilization AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 30 AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 31 MAN 516, TOT PEOPLE AS OF SEPTEMBER 30, 2014 COUNCIL OF TRUSTEES Hon. William J. Clinton (Honorary Chair) 42nd President Of The United States Of America Mr. Arjun Aggarwal Managing Director, Healthscape Advisors Mrs. Anuradha Aggarwal Mr. Anil Godhwani Founder, India Community Center, Silicon Valley Mrs. Jyoti Godhwani Mr. Vijay Goradia Chairman & Ceo, Vinmar International Mrs. Marie Goradia Mrs. Tinnie Grewal BOARD OF DIRECTORS Ms. Lata Krishnan (Chair) Chief Financial Officer, Shah Capital Partners Mr. Pradeep Kashyap (Vice Chair) Dr. Venkat Srinivasan (Vice Chair) Founder & CEO, Rage Frameworks Mr. Vimal Bahuguna President, Drona Group, LLC Mr. William T. Comfort Chairman Of Citigroup Venture Capital And Chairman Of The Investment Committee Of CourtSquare Capital Partners Mr. Sridar Iyengar Co-Founder, The Sounding Board Mr. M.A. Ravi Kumar CEO, American India Foundation Mr. Ash Lilani Managing Partner & Co-Founder, Saama Capital Mr. Victor Menezes Retired Senior Vice Chairman, Citigroup Chairman Emeritus, American India Foundation Mr. Diaz Nesamoney President & CEO, Jivox Corporation Mr. Dinesh Paliwal President & CEO, Harman International Mr. Arvind Raghunathan Founder, Chief Executive Officer And Chief Investment Officer, Of Roc Capital Ms. Anjali Sharma Chairperson, Philanthropic Engagement, American India Foundation Mr. Raj Sharma Managing Director Of Investments; Head Of The Sharma Group Of Merrill Lynch Private Banking And Investment Group Mr. Geoff Stewart Esq. Partner, Jones Day Mr. Harit Talwar President – U.S. Cards, Discover Financial Services AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 32 Mr. Ravi Akhoury Akhoury Foundation Mrs. Ginny Akhoury Mrs. Talat Hasan Venture Partner, Granite Hill Capital Partners, Llc Mr. Kamil Hasan Mrs. Rani Bahadur Michigan-Based Philanthropist Mr. B N Bahadur Mr. Vinod Khosla Founder, Khosla Ventures Mrs. Neeru Khosla Mr. Vimal Bahuguna President, Drona Group LLC Dr. Bulbul Bahuguna Mr. Kumar Malavalli Co-Founder, Chairman, & Chief Strategy Officer, Inmage Systems Mrs. Vijaya Malavalli Mr. Raj Bhatia Managing Director – Investments, The Bhatia Group, Merrill Lynch Private Banking And Investment Group Dr. Seema Bhatia Mr. Satjiv Chahil Innovation Advisor To President, Sony Electronics, Ltd Mr. Victor J. Menezes Retired Senior Vice Chairman, Citigroup Chairman Emeritus, American India Foundation Mrs. Tara Menezes Mr. Sant Chatwal President, Hampshire Hotels & Resorts LLC Mrs. Daman Chatwal Mrs. Tania Mirchandani Vice President, Private Wealth Management (Pwm) Group, Goldman Sachs Mr. Dinesh Mirchandani President And Co-Founder, Sindulge Mr. Navneet S. Chugh Attorney, C.P.A. The Chugh Firm Mrs. Ritu Chugh Mr. Anil Monga CEO, Victory International (USA), LLC Mrs. Rajni Bala Monga Mr. Tushar Dave CEO & Co-Founder, Enlighted, Inc. Mrs. Reshma Dave Mr. Diaz Nesamoney President & CEO, Jivox Corporation Mrs. Usha Nesamoney Mr. Vinod Dham Founder And Executive Managing Director, Indous Venture Partners Mrs. Sadhana Dham Mr. Bhikhubhai Patel Chairman, Tarsadia Hotels Mrs. Pushpa Patel Dr. Jasvir Gill CEO,Alert Enterprise, Inc. Ms. Kaval Kaur CFO, Start Up Farms, Inc. Mr. Mukesh Patel Managing Partner & Founder, Invati Capital Mrs. Harsha Patel Mr. Mukesh Gangwal Managing Director, Huron Consulting Group Mrs. Nita Gangwal Mr. Nimish Patel Partner, Richardson & Patel, LLP Mrs. Nancy Patel Mr. Vivek Paul Consulting Professor, Stanford University Mrs. Nilita Paul AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 33 PEOPLE Brian J. G. Pereira, MD President & CEO, Visterra Sunita Pereira, MD Tufts Medical Center Mr. Krishna Veeraraghavan Partner, Sullivan & Cromwell Dr. Sejal Shah Dermatologist Mr. Ravi Reddy Co-Founder And Managing Partner, Think Capital LLC Dr. Romesh Wadhwani CEO & Managing Partner, Symphony Technology Group Mrs. Kathy Wadhwani Ms. Neerja Sethi Co-Founder And Vice President, Syntel Inc. Mr. Bharat Desai Mr. Ajay Shah Founding Managing Director, Silver Lake Sumeru Ms. Lata Krishnan Chair, American India Foundation Mr. Dave Sharma Chairman, TTA Group Of Companies Mrs. Usha Sharma Artist, Figurative Paintings In Oil Mr. Raj Sharma Managing Director Of Investments; Head Of The Sharma Group Of Merrill Lynch Private Banking And Investment Group Mrs. Nalini Sharma INDIA TRUSTEE BOARD Mr. Ashok Alexander Former Director, India Country Office, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation Mr. Nishith Desai Founder, Nishith Desai Associates Mr. Saurabh Srivastava Chairman, CA Technology India Dr. Venkat Srinivasan Founder & CEO, Rage Frameworks Mrs. Pratima Srinivasan Ms. Malavika Tiwari Founder, Malavika Tiwari Glass Art Mr. Sanjay Subhedar General Partner, Storm Ventures Mrs. Suniti Subhedar US ADVISORY COUNCIL Mr. Harit Talwar President – U.S. Cards, Discover Financial Services Mrs. Reena Talwar Dr. Rajendra Vattikuti Vattikuti Ventures Mrs. Padmaja Vattikuti Ambassador Frank G. Wisner International Affairs Advisor, Patton Boggs LLP Mr. Ajay Relan Founding Partner, CX Advisors LLP Mr. Vivek Sharma CEO, Piramal Critical Care Mrs. Vandana Sharma Mr. Ravi Tilak Co-Founder & CEO, Almex USA Mrs. Vandana Tilak President, Bombay Pictures, Inc. Mr. V. Prem Watsa Chairman & CEO, Fairfax Financial Holdings, Limited Mrs. Nalini Watsa Dr. Amartya Sen, (Chair) Thomas W. Lamont University Professor, Professor Of Economics And Philosophy, Harvard University Ms. Maya Ajmera Founder & Former President, Global Fund For Children Mr. Marshall M. Bouton President Emeritus, The Chicago Council on Global Affairs Dr. Lincoln Chen President, China Medical Board, USA AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 34 Mr. Kamran Elahian Chairman And Co-Founder, Global Catalyst Partners Mr. Pramit Jhaveri CEO, Citi India Mr. Maneesh K. Goyal Founder And President, MKA Mr. Vijay Mahajan Founder & Chairman, Basix, A “Group Of Livelihood Promotion Institutions” Mr. Raj Goyle Co-Founder, Bodhala Dr. R. A. Mashelkar President, Global Research Alliance Mr. Rakesh Gupta President & COO, Infofree.Com Mr. Bakul Joshi Founder & President, Multiple Access California Corporation Mr. Sanjay Nayar CEO, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co. (Kkr), India Advisors Private Limited Mr. Ranjit Pandit Managing Director, General Atlantic Private Limited Mr. Kailash Joshi Co-Founder, AIF & Retired IBM GM Mr. Tarun Khanna Director Of South Asia Institute, Harvard University Ms. Priya Paul Chairperson, Apeejay Surrendra Park Hotels Mr. Neil Lachman Senior Advisor, Finance, American India Foundation Mr. Jerry Rao Founder & Chairman, Value Budget Houston Corporation; Earlier Founder Of Mphasis Ms. Jacqueline Lundquist VP Corporate Affairs And Chief Serendipity Officer, Waterhealth International Dr. Rajiv Tandon Senior Advisor, Maternal, Newborn, Child Health & Nutrition, Save The Children Mr. Carl Pope Former Chairman & Executive Director, Sierra Club Mr. Adil Zainulbhai Ceo, Mckinsey & Co. India Ms. Kavita Ramdas India Representative, Ford Foundation AMBASSADORS Mr. Nitin Sacheti Senior Analyst, Charter Bridge Capital Mr. Rahul Bose Actor And Director Mr. Sudhakar Shenoy Chairman & CEO, Information Management Consultants, Inc. Mr. Deepak Chopra Founder, The Chopra Center For Well Being INDIA ADVISORY COUNCIL Ms. Madhur Jaffrey Author And Actress Mr. K.V. Kamath (Co-Chair) Non-Executive Chairman, ICICI Bank Limited Ms. Mira Nair Filmmaker, Mirabai Films Mr. Deepak Parekh (Co-Chair) Chairman, HDFC Limited Ms. Gloria Steinem Author And Activist Dr. Isher Ahluwalia Chairperson, Indian Council For Research On International Economic Relations EDUCATION ADVISORY COUNCIL (US) Ms. Sushmita Ghosh Chair, Changemakers; Former President, Ashoka Diaz Nesamoney President & CEO, Jivox Corporation (Chair) Vimal Bahuguna President, Drona Group LLC AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 35 PEOPLE Tushar Dave Co-Founder & Managing Director, NewPath Ventures LLC Prof. Badri Narayan G.B. Pant Social Science Institute, Allahabad Sejal Desai CEO, SevaYatra Prof. Ravi Srivastava Center for the Study of Regional Development, Jawaharlal Nehru University Dr. Rafiq Dossani Senior Economist RAND Corporation Stacey Kertsman Director, ACE Center at Castilleja School Lata Krishnan Chair, American India Foundation FELLOWSHIP ADVISORY COUNCIL Farrokh Billimoria Founder, Managing Partner at Mynt Capital Rick Desai Co-Founder, Dashfire Purvi Kunwar Trustee, Menlo School Venkat Srinivasan Co-Founder & CEO, Rage Frameworks Manisha Aggarwal Independent Education Consultant Subhalakshmi Ganguly Head of Communication, Research and Policy, IL&FS IETS Group Yael Gottlieb Director, Global Development Strategy, Human Rights Watch Sridar Iyengar Co-Founder, The Sounding Board Vibhu Mittal Founder, Root One Lakshmi Karan Director, Global Strategy at Riders for Health EDUCATION RESOURCE GROUP Dr. Poonam Batra Professor, Central Institute of Education, University of Delhi Sutapa Deb TV journalist, Features Editor, NDTV 24X7, Director of India Matters Prof. R. Govinda Vice Chancellor, National University of Educational Planning and Administration Dhir Jhingran Former Principal Secretary, Government of Assam,previously Director of Elementary Education, Ministry of Human Resource Development Avinash Kumar Former Director, Policy Research and Campaigns, Oxfam India Sudhir Mankad Former Chief Secretary and Education Secretary of Gujarat Lata Krishnan Chair, American India Foundation M.A. Ravi Kumar CEO, American India Foundation Ajay Shah Founding Managing Director, Silver Lake Sumeru Poonam Singh Education & Leadership Development Consultant BAY AREA LEADERSHIP COUNCIL NEW ENGLAND LEADERSHIP COUNCIL Vijay & Swati Advani John & Selina China Sridar & Anita Iyengar Sandeep & Purvi Kunwar Ash Lilani Joe & Anne-Marie Macrae Sanjay & Sangeeta Mehrotra Diaz & Usha Nesamoney Ajay Shah and Lata Krishnan Sanjay & Suniti Subhedar Rajesh & Rohini Vashist Brian J.G. Pereira, MD & Sunita Pereira Raj & Nalini Sharma Vivek & Vandana Sharma Venkat & Pratima Srinivasan ORANGE COUNTY LEADERSHIP COUNCIL CHICAGO COUNCIL OF GOVERNORS Karen & Matt Barnes Jasma & Rahul Ghai Anjali Gurnani & Shakeel Abdul Savera & Mayur Gupta Ritu & Ashish Jain Varsha & Ashish Kaura Tariq Laliwala Aditya Nath Amy & Arijit Roy Rahul Roy Masha & Rohan Sajdeh Arvind & Neeta Singh Parita & Alex Singla Mani Venkataram & Vinita Subramani Rohit Voshnoi DALLAS LEADERSHIP COUNCIL Raj & Ruby Bhandari Seema & Harish Bhandula Colleen & Barney Brinkmann Fonsa & George Brody Sejal & Hemang Desai Lauren & Wes Holloway Hema & Raj Kalyandurg Paul & Geetha Pandian Ishwarya Srinivasan & Vijay Ramnath Sonali & Suranjan Pramanik Lina Shah Sandya & Mahesh Shetty Smita & Mustafa Suterwala LOS ANGELES LEADERSHIP COUNCIL ATLANTA LEADERSHIP COUNCIL Amitabh Sharma (Chair) Prof. (Dr.) Jagdish Sheth Prof. (Dr.) Beheruz Sethna Subash Razdan Lani Wong Allen Judd Phil Bolton Prof. Shyam Menon Vice Chancellor, Ambedkar University Delhi AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 36 Tania & Dinesh Mirchandani (Chairs) Radhika & Ravi Achar Rahkee & Suchir Batra Varuna & Rahul Grover Megha Kadakia & Saurabh Kikani Sudha & Pravin Mody Nancy & Nimish Patel Asha & Anil Punyapu Ritu & Vikas Thakur Vandana & Ravi Tilak Tinnie & Shiv Grewal (Chairs) Mike Colaco Sharlene & Neel Grover Maya & Sunil Patel Pushpa & BU Patel Sandhya & Ram Rao Mona & Rupesh Shah Rika & Manu Shah RICHMOND, VA LEADERSHIP COUNCIL Sunita Gupta & Sanjay Mittal (Chairs) Nupa Agarwal and Amit Acharya Zarina Fazaldin Chiranth & Janani Nataraj Surajit & Gargi Pal Ajoy & Vasudha Ranga Stephanie Short Rupa & Sahil Tak Peter & Julie Woo WASHINGTON, DC LEADERSHIP COUNCIL Sudhakar Shenoy Ron Somers Geoffrey Stewart Mahinder & Sharad Tak Ranvir & Adarsh Trehan Suresh & Neena Shenoy YOUNG PROFESSIONALS ATLANTA Sourendra Raut Aastha Sharma BAY AREA Nadim Laiwala Rahul Talati Salima Taplin LOS ANGELES Purva Kogje Sameer Mehta NEW ENGLAND Emil Kuruviilla Vimi Mirchandani Prabhod Sunkara AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 37 PEOPLE INDIA STAFF NEW YORK Jaya Malik Neha Prakash Aamir Aijaz Program Manager, Livelihoods WASHINGTON, DC Rashmi Ankam Anushree Banerjee Sarika Kasaraneni Ananya Alexander Program Associate, Strategic Partnerships V. Alexander Regional Coordinator – Tamil Nadu, Digital Equalizer U.S. STAFF Nandini Ansari Senior Operations Manager (New York) Meenu Anand Manager, Human Resources Sudhakar Bhandari Regional Coordinator – Karnataka, Digital Equalizer Nicole Asbury Database Administrator (New York) Bhawna Chawla Senior Development Officer (California) Drew Foxman Senior Director, Strategic Partnerships & Communications (California) Mugdha Gangopadhyay Development Officer (New York) Biren Brahma Program Manager – Gujarat, Digital Equalizer Ashish Chandra Program Manager – Delhi, Digital Equalizer Eshwari C. Regional Coordinator – Bangalore, Digital Equalizer Roopak Chauhan Operations Director – AYV, O3 And Special Projects Nirmala Garimella New England Chapter Manager (Boston) Palka Gupta Senior Financial Officer (New York) Aparna Dass Program Manager, Livelihoods Neha Deepak Senior Program Associate – Livelihoods (Disability) Bhupendra Jadav Accounts Manager (New York) Baskaran Dheenadayalan State Program Manager – Tamil Nadu, Digital Equalizer M.A. Ravi Kumar CEO (New York) Luz Pacheco Outreach And Events Manager (California) Meghana Srinivasan Editorial Content Manager (New York) Mrinalika Dhapola Operations Director – Punjab, Digital Equalizer Priyanjana Ghosh Operations Director, William J. Clinton Fellowship For Service In India Charu Johri Director, Public Health Ritu Kathuria Finance Manager AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 38 Rajvinder Kaur Project Assistant – Livelihoods (Disability) Gurvinder Singh Senior Manager, Finance Aparna Krishnamurthy Project Manager (Citi) – Digital Equalizer Harinder Singh State Coordinator – Punjab, Digital Equalizer Praniti Maini Manager, Strategic Partnerships Jagdeep Singh Program Assistant, Livelihoods Rowena Kay Mascarenhas Senior Manager, Communications Mandeep Singh Regional Coordinator – SIRSA, Digital Equalizer Kundan Mishra Program Manager, Education Santosh Singh Program Manager – Punjab, Digital Equalizer Prabhakar Program Manager, Livelihoods C. Sudhir Program Manager – Hyderabad, Digital Equalizer Amol Parmar Administrative Assistant J. Sundarakrishnan Director, Digital Equalizer Yash Paul Program Officer – Delhi, Digital Equalizer Vivek Wandhile Project Manager – Gujarat, Education Usha Raghupathy State Program Manager – Karnataka, Digital Equalizer SENIOR ADVISORS Mohit Raj Program Associate – Livelihoods (Disability) Ajit Kothari Senior Advisor, Uttarakhand Rehabilitation Program (New York) Hanumant Rawat Livelihoods Advisor Neil Lachman Chief Financial Officer (New York) Oindrilla Roy Program Associate, William J. Clinton Fellowship For Service In India Vijayalakshmi Tyagarajan Senior Advisor, Finance (New York) Raj Kanwar Rishi Regional Coordinator – Haryana, Digital Equalizer CONSULTANTS Arjun Sanyal Deputy Director, Education Suchitra Krishna New England Chapter Consultant (Boston) Anupam Sarkar Project Advisor, Public Health Elijah Monroe International Program Manager, William J. Clinton Fellowship For Service In India (India) Subrat Sarkar Operations Director – Odisha, Digital Equalizer Chand Nirankari Senior Digital Communications Manager (New York) Tapas Kumar Sathpathy Program Manager, Education Venkatesh Raghavendra Chapter Development Consultant (Washington, DC) Shama Shanmugam Administrative Officer Gaurang Raval Consultant, William J. Clinton Fellowship For Service In India (India) R. Sathyanarayan Program Manager, AYV AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 39 PEOPLE ADOBE YOUTH VOICES CONSULTANTS Praveen Gulnaz Hussain Neeraj Kumar Vinod Rao N. Neelam Rawat Shishir Kumar Singh DIGITAL EQUALIZER CONSULTANTS Arjun Deepak Ishit Jaishree Lalit Pritika Seetharamu Venkatalakshmi Priyanka Agarwal Nafees Ahmed Siddiq Ahmed Yaqub Ahmed Mohd Anee Shveta Arora Kamala Badiger Rajni Bala H. Banu Baidyanath Behera Manoranjan Bhoi Shanti Bhusan Padhi Sanjaya Biswal Mohan Chand Padhan Jyoti Chauhan Anuradha Chavda Nitesh D Pahadiya P. Dinesh Ankur Gaba N. Gopinath Santosh Goud Pooja Gupta Sandeep Gupta Ankit Gupta Mehul H. Rathod Anju Jain Parmod Jain Kaushal Kalia Pankaj Kamboj Manmeet Kaur Tarandeep Kaur Amandeep Khan K. Kokila Raghavendra Kulkarni Arun Kumar Varun Kumar Sunil Kumar Dinesh Kumar Deepak Kumar Manoj Kumar Sunil Kumar Goswami Umesh Kumar Sharma Manju Kumari Mamta Kumari Varsha Kumari Prakash Lambi Sumithramma M. Hardik M. Sonchhatra Sandipbhai Manjibhai Kevdiya Ritu Maurya Abhinav Mayank J. Meenakshi Lalita Mehra Santanu Mishra Mrutunjay Mishra Harish Mohan Anup Mohanty A. Muthuvel Manjunatha MV Murali N. Mohd. Nawaz Hussain Mohd. Omer Nagendra P. Vijay Pal Savjot Pal Singh Satinder Pal Singh Neelam Pandey Riddhi Pandya Niraj Patel Sarmistha Pattanayak Pankaj Paty P. Pavithra Jyoti Prakash Sahu R. Priyadharshini M. Ragavendhira Raj Dixita Rakesh Patel K. Ramachandran Amit Rameshbhai Munjapara J. Ramya Rizavan Ramzanbhai Chudasama Dinesh Rathod Chandu Rathod AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 40 Shobha Rustagi Vinayaka S. Jignesh S. Bhatt Priyanka Sahni Neelam Sahoo Rajni Sani Ashish Sethi Meenakshi Sharma Tanu Sharma Anjana Sharma Mithun Sindra Pooja Singh Neha Singh Inderpreet Singh Gurmail Singh Sukhwinder Singh Harjinder Singh Gurpartap Singh Harjit Singh Harpreet Singh Simardeep Singh Amardeep Singh Ravinder Singh Gurpreet Singh Germanpreet Singh Jaswinder Singh Gurjant Singh Satwinder Singh Hakam Singh Charandeep Singh Grewal Rajinder Singh-Fdkt Rajinder Singh-PTL Poonam Sureshbhai Bhagat Jatin Thacker Ritika Trivedi Babajan V.B. S. Vadivu Kavya Vani N. M. A. Vijai Vinod Vinzuda INTERNS & VOLUNTEERS September 2013 - Present Nisha Bala Rachel Chang Surbhi Kubba Rina Madhani Padmashree Nayak Archana Patel Rahul Tora Emily Wyatt Yu Vongkiatkajorn AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 41 THANK YOU Without the dedication and passionate support of our donors, none of this work would be possible. AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 42 SUPPORTERS U.S. DONORS LEADERSHIP LEVEL $100,000 and above Adobe Foundation Adobe Foundation Fund at Give2Asia Applied Materials Foundation, The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation Krishnan, Lata & Ajay Shah Menezes Foundation, Inc., The Srinivasan, Venkat & Pratima Anonymous BENEFACTOR LEVEL $50,000 - 99,999 American Express Foundation Bain Capital Children’s Charity Ltd. Citi Kapoor, Rohit & Shikha Khosla, Vinod & Neeru MasterCard Worldwide Anonymous Nesamoney, Diaz & Usha Paliwal, Dinesh & Ila Sarva Mangal Charitable Trust, The Thangaraj, Immanuel & Preetha Anonymous US Department of State Uttarakhand Mandal of America Wadhwani Foundation PATRON LEVEL $25,000 - 49,999 Abbott Laboratories Almex USA Bahuguna, Vimal & Bulbul Banga, Ajay & Ritu Bank of America Merrill Lynch BMO Nesbitt Burns Bristol-Myers Squibb Chandra, Neeraj Cognizant US Corp Desai, Nishith Development Specialists, Inc. Dhawan, Sanjay & Anjali Dow Chemical Company Foundation, The eBay Inc. Ernst & Young Goldman Sachs Gives Goldman, Sachs & Co. Matching Gift Program Harman International Industries, Inc. IPG Interpublic Group (DraftFCB) Jones Day Lawande, Sachin & Anuja Ludwig, Eugene & Carol Lynn Malavalli, Kumar & Vijaya McKinsey & Company, Inc. Mitra, Sundari & Samir National Basketball Association New Vernon Capital LLC Premium Point Investments Prudential Financial, Inc. Quinnox, Inc. Raghunathan, Arvind & Sribala Subramanian Ravi B. Reddy Foundation, Inc. Roc Capital Management Rosenbloom, Lewis SanDisk Corporation Fund, a corporate advised fund of Silicon Valley Community Foundation Sanjay and Suniti Subhedar Charitable Fund SAP America, Inc. Sharma, Raj & Nalini Sharma, Vivek & Vandana Silicon Valley Bank Subramaniam, Shivan & Jyothi Sullivan & Cromwell Talwar, Harit & Reena Tarsadia Foundation Trehan Foundation, Inc. Vee Technologies USA Victory International (USA) LLC ZedNext (For Raj, Zainul & Lubaina) VISIONARY LEVEL $10,000 - 24,999 Accenture Advani, Vijay & Swati Akhoury Foundation, Inc. Allman, James AMC Cares Charitable Fund and Tulsa Community Foundation American Century Investments American Express Anderson, Erik & Deborah Adams Anne C. Kubik and Michael A. Krupka Charitable Gift Fund Anonymous Arun I & Asmita Bhatia Family Foundation, The AT&T Avasant Foundation Bancorp Bank HAS, The Basaviah-Ganesan Family Charitable Fund, The Best Bay Apartments BlackRock Financial Management, Inc. Bhungalia Family BMO Harris Bank N.A. Booz and Company Canekeratne, Tushara Capgemini Chadha, Sumir & Vaishali Shah Chipty, Tasneem & Aleksander Franz Chopra, Sanjiv & Amita Cisco Systems, Inc. Colaco, Michael Comerica Bank Das, Sanjiv & Kusum Dave, Tushar & Reshma Delphi Foundation DigitasLBi Dinyar and Aashish Devitre Foundation, The Discover Financial Services, LLC Eichstaedt & Lervold, LLP Farrokh Billimoria Fenwick & West LLP FinalMile Consultants Pvt Ltd Flextronics Foundation Franklin Templeton Investments Frost Venture Partners Gala, Anand & Sona Gangwal, Mukesh & Nita Gill, Biri & Sukhjit Glades Foundation, The Glasnapp Foundation, The Google Inc. Grewal, Shiv & Tinnie Grover, Neel & Sharlene Guggenheim Securities, LLC Gupta, Ram & Rashmi HealthScape Advisors Hilco Trading Co., Inc. Hochschild, Roger & Stephanie Illinois Tool Works Inc. Information Management Consultants, Inc. Infosys Technologies Limited Intuit Inc. Jivrajka, Vinod & Jayashree Joshua & Anita Bekenstein Charitable Fund, a Donor Advised Fund of Combined Jewish Philanthropies of Greater Boston, Inc. JP Morgan Chase & Co. Kamra, Deepak & Christina Khanna, Atul Kirkland & Ellis Foundation Kohli, Sajal & Rohini Dey KPMG LLP Lavingia, Dr. Kedar Lumis Partners Menezes, Ivan & Shibani Mesirow Financial Motwani Family Foundation, The Mukesh & Harsha Patel Fund, The Narayandas, Das & Sunitha Das Nathan Family Foundation Inc. Anonymous Oberoi, Arun & Neeru O’Melveny & Myers LLP Pandey, Alok Patel, Sumeet Pereira, Brian & Sunita Price, Richard & Linda PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP Raj, Deepak & Neera Rauner Family Foundation RBS Citizens Financial Group, Inc. Reddy Foundation, The Reddy, Girish & Rasika Reggie & Dharini Aggarwal Foundation Riverwood Capital LLC RR Donnelley Sawhney Family Foundation, The AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 43 SUPPORTERS Schwartz Family Foundation, The Schwertfeger, Timothy & M. Gail Waller Shriram, Ram & Vijay Sierra Wireless Inc. Simpson Thacher & Bartlett LLP Sita Foundation, The SMART Modular Technologies, Inc. Sperling, Scott Srivastava Foundation Srivastava, Raman & Shalini Steinberg Asset Management, LLC Stewart, Geoffrey Stradling, Yocca, Carlson & Rauth Sutherland Global Services Swani, Sanjay & Preeti TD Securities (USA) LLC Thermo Fisher Scientific Tullman, Glen & Trish Underwriters Laboratories Inc. Utopia, Inc. Vatsa, Sanjay & Rekha Vinod, Udayan Vishwanath, Vijay & Gita Iyer Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz WestBridge Capital Wilkie Farr & Gallagher LLP Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati Foundation Winston & Strawn LLP CATALYST LEVEL $5,000 - 9,999 Abel Noser Corp. Acxiom Corporation Agarwal, Ajay & Kate AGS Health, Inc. Aiyer, Kamesh & Geeta Akhoury, Ravi & Ginny Allianz Global Investors Distributors Americo Financial Life & Annuity Insurance Company Anil and Jyoti Godhwani Charitable Gift Fund Arora, Sudesh & Chitra Asia TV USA Ltd Austin Family Fund Baxter International Inc. Bayman, Scott & Lynn Becker, Greg & Michelle Berger Schatz Bhalla, Suresh Bharadwaj, Srinivasan & Smita Bhatia, Gulab & Himanshu Bhatia, Raj & Seema Boecke, William & Joan Boush, Mike Cepheid Capital, LLC Anonymous Chopra, Ajay & Shyamoli Banerjee Chopra, Rohit & Sonal Chuttani, Ram Citi Private Bank Crowe Horwath (For Brian Sanderson) CRT Capital Group Dalal Charitable Trust, The Deloitte Dhanda, Michelle & Raj Downes, Patrick Dr. Prem Reddy Family Foundation Dutta, Rajiv & Sumita eHealthObjects (For Sanjay and Sunita Mittal) EXL Service Experian Fidelity Investments Gautam Godhwani Charitable Fund, The GE Foundation, The Ghai, Vijayant Giancarlo Family Global Payments Inc. GlobalGiving Foundation Goldman Sachs & Co. Goyal, Maneesh & Andrew Wingrove Graf, R. Mark & Rebecca Greenberg Traurig, LLP Grosvenor Holdings LLC Hausfeld LLP Hollister Incorporated Hughes Network Systems, Inc. (For Pradman and Sunita Kaul) IBM Corporation Infogix Islam, Frank & Debbie Jain Family Foundation Jain, Naveen & Anu Jiganti, Dorothy & John Kadakia, Megha & Saurabh Kikani Kania, Edwin Mirchandani, Tania & Dinesh Kapoor, Vinod & Shikha Kathawalla, Imtiaz & Farida Katten Muchin Rosenman Foundation, Inc. Khanna, Karan Khanna, Tarun & Ruhi (Matched by AES) Anonymous Kumar Foundation, The Kunwar, Sandeep & Purvi Leo Burnett Lipoff, Mr. & Mrs. Cory Madavi and Gaugarin Oliver Foundation Martin Agency, The MDC Partners Inc. MediaCom Mehta, Siddharth & Swati Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc. Nallathambi, Anand Narula, Deepak Nathan, Hema & Murali Natixis Global Asset Management Nishar Family Charitable Foundation, The Nohria, Nitin & Monica Chandra Olayan Group, The Oza, Rohan Patel, Ash Pimco Investments LLC Planco Financial Services, LLC Punyapu, Anil & Asha Rao, Ramgopal & Sandhaya Anonymous Robson, Alex Roy, Rahul & Anuradhika RS Investment Management Co. LLC Sacheti, Nitin Sahney, Vinod & Gail Sajdeh, Rohan & Masha Saligram, Ravi & Nalini Sanderson, Brian Sehgal, Mukesh & Radhika Shah, Jogen & Kanan Shah, Kamal Sharma, Anjali & Deven Sharma, Ken & Geetha Shokeen, Amarjit & Rita Sidoti & Company, LLC Silicon Valley Capital Partners L.P./Christopher Combs Silicon Valley Community Foundation Singh, Gurpreet & Shammi Sinha, Prabhakant & Anita SourceHOV LLC, Inc. Stansbury, Roy Vashisht, Naresh Anonymous Vohra, Rita Waddell & Reed Companies Wadia Associates LLC Weinberg Family Foundation Weingardt, Marc Whitehead, Susan Wiseman, Eric & Susan Zwanziger, Ron & Janet CHAMPION LEVEL $1,000 - 4,999 A Noble Dental Care Abdul Family Fund, The Ace Foundation, NFP Agarwal, Anu & Anant Ahluwalia, Sarojkyogi Alam, Rummana & Nadeem Yunus Aliantel, Inc. Alliance Data Ambani, Anita Amin, Chirayu Ansara, James & Karen Apple Matching Gifts Program Argalas, Lindsey Arora, Sartaj & Akanshi Arora, Suneel AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 44 ARQ Ashwini & Anita Gupta Foundation, Inc. Asthana, Anjan Aurora, Ravi Avendus Capital Inc. Balaji, Vidhya Balcer, Rene & Carolyn Baliga, Vivek Bank of America Matching Gifts Barclays Capital Bassi, Sohanjeet & Anmol Baxter, Behram Belkin Burden Wenig & Goldman, LLP Berger, Michael & Alice Berrington, Howard & Cheryl Bhalla, Guninder Bhandarkar, Vasudev & Virinda Bhatia, Manish Bhatia, Sadhna & Raj Bhatia, Sushil & Urvashi Bhatt Family Charitable Fund Bhawan, Jag & Pratibha Bhutani, Harish Bose, Anirban & Manjari Boston Consulting Group, Inc., The Boveja, Raj & Sonia Brady, Terrence & Cynthia Brandt, William Buckingham Research Group, The Burnes, Rick & Nonnie Byahatti, Seema Canekeratne, Kris Care.com Inc. Carey, Melina & Patrick Carter, Larry & Cheryl Chadha, Rajive & Puja Chadha, Sandeep Chahil, Satjiv Chalana, Vikram Chandhok, Bela & Vinay Kumar Chandra, Naveen & Alka Chandra, Sonya Chauhan, Anudeep Chawla, Inder & Vera Chawla, Rajinder & Shashi China, John Choksi, Sabin & Sejal Javeri Chopra, Aneesh & Rohini Chopra, Sunil & Maria Christina Chowdhary, Siddhartha & Leigh Churiwala, Anil & Shahenaz Colaco, Vernon Colaco-Desouza, Lynette Combined Federal Campaign Comninellis, Thalia ConAgra Foods Convergex Group Cooper-Horowitz Inc. Dahya, Minakshi Dane, Bikram Dang, Ira & Joy Dasgupta Daruvala, Toos & Hira Daruwalla, Sanaea Dasgupta, Jaidev & Leena Datta, Avijit & Meena Dayal, Sandeep Dayalu, Praveen DeWaele, Jim & Patti Deb, Dipanjan & Shashikala Deeter, Byron Dehni, Walid Deora, Ajit & Sucheta Desai, Akshay & Brinda Kamdar Desai, Ketan & Anji Desai, Niraj & Anita Deshpande, Charu Dewbray, Tom Dham Non-Grantor Charitable Gift Fund Dhillon, Harkeerat & Deepta Dhingra, Gautam & Ritu Dhir, Karan Downs, Rick & Sadhana Dubey, Aditi Dutta, Rick & Jayashree Dyal, Thomas Eagan, William & Ann Edwards, Christine Eggers, Barry EnDyna (For Smita and Ashok Siddanti) Eskandari, Mojdeh Everest Group LLC Federated Investors, Inc. Finklestein, Mark & Janet Penn Fisher, Mary Foley & Lardner LLP Fox, Justin Gandhi, Navroz Ganesan, Venky & Preetha Basaviah Ganju, Shiban Ganz, Elizabeth & Richard Garg, Deepak Garg, Prem & Sudha Garimella, Manaswini Garimella, Parameswar & Nirmala Garland, Jack Gauba, Gary & Pooja GBS Linens Inc. Ghai, Jasma & Rahul Ghosh, Hitendra & Manjulika Global Industry Analysts, Inc. Godbole, Milind & Mona Bhoyar Goel, Jagdish Rai Goela, Vikas Good, Samantha Goodwin Procter LLP Greider, Suzanne & Max Grewal, Jas & Suren Dutia Grover, Eva Gupta, Anindya Gupta, Mayur Gupta, Deepa Acharya & Andy Gupta, Rajinder & Indu Gurbaxani, Vijay & Penny Hall, Russ & Deborah Hamilton, Doug & Dori Hanson, Jeffrey & April Hartford Mutual Funds Hatcher, Douglass Hawes, James & Ellen Hanson Herlihy, James & Catherine Hewlett-Packard Company Hinduja, Kunal & Jasmita Patel Hoenigsberg, Pauline & Peter HSBC Bank Inamdar, Sarla & Subhash India Project, The Infinite Computer Solutions, Inc. Invesco Powershares Iyer, Hari Javade Chaudhri and Gail Kee Fund, The Jha, Abhisek Jindia, Indu Johri Family Charitable Foundation Joshi, Asha & Chandu K.B. Chandrasekhar Family Foundation, The Kacker, Ravi & Anisha Kadakia, Nikesh Kadrovach-Duckworth Family Foundation Kalva, Satish & Shailaja Kamdar, Kim Puloma Kapoor, Art & Ellen Kapoor, Perminder & Jagjeet Kapoor, Vikas Kapur, Ramesh & Susan Karamchandani, Aarti & Naren Karnani, Nitin Kasera, Sandhya & Sneha Kashyap, Pradeep & Reena Kashyap, Satish & Punam Kashyap, Sudha Kataria, Anjali Katz, Jeffrey Kaura, Ashish & Varsha Kay Family Foundation Kemp, Christian & Jill Khandekar, Janardan & Amita Khanna, Rock Khanna, Sunil & Susan Khanna, Tarun & Ruhi (Matched by AES) Khosla, Sanjay & Neelu Khot, Prakash Khurana, Deepak & Anjula Khurana, Rajat Khushroo F. Dordi Family Trust, The King, Gregory & Karen King, James & Susan Kirkham, Christopher Kohli, Ashish & Sugeeta Kohli, Shelly Kohli, Ujjal & Sarita Koota, Mandaara Kannada Kothari, Tushar & Sangeeta Kothiwale, Mahantesh & Mamatha Krishna Kandarpa Fund Krishnamurthy, Vasu & Mary Kuchinad, Bala & Mukta Kumar, Ashok & Neera Kumar, M.A. Ravi & Sudha Ravi Kumar, Sanjiv Kumar, Sushen Kumar, Udai Kurtz, David Kustel, Matthew Lakhanpal, Ashish & Amrita Lal, Rajiv & Suruchi AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 45 SUPPORTERS Lathrop, Carey Lee, Sally C.B. Lodhia, Sheila Logadottir, Kristin London Company, The Longfield, Chuck M S International, Inc. Mahapatra, Jayanti Mahendroo, Vikesh & Kiran Mahurkar, Monish & Padmini Maker, Vijay & Sushila MalekRemian LLC Malik, Jaya Malkin, Barry & Jodi Block MasterCard Matching Gift Program Matta, Elissa & Anil McCarter, Kevin McGladrey, LLP McNally, Patrick & Mary Ann Mehra, Vivek Mehta, Aashish & Emily Shamsuddin Mehta, Jayesh Mehta, Kaushal Mehta, Meena & Jivan Meru Education Foundation Inc. Microsoft Matching Gifts Program Mills Family Foundation Mitra, Nidhi & Sanjeet Modi, Nikhil & Rahat Mody, Ajay & Suhani Mohasseb, Sid & Assal Moochhala, Zenobia Moughamian, Debra & Jose Molina Mukerji, Ananta & Kumkum Multani, Pramod & Anju Nair, Prasanna & Shyamala Narain, Saurabh & Rajita Naranan, Gomathy Nassi, Albert & Angela Natenstedt, Don Nathani, Adil & Nandini Nathoo, Raffiq Nayak, Prakash Nayar, Madhavan & Teresa Neelamkavil, Sebastian Newman, Carol Nimgaonkar, Shirish & Gouri Nirankari, Verinder & Kiran Nohria, Anju & Bharat Anand Nuveen Investments Oberoi, Dolly Offereins, Diane Offit, Morris & Nancy O’Hara, James & Kathleen Ohri, Arun O’Keefe, Mike & Nancy Opus Bank Padval, Umesh & Madhavi Pagemill Partners, A Duff & Phelps Business Pai, Vinay & Aarti Pal, Pushpendu Pal, Sumant & Alpna Seth Panchanadeswaran, Balasubramanian & Subadra Patel, Ajay Patel, Amit & Urvi Patel, Amit R. Patel, Deepa Patel, Hitesh & Sangeeta Patel, Mukesh & Sushma Patel Patel, Roshani Patel, Swetal Patiath, Pradip & Shalini Patwa, Najmuddin & Fehmida Chipty Pauline B Duffy Inc. Payden & Rygel Investment Management Pereira-Kamath, Nikhil Perlman, Andrew Pfizer Foundation Matching Gifts Program Phillips, Adam & Dana Pinover, Eugene & Diana PMG Global Corporation Prakash, Shimoga Prasad, Narayan & Poonam Prior, Sheridan Private Bank, The Prudential Foundation, The Puhanmadhom, Narayan Punater, Jayesh Qualcomm Raghavan, Anisha Rai, Raj Raiguel, Kara Rajpal, Rajesh & Apra Raju and Neeraja Reddy Family Charitable Fund, The Ramabadran, Barkha Ramakrishnan, Anand & Deepa Kartha Ramos, Pilar Ranadive, Rajeev & Joan Raut, Sourendra Ravula, Karthik & Anjana Sukumar Reddy, Nithin & Sheetal Reidenouer, Jeff Richards, Bob Robins, Norman Rose, Douglas & Elizabeth Rosenbloom, Micah Rowland, Jennifer Roy, Arijit Rubin, Donald & Shelley Rutstein, Mr. & Mrs. Carl Sachdeva, Jay Sahai, Neelam & Neeraj Sahgal, Nishi & Rohit Sahni, Rakesh & Pammi Sakhuja, Ravi & Rohini Sanjeev and Indu Tyagi Family Charitable Fund Saxena, Manoj Schulhof, Jonathan Selbst, Dave & Susie Sen, Chandranath & Sharmila Sen, Dinendra & Devalina Seneca Foundation, The Sentinel Investments Seshadri, Sridhar & Sushma Hegde Seth, Ishaan Shah, Ajay Shah, Amish Shah, Amit & Bela Shah, Divyesh & Priti Shah, Dixit & Associates Shah, Himat Shah, Mihir & Vinita Shahjahan, Riyad & Aarifa Shapiro, Owen & Elizabeth Rose Sharma, Ravi & Juhi Shatto, Steven & Elizabeth Sheridan, Paul Shrin Corporation Shrivastava, Ritu & Poonam Shroff, Adhir Shukla, Manish & Roma Siddhanti, Smita & Ashok Sidley Austin Foundation Singh, Ajay & Nidhi Singh, Anilam & Narindar Singh, Arvind Singh, Ashish Singh, Manoj & Rita Singh, Nithya Iyer Singh, Rajesh & Roberta Singh, Sonu Singla, Anupy & Sandeep Gupta Singla, Atul (Alex) & Parita Siva, Sheela & Chokkalingam Snow, Gregory Somasekhar, Amirapu & Monisha St. Hilaire, Chris Suchomel, Joel Sule, Aparna Sundaram, Mr. & Mrs. Viyas Sunkara, Prabhod & Vimi Mirchandani Anonymous Tak, Mahinder & Sharad Takiar, Hem Tandon, Anil Taplin, Shahnaz Chinoy & Carl Pope Tata Consultancy Services Thanapathy, Jumnah Thelander, Brett & Amy Thermos, Elli Thukkaram, Navin Tinsley, John & Jennifer AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 46 Tobon, Eduardo TTF Foundation Tuli, Sushil Upson Technology Group Vaid, Mohammed Vaidyanathan, Shankar Vaishnaw, Akshay Varshney, Prashant Vashist, Rajesh & Rohini Vasudevan, Sriram & Ramya Vattikuti, Abhinav Veeraraghavan, Vivek Venus Group, Inc. Verissimo, Marc & Laurel Verma, Kimi Vij, Sandeep & Priya Viswanathan, Krithika Vohra, Anshuman Vyas, Hamel Wang, Fred Waters Corporation Weisz, Robert & Cristina Welch Family Trust, The Wendell Family Foundation Yadav, Ajay Yalamanchi, Praveen Zook, Ted & Amy INNOVATOR LEVEL $500 - 999 Abnee, Nina Ahuja, Anilesh & Tania AMGEN Foundation Amiryani, Karim Anderson, Allen Annapareddy, Sphurthi Applied Materials, Inc. Armbrust, Joseph & Susan Arnold Electronics, Inc. Anonymous Badinehal, Venkat Bajwa, Raghubinder Bala, Venkatesh Baqueri, Abbas Berkes, Jim & Mary Beth Berkowitz, Rabbi Abraham Bhaskaran, Jayakumar & Kaimal Anitha Jayamumar Bhat, Anita Bhatia, Simmi Bhatt, Bharat Bhullar, Tahira Bhuwalka, Chanda Biller, Bruce Biswas, Tania Bitterman, Kevin Blee, Robert Bolt, Khurshid Bose, Rajat Carlson, Walter & Debora De Hoyos Cefalo, Adam & Krysta Celeste, Richard & Jacqueline Lundquist Central Mechanical Systems Inc. CHAI Chaturvedula, Durgaprasad Chittipeddi, Sailesh Choi, Paul & Lisa Cohen, Barry & Lisa Conjeevaram, Srini & Smita Contractor, Rumi Coppola, Richard & Debra Corn, Poe Cort, Ronald Cowen and Company Dave, Pragna Dayal, Yogeshwar & Shyam De Souza, Venita DeCaprio, Peter Deutsche Bank (For Venkat Badinehal) Dholakia, Urvi & Yagnesh DiBari, Lauren DLA Piper LLP (US) Dornfeld, Richard Eckton, Michael & Manisha Faith, Alison Galera, Rudolph Georgolous, Steve Gill, Sanjay & Sonja Goloboy, Andrew & Joan Abrams Grewal, Mehr & Kabir Grossman, Lindsey Gupta, CPA, Esq., Rajat K. Horowitz, Andrew & Pamela Houle, Jeffrey Humphries, Paul Jain, Ashish & Ritu Janardhan, Shashi Jansen, Mr. & Mrs. Mike Kadakia, Nimish Kapadia, Rajesh & Lina Kaplowitz, Karen Kapur, Suraj Kejriwal, Rakshit Kertsman, Robert & Stacey Keshavan, Matcheri Khanna, Rohit Anonymous Kigel, Alex Kohler, Michael & Mariela Cano Kolluri, Venkat Kota, Subu & Virginia Krishna, Preethi Krishnan, Ram & Nalini Kumar, Kapil Kumar, Riju & Sangeeta Lakhanpal, Vinod Lal, Anand & Mrinalini Chandra Laliwala, Tariq Larkey, Adam LeBlanc, Mr. & Mrs. Oscar Levin, Richard Lobo, Sandra Lowstuter, Clyde & Carolyn Madyastha, Sujay Mahindra, Gaurav Majithia, Rajendra Makadia, Jay Mani, Mahadeva McLaughlin, Jacki Meador, Wesley Mehta, Arjit Mehta, Toral Mehta, Zubin & Nancy Metropolitan Museum of Art Meyers, Genevieve Mishra, Madhavi & Debi Mody, Seema Mohan, Krishna & Swarna Morgan Stanley & Co. (World Headquarters) Mukherjee, Niladri Mulaikal, Peter Murillo, Jennifer & Albert Nagia, Naresh & Geeta Nagpaul, Kanta & Chander Nair, Anup Nath, Aloke & Rekha Nijhawan, Vinit & Deepti Nortman, Benjamin Oliver, Todd & Suzy Pal, Gurpreet Parekh, Ashish Parekh, Raj Parekh, Sujata & Vijay Parida, Samaresh Patel, Bella Patel, Kunal Patel, Minesh Patel, Mita Patel, Nehal Patel, Raju & Lisa Patel, Sejal Patel, Shama Patel, Tejshri Patel, Trishul Patwa, Gautam Pavia, Torin Phillips, Colette Prakash, Suman Prasad, Ashish & Ashley Prasad, Keshava & Vasumathi Prasad, Mukesh & Chandni Ramakrishnan, V S & Anuradha Chitrapu Ramakrishnan, Vishal Rao, Soma Rastogi, Sharad Reddy, Dharma & Pushpa Rehki, Raj-Ann Rehman, Anita Rogers, Molly Saha, Milan Sakamuri, Raj & Ramani Saluja, Kiran Sangha, Devinder Sarang Corporation Schulhof Family Foundation, The Sen, Kaustuv Seth, Anand Sethna, Meenal Shangri-La Tea Co. Inc. Sharma, Deven & Anjali Sharma, Maitreyi Sharma, Rishi Shekhar, Shashank Sheppard, Hille & Christian Shrivastava, Sandeep Singh, Harjit & Manka Dhingra AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 47 SUPPORTERS Sinha, Vijay K. Sinha, Vikas Smith, Matthew & Barbara Somaiya, Sandeep & Nasim Keynejad Sparacino, Dennis & Heidi Spinner, Steve Srinivas, SL & Dhanavathi Srinivasan, Ravi Srivastava, Nilendu Stegall, William & Rachna Stempel Bennet Claman & Hochberg, P.C. Subramanian, Ganesan & Chitra Tekchand LLC Tenneti, Janaki Thakur, Ritu & Vikas Thanawala, Chetna & Ambrish Thiagarajah Family Thomas, Samuel Tripathi, Mayank & Anu Verghese, Abraham Verma, Rati VJ, Nishanth Vora, Ketan Walia, Gurpreet Singh WaterHealth International Weber, Suzanne West, Meghan Wormer, Clark Zelenberg, Igor IN-KIND GIFTS AND PRO-BONO SERVICES Bahuguna, Vimal & Bulbul Bombay Sapphire Chatterjee, Mala Dalrymple, William Dey, Rohini Diageo Godbole, Milind & Mona Bhoyar Harman International Jaffrey, Madhur Kapoor, Vinod & Shikha Krishnan, Santhana Mehra, Vivek Pengun Random House Pereira, Brian & Sunita Saffron Arts Sej Jewels Shangri-La Tea Co. Inc. Sharma, Ken Sharma, Vandana Srinivasan, Venkat & Pratima Stewart, Geoffrey Taj Hotels Resorts and Palaces Tak, Mahinder & Sharad Thakur, Ritu and Vikas TV Asia United Airlines Victory International (USA), LLC INDIA DONORS LEADERSHIP LEVEL $100,000 and above DELL International Services India Private Limited Donation Received in Kind by DE DELL Prog. ICICI Foundation PATRON LEVEL $25,000 – 49,999 Human Dignity Foundation TCSRD VISIONARY LEVEL $10,000 – 24,999 ILFS Skills Development Corp. Ltd. Lahmeyer International India (P) Ltd. CATALYST LEVEL $5,000 – 9,999 IMC Global Technology Services CHAMPION LEVEL $1,000 – 4,999 Babajob Cybertech Software Multimedia Direct Deposit at Bank Donor-Unspecified Environment Conservation Gupta, Sanjay Haryana -Diet Prog. Iyengar, Sridar Arvamudhan KPMG Lohit, Harsh Singh Magic Bus Mehta, Atul Nair, Raji Negi, Ravinder Kumar Somany Impex-MSI Stone Craft India-MSI Tata Consultancy INNOVATOR LEVEL $500 – 999 Aangan Abraham, Aby Aravind Eye Hospital-Madurai Central Square Foundation Chatterjee, Jaysree Gulshan, Rishab Gupta, Akhilesh Imerit Technology Services (p) Ltd. Malik, Saman Paul, Hemanth PBK Waste Solution Sujaya Education Foundation Corporation MUMBAI SILICON VALLEY BANGALORE SINGAPORE MUMBAI BKC AIF also thanks all of our donors who have contributed amounts up to $500. Their contributions are greatly appreciated. A lack of space prevents us from acknowledging their gifts individually. AIF sincerely apologizes for any inadvertent omissions or errors in this listing of donors. AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 48 AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 49 NEW DELHI MUNICH GET INVOLVED 216 E.45th Street, 7th Floor, New York, NY 10017 901 Mission Street, Suite #105, San Francisco, CA 94103 C-17 Green Park Extension, New Delhi 110016 AMERICAN INDIA FOUNDATION • ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 • PAGE 50 www.AIF.org @AIFoundation
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