Manavodaya Institute of Participatory
Development
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PROGRESS YOU CAN BANK ON
Suppose you are a small farmer in a remote area of India. In a
good year you manage to grow just enough to feed your family. If
the weather failed you one year, you became indebted to the village
money-lenders. Being illiterate, you unknowingly signed up to extortionist
rates, which your family won’t pay off even after multiple
generations. You have no cash savings or bank account. How will
you ever purchase a bullock or other livestock to better your life?
How will your village ever get a new water well, an irrigation pump,
or other improvements if all the other villagers are like you?

This is the unfortunate situation in much of the world, and it
has been for centuries. But it does not have to remain that way.
With personal initiative, group effort, patience, and a little practical
help, the lives of thousands of villagers are experiencing genuine
and lasting improvement.
The Manavodaya Institute of Participatory Development has created
an entirely new paradigm based on participatory intervention. Their
programs send trained and inspired teams of change agents into the
countryside to provide practical advice and hands-on instruction
to help some of the nation’s most impoverished rural villagers.
For example, they teach that it is possible to raise small amounts
of capital simply by saving a handful of rice at each meal to eventually
sell for small amounts of money. Family members and friends can
pool their resources, which can then be put together with others
in larger villages groups. The result has been villages and groups
of villages not only meeting their own needs, but also being able
to lend money to other rural communities for capital improvements.
Manavodaya (Human Awakening) was established in 1985 in Lucknow
by two highly educated individuals, Varun, and engineer and MBA,
and Amla, a Ph.D. in biochemistry, who gave up fast-track commercial
careers. Their vision of grassroots intervention in villages began
with the goal of establishing sustainable self-help institutions
in rural areas based on the micro-financing model made famous by
Gramin Bank. While direct empowerment of the villagers is primary
to the organization’s mission, it also involves training field
workers and creating outreach programs to sensitize officials in
government and banking to needs of the new village banking initiatives.
In 1996, capacity building programs began to be directed to large
numbers of non-governmental executives and workers. By 2002, Manavodaya
was invited to participate in policy dialogue for training government
officers. Success is spreading from individual villagers, to entire
villages, to districts, to banks, and to government agencies. Today,
international programs are also taking hold and speakers are invited
to World Bank conferences.
Today, Manavodaya is spread throughout India, with some 20,000
self-help groups comprised of about 200,000 individuals. Contributions
to the organization are exempt from tax under Section 80-G. To learn
more about the power of human resource development for alleviating
rural poverty, visit: http://www.manavodaya.org/.
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