The Akshaya Patra Foundation came into being in the year 2000. A one-man initiative, it started with feeding 1,500 school children in Bangalore and has expanded to feeding over 1.3 million children over 14 years.
That one man whose initiative it was to feed 1,500 children was Sri Madhu Pandit Dasa. Born in Nagercoil, Tamil Nadu,went on to do his B.Tech in Civil Engineering from IIT-Mumbai in the year 1980. When here, he came across books of Srila Prabupada and got inspired to practice Krishna Consciousness. In 1983, he became involved in overseeing the activities of ISKCON, Bangalore and was also responsible for the activities of the Trivandrum temple as president.
Looking out of a window one day in Mayapur, a village near Calcutta, he saw a group of children fighting with street dogs over scraps of food. From this simple, yet heart breaking incident, came the determination that: No one within a ten mile radius of any of the ISKCON temples should go hungry. Little knowing that these were just baby steps towards a bigger goal, ISKCON temples started providing food to hungry children.
As this process continued regularly, children started coming to the temple on their own, before lunch time. On speaking to some of these children one day, Sri Madhu Pandit Dasa learnt that these kids either didn’t go to school or were leaving early in order to make it to the temple for lunch. That’s when he thought of sending food to the schools themselves. And before he really realized it, thanks to his efforts, 1,500 children in schools across Bangalore were receiving lunch from the ISKCON temple every school day.
He only realized the importance of what he was doing when teachers and principals from other schools wrote in, asking ISKCON to feed children at their school too. Applications from a few lakh schools in Bangalore came in, to start the programme at their schools! A disguised compliment was that kids from non-ISKCON supported schools were leaving to join schools benefitting from the temple’s food programme. Hunger was clearly an urgent issue that needed to be addressed!
Feeding children at over a lakh schools required operations that could not be managed from within the temple premises itself. So how could the operations be scaled up? He discussed the idea with prominent personalities whom he was in touch with through the activities of the temple. People like Mr. Mohandas Pai and Mr. Narayan and Sudha Murthy, amongst others. Thanks to their collective efforts, in 2000, The Akshaya Patra Foundation was officially born.
With a large portion of the seed funding coming in from Mr. Narayan and Sudha Murthy, and Sri Madhu Pandit Dasa’s engineering background, the organisation was able to set up state-of-the art kitchens. Sri Madhu Pandit Dasa himself is the brain behind the design of the first centralized & mechanized kitchen.
Providing a meal to children a day may not sound like a very ambitious mission. But the implications are truly massive. In doing so, the organisation addresses two of the most immediate challenges of India – hunger and education. By providing unlimited, wholesome food, they attract children to schools, retain them and then focus on their holistic development.
In 2010, IIT Mumbai honoured Sri Madhu Pandit Dasa with their distinguished alumnus award for his contribution to humanitarian service.
Established in 2000, Give is the largest and most trusted giving platform in India. Our community of 2.6M+ donors have supported 2,800+ nonprofits, impacting 15M+ lives across India.
Discover more from give.do
Subscribe to get the latest posts to your email.
Madhusudan Pillai
January 27, 2016 — 7:48 am
If i come across the person who is truly into starvation, how can , that person be helped through Akshaya
Tarika Vaswani
January 27, 2016 — 8:08 am
It would be best if you yourself bought a truly starving person, you come across, a meal :-). The Akshaya Patra Foundation provides wholesome food to attract children to schools. Their impact has resulted in increased attendance rates as well as increased concentration of the kids at school.