The Sulabh initiative for widows is meant to emancipate them from all kinds of deprivations, restrictions and humiliations. All right-thinking people must come together to lend our widowed sisters and mothers healing and helping hand.
~ Dr. Bindeshwar Pathak

Restoring Dignity with Love and Compassion

Widow Page 1

Shunned by their own families, thousands of Hindu widows make their way to the holy city of Vrindavan in northern India to find solace. But most also end up impoverished and neglected.

Located on the banks of the river Yamuna in the state of Uttar Pradesh, Vrindavan is considered sacred to India’s majority Hindu population. It’s believed to be the birthplace of Lord Krishna, one of the most revered gods in Hinduism. With more than 5,000 temples, ashrams of various religious gurus and sects, the town is one of the most visited pilgrimage sites in India.

It is also home to more than 10,000 widows, most of them living lives of destitution and neglect and surviving by begging on the streets.

A global report on widows by the charity Loomba Foundation found there are 46 million widows in India, which makes up more than 9% of the population.

Those who make it to Vrindavan come from a broad cross-section of society, but they are also one of the most neglected and marginalised groups in the country.

One study by the National Commission for Women found the majority of widows living in Vrindavan are illiterate and have no access to government pension schemes or subsidised meal schemes.

Dr. Pathak’s idea was not just to help them but to bring a smile on their face so that they could live their remaining live with confidence and hope. He showered them with love and affection.

Plight of the Widows

How SISASSS changed the lives of widows at Vrindavan?