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The difference we make

Friends of SBT supports Salaam Baalak Trust to get vulnerable children off the street and on their feet through the provision of safe shelter, healthcare, nutritious food, education and access to support.

Funds we raise in the UK, and elsewhere outside India, are spent:

  • Providing 24 hour residential care for up to 400 children aged 4-18 years at any given time, through the running and staffing of seven residential care homes in Delhi.
     

  • In the provision of 10 day-care centres, known locally as Contact Points, for non-residential, vulnerable children who need support.
     

  • Enabling 3 emergency childline telephone helplines to provide help for 1200-1500 children and young people every year.

In doing this, we aim to encourage a sense of safety, self-worth, confidence and rounded social development for as many vulnerable children in dangerous and precarious situations as possible.

The Difference We Made in 2020

How Your Donations Can Help

Over the past year, India's street children needed us more than ever before. The pandemic led to SBT feeding an extra 10,000 families at a time when income from the City Walk programme came to an immediate standstill and volunteers where forced to stay away.

Thanks to the ongoing generosity of people like you, Friends of Salaam Baalak Trust raised more money than in any previous year, helping us to bridge the funding gap and to provide £7,000 in emergency funds for PPE so the cost didn't impact the already stretched shelter home budgets. With your help, Friends of SBT contributed 5% of the total revenue to Salaam Baalak Trust.

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99% of Friends of SBT's funds go directly to India; we're proud to spend less than 1% on web hosting and admin fees, with all work carried out by our volunteers. Funds raised through Friends of SBT are spent where they are needed the most on frontline activity in Delhi. Here are some examples of how far your money could go...

How Young People Benefit

The first day a child arrives at a SBT shelter home, their immediate safety and protection is the priority. For some children this is a brief stay, whilst their families are found and they are reconnected. For the hundreds of others, who stay within the Salaam Baalak family until they are 18, the charity provides a platform for them to reach their full potential.

Encouraging the children to flourish are the shelter home co-ordinators, staff, teachers and volunteers, under the management of the Executive Council at Head Office. Children are supported by a specialist mental health team and are enrolled in local schools or home learning programmes. Young people leaving Salaam Balaak's care have become successful photographers, choreographers, actors, dancers, writers and film makers as well as employees in corporate houses such as Coca Cola and DSC, and media houses including MidiTech and Teamwork. From the most challenging of starts in life, all of the beneficiaries have their own special stories...

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Amit

Arriving alone to Delhi from Varanasi, a young Amit worked on a tea stall in Connaught Place before connecting with SBT. After taking him in to a shelter home, the charity enrolled him in school. Amit studied hard for 12th grade before graduating from VELTECH University of Chennai and has just been appointed a manager at RBI (Reserve Bank of India).

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Roshni

Roshni spent much of her childhood with SBT in one of its two shelter homes for girls. A special partnership the charity established enabled Roshni to attend The Lawrence private school in Sanawar where she achieved an incredible 94% in her 12th grade exams. Roshni is well on track to achieve her ambition of becoming a lawyer.

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Ruhi

Ruhi came to SBT when she was

5 years old. She quickly settled into the shelter home and enjoyed studying. If you've been on the City Walk, you may recognise her as one of the guides. Ruhi will also be hosting tourists in her next role, having been enrolled for training at the Frankfinn Institute (India's Institute of Air Hostesses).

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Ajay

Fleeing his difficult home life in Nepal, Ajay travelled to Delhi as

a child. He was placed in an SBT shelter home aged 12, and through his hard work has just secured 88% in his 12th grade exams. Ajay plans to move on to a career in the field of Mass Communication.

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Rekha

Moving to an SBT shelter home as a child gave Rekha the opportunity to study. After completing secondary school, she graduated with a Bachelors degree in Spanish. Rekha has recently been recruited as a Client Relationship Officer at a Bangalore-based company.

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