The silent
crisis no one is talking about
In Koraput and Kalahandi, families live in the shadow of decades of industrial and
environmental pollution. The rivers carry it. The air holds it. The soil is
soaked in it. And the bodies of the people — especially the young — are paying
the price. Young men and women, some barely in their twenties, are falling ill with diseases that should not visit them for decades. Families that are already poor are being pushed into deeper destitution by medical bills they cannot afford. Andgrieving without answers is becoming a way of life here.
Pramod and Tejswini Khora (who is the chairman of the turst )both started this NGO because he is a local man — born and raised in the same polluted land — who lost his cousin to illness at just 27 years of age. That loss broke something in him, and then rebuilt him as someone who refuses to look away. He has seen enough funerals. He has seen enough families sell their last asset to pay for medicine that arrives too late. So Pramod decided to act — not with grand promises, but with consistency. Every week, he shows up. He delivers groceries. He arranges for basic medical supplies. He sits with families who have no one else. He asks for nothing in return. He needs only your support to keep going.
Where your Money goes ?
- Groceries
- Basic Medicaine
- Care for elderly
- Wder Dist Reach
Every rupee raised is used directly for supplies. Pramod does this work personally, with no administrative overhead.
Why this matters — even when the big
problems remain unsolved
We know pollution in these districts will not
be cleaned overnight. Legal battles take years. Industrial accountability is
slow. But the family that has no rice tonight cannot wait for policy change.
The child running a fever without medicine cannot wait for a government scheme
to reach her village.
Pramod & Tejaswini's approach is not a cure — it is a
lifeline. It says: you are not forgotten. Someone sees you.
Someone is coming. That message alone — delivered with
groceries and medicine — is enough to keep a person alive in spirit when their
body is failing.
Support him. Because consistent, ground-level care from one determined human being can do what systems often cannot — showup.

"I watched my cousin — 27 years old, full of life — fade away from an illness we never saw coming. And then I looked around, and I saw it was not just him. It was happening to so many young people here. I could not clean the air. I could not fix the rivers. But I could make sure that those suffering did not also go hungry or die without medicine."
— Pramod, resident of Koraput, Odisha