M D Pallavi to sing for three city NGOs

At this year's Joy of Giving Week, M D Pallavi will perform to raise money in support of a home for girls without parents, a rag-pickers education group, and a child-rights NGO.

The Joy of Giving Week is a national movement that hopes to engage every Indian in "acts of giving" – money, time, skills, resources or love. To be celebrated every year for a week including Oct 2, the week aspires to become a "festival" of giving that unifies India across its classes, castes, socio-economic strata and the urban/rural divide.

This year the week is celebrated from Oct 2nd to Oct 8th, 2011.

As part of one of the programmes conceived for this year, there will be fund raising dinner with a musical concert by singer M D Pallavi at the Taj Westend hotel.

M. D Pallavi also known as Pallavi Arun, is a Kannada Sugama Sangeetha (light music) singer, playback Singer, actor and TV anchor. She won the Karnataka State Film Awards for Best playback singer in 2006-07 for her song ‘Nodayya Kwate Lingave’ for the Kannada film ‘Duniya’

Three NGOS will receive the proceeds of the concert with dinner. ‘Baale Mane’, Association for promoting Social Action (APSA) and Rag-pickers Education and Development Scheme (REDS) are the NGOs identified.

Baale Mane (Girls’ Home) at Gopalapura, on the outskirts of Bangalore, is a home for around 65 girls between the ages of 5 and 18. Founded in 2001 by Paraspara Trust, an NGO dedicated to the eradication of the child labour system, it provides shelter and a loving home for girl children.

The girls are either orphans, have a single parent who is unable to care for them or have lost contact with their parents. Most of the girls have been rescued from domestic service, some have been found homeless in the streets by volunteers and others have been given shelter having been arrested by the police when living on the streets.

At Baale Mane, the girls are take care of with special emphasis on education, in addition to healthcare.

REDS works to enable uneducated and waste picking children from the streets of Bangalore and Ranchi. While APSA is a rights-based child-centered community development organisation.

Event details

Fundraising musical concert with dinner Donor Pass price: Rs 2000/-

Venue: Ball Room, The Taj West End

Date: October 2, 2011

7:00 PM – Music Melodies by M D Pallavi

8 PM – Dinner

Event anchor: Tuscany (Natural Ice cream lounge), Jayanagar, Bangalore

For details contact – Mohan – 9880016846 or Rajan 9845030095

Passes available at www.indianstage.in, Taj West End, Race Course Road, Tuscany, Jayanagar 9th Block.

Media Partner: www.citizenmatters.in

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Similar Story

Dog park in south Mumbai vacant for more than a year

A functional dog park remains unopened in Worli, even as pet parents in Mumbai struggle to find open spaces for their furry friends.

Any pet parent will tell you that dogs need a safe space where they can be free and get their requisite daily exercise. Leashed walks can fulfil only a part of their exercise requirement. Especially dogs belonging to larger breeds are more energetic and need to run free to expend their energy and to grow and develop well. This is especially difficult in a city like Mumbai where traffic concerns and the territorial nature of street dogs makes it impossible for pet parents to let their dogs off the leash even for a moment. My German Shepherd herself has developed…

Similar Story

Mumbai’s invisible beaches: A photo-story

Mumbai's shoreline may be famous for iconic beaches like Juhu and Girgaum but there's much more to it, says a city photographer.

Once a year, I inadvertently overhear someone wondering aloud about the sea level while crossing the Mahim or Thane Creek bridges without realising that the sea has tides. Similar conversations are heard at the beaches too. The Bandra Worli Sea Link, which now features in almost every movie about Mumbai, as seen from Mahim. Pic: MS Gopal Not being aware of tides often leads to lovers being stranded on the rocks along the coast, or even people getting washed away by waves during the monsoons. People regularly throng the sea-fronts of Mumbai - sometimes the beaches, sometimes the promenades, but…