Build a village in India

Help Passports with Purpose

Passports with Purpose is a collaborative online fundraiser created in 2008 by four Seattle-based travel bloggers: Debbie Dubrow, Pam Mandel, Michelle Duffy and Beth Whitman, the bloggers behind Delicious Baby, Nerd’s Eye View, WanderMom, and Wanderlust and Lipstick.

Each year, they choose a charity and leverage their online presence to help raise funds for it. This year, 2010, they are building a village in Southern India with Land for Tillers’ Freedom (LAFTI) and their non-profit branch based in the U.S., Friends of LAFTI Foundation.

Watch this video about the founder of LAFTI – a real modern-day hero. It’s a very inspiring, very moving story about women empowering women. Yay!

Build a village for Dalits in Tamil Nadu, India

After successfully raising nearly $30,000 in 2009, this year they are aiming for $50,000 to benefit LAFTI, based in Tamil Nadu, India.

“We really are calling upon travel bloggers to help raise the funds by spreading the word about Passports with Purpose among their networks, readers and social media contacts,” said Debbie Dubrow. “Like last year, we hope that this effort will not only raise money for a very worthy charity, but also help develop a stronger sense of community among travel bloggers, and demonstrate the effect we can have when we work together.”

For more information visit the Passports with Purpose website.

LAFTI’s Mission

For more than 50 years, LAFTI’s founders – Krishnammal Jagannathan and S. Jagannathan – have been committed to helping Dalits (India’s untouchables), especially women, with projects that include land distribution, cultivation, adult training, youth housing and housing construction. For less than $2,000, LAFTI can build a home, for which the land title is given to the woman of the household. Passports with Purpose aims to raise enough money to build approximately 25 homes to create the Passports Village in Karunganni, located in the state of Tamil Nadu.

Krishnammal Jagannathan and S. Jagannathan have been awarded two major humanitarian awards for their efforts. The first was the Opus Prize, presented on November 18, 2008 in a ceremony at Seattle University in Seattle. The second was the Right Livelihood Award presented a month later in Sweden as part of a ceremony in the Swedish Parliament. Since Jagannathan is no longer able to travel, Krishnammal accepted both of these awards on behalf of LAFTI.

According to Krishnammal, “Orathur villagers are firmly determined to build new houses. They are very eager to contribute their labor towards house building.”

Help Passports with Purpose raise funds to help these determined villagers create a better life for themselves and their families.

For more information visit the Passports with Purpose website.

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2 Responses to “Build a village in India”

  • Krista says:

    This is one of your many great blogs I will send to my friends. Keep up the good work.

  • George says:

    A good initiative of building a village in India and may this go through the proper way and don’t allow the dirty politicians of India to interfere..

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About BreatheDreamGo


BreatheDreamGo is Mariellen...
a travel writer, yogi and Indiaphile, who agrees with Rumer Godden: "Once you have felt the Indian dust, you will never be free of it." Mariellen has traveled for more than a year in India and is passionate about sharing the beauty of India's culture and wisdom.
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