
Why Skill Training Means More Than Just Employment
In many rural towns and low-income settlements, the term “skill development” is often misunderstood. It is reduced to a checklist — a short course, a
Whether it’s a child without a classroom or a cow left in pain, our work begins in the places often ignored — offering care that’s quiet, real, and lasting.
Founded in 2020, Anitya Welfare Society is a community-rooted NGO based in Madhya Pradesh. We work in areas where public services don’t reach easily — offering education to children of ragpickers, training to unemployed youth, and shelter to neglected cows. We also lead major environmental projects like “Mission Green Khandwa,” which has planted over 800 native trees and transformed 26 public spaces. Our focus is quiet consistency. We don’t just start projects — we see them through.
We help youth learn real-world skills that lead to income, stability, and confidence.
From stitching units to self-help support, we create space where women rise on their own terms.
Our Bal Sanskar Shalas bring alphabets, stories, and routine to kids never seen a classroom.
We restore empty, ignored spaces with trees, gardens, and care that keeps growing.
Every cause we work on responds to a real, visible gap — not trends. Whether it’s skill training, early education, animal care, or restoring green spaces, our efforts begin where neglect is the loudest and help is rare.
A vocational training program focused on job-ready skills in retail, healthcare, and trades developed in partnership with government missions to uplift unemployed youth with placement-driven education.
An initiative that brings joyful, foundational learning to ragpicker and underserved children through outdoor classrooms, games, and story-based learning — helping them build confidence and
daily discipline.
From sapling drives to street classrooms, community gatherings to care for the injured — these images capture not campaigns, but connection. This is what our work looks like on the ground.
At Anitya Welfare Society, our causes are not selected by trends — they emerge from what we witness on the ground. We start by listening to what’s missing: a child without access to learning, a cow left unattended, a green space turned grey, or a youth unsure where to go next. These aren’t just “issues” — they are daily realities for the people and animals we serve. Every campaign we run begins with presence and patience. We act where others pause, and stay where quick fixes don’t work. That’s how our causes become commitments — rooted in care, delivered with consistency, and shaped by what people truly need.
“There was a time I didn’t even own a pair of scissors. Today, I run my own tailoring unit and train other women in my neighborhood. Anitya Welfare Society didn’t just teach me stitching — they helped me believe that my hands could create a future. That belief changed everything.”
“I used to study under a tree because we didn’t have electricity at home. Through Anitya’s support, I completed my 10th and now teach my younger brother at home. That one small classroom gave me confidence, discipline, and dignity.”
“I used to study under a tree because we didn’t have electricity at home. Through Anitya’s support, I completed my 10th and now teach my younger brother at home. That one small classroom gave me confidence, discipline, and dignity.”
“My daughter would roam barefoot in the basti, no sense of a routine, no exposure to alphabets. Bal Sanskar Shala didn’t just teach her letters — it gave her a rhythm, a habit, and a place to smile. Now, she wants to go to a real school.”
Our blog captures the heart of our work — not in headlines, but in real voices, quiet moments, and lessons we carry from the field. These aren’t updates. They’re lived experiences.
In many rural towns and low-income settlements, the term “skill development” is often misunderstood. It is reduced to a checklist — a short course, a
There’s a kind of silence that hangs in places where children have never held a book. It’s not the absence of sound — it’s the
In our line of work, stories often begin where others stop looking. This one started with an old, injured cow lying beside a broken wall
Anitya Welfare Society is a registered nonprofit working since 2020 to bring skill, dignity, and care to those often overlooked.