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Health, Nutrition & WASH — Because Dignity Starts with Well-being

A child who is sick cannot learn. A family without clean water cannot thrive. A mother without proper nutrition cannot raise a healthy child. These are not abstract statistics — they are daily realities for millions of families in India. That is why TWF, as a leading NGO for health and nutrition and an NGO for water, sanitation, and hygiene, places physical well-being at the core of everything we do.

Our WASH programs deliver clean drinking water, sanitation facilities, and hand-hygiene education to underserved households and schools — slashing waterborne disease and restoring dignity. Our health and nutrition initiatives include preventive healthcare, maternal and child health services, and community nutrition support — especially for women and children in high-vulnerability areas.

Education & Child Protection — An NGO for Child Education That Refuses to Leave Anyone Behind

More than 6 crore children in India are out of school. Millions more are in classrooms but not learning. As an NGO for child education and an NGO supporting underprivileged communities, TWF addresses the full spectrum of education barriers — from early childhood care to digital learning, from dyslexia support to infrastructure development.

We run Early Childhood Care & Education (ECCE) centres, classroom and mobile libraries, STEM labs, and teacher training programs. Our blended learning model combines offline classroom teaching with interactive digital tools, ensuring that even children in the most remote areas have access to quality learning.

Alongside education, TWF is a committed NGO for child protection and welfare — embedding child rights, safety training, and abuse-prevention programs in every school community we work with. Creativity matters too: our Art and Culture programs nurture confidence, expression, and community pride in young learners.

→ Explore: Education | Digital Education | Child Protection | Art and Culture

Livelihood, Skill Development & Women Empowerment — Breaking the Cycle of Poverty

Poverty is not a personal failing — it is a structural trap. And the most powerful way to spring that trap is to invest in people’s ability to earn, lead, and grow. TWF is both a frontline NGO for poverty alleviation and a dedicated NGO for livelihood programs — equipping individuals and communities with the tools they need to build sustainable economic independence.

As an NGO for skill development and an NGO for youth empowerment, TWF provides vocational training, digital literacy, entrepreneurship development, and career placement support. Our Career Connect and Sustainable Enterprises programs have helped hundreds of young people and women move from unemployment to meaningful, market-relevant work.

At the heart of this work is a fierce commitment to women’s empowerment. As an NGO working for women’s empowerment, TWF promotes women’s self-help groups, financial literacy, leadership training, and entrepreneurship — because when women rise, families and communities rise with them.

Rural Development, Migrant Workers & Marginalized Communities — Reaching the Last Mile

True development cannot be measured only in cities. As an NGO supporting rural development and an NGO working for migrant workers, TWF reaches the communities most often overlooked — farmers and daily-wage workers in remote villages, migrants living in construction camps and urban fringes, and tribal communities navigating systemic exclusion.

Our community development approach is participatory — we co-design solutions with communities rather than imposing them. This means programs are more relevant, more trusted, and more sustainable. As an NGO for community development and an NGO for sustainable development, we build systems that outlast any single project cycle.

Our environment and green energy work ensures that development doesn’t come at the cost of the planet. From solar-powered schools to tree plantation drives, TWF integrates environmental sustainability into every community it serves.

→ Explore:  Environment and Energy | Green Energy

Emergency Preparedness & Disaster Response — An NGO That Stays When Others Leave

When floods destroy homes, when pandemics shut down cities, when disasters tear apart communities — TWF is there. As a committed NGO for disaster relief and response, we mobilise rapidly to deliver emergency supplies, medical aid, and humanitarian support to the hardest-hit communities — both urban and rural.

But response is only half the work. TWF also trains communities in disaster preparedness — building local capacity to anticipate, absorb, and recover from shocks. Because the most resilient communities are not the ones that never face disasters — they are the ones that are ready.

→ Explore: Emergency Preparedness and Response

The WE Foundation is not defined by a single issue. We are defined by our commitment to leaving no one behind — whether that means a girl in school, a farmer with clean water, a young woman with a livelihood, or a flood-hit family with a roof. If you believe in this mission, join us. Donate, volunteer, partner — and together, let’s build an India that works for everyone.

FAQs :

Q: How do NGOs provide emergency preparedness and disaster response support?

A: An NGO for disaster relief and response, like The WE Foundation,n deploys rapid relief teams, distributes emergency supplies, coordinates with local governments, and runs community preparedness training. TWF has responded to floods, the COVID-19 pandemic, and other crises — reaching the most vulnerable populations in both urban and rural India before and after disasters strike.

Q: How do NGO health and nutrition programs help vulnerable communities?

A: An NGO for health and nutrition works at the community level to provide preventive health services, maternal and child nutrition programs, health awareness campaigns, and links to government health schemes. TWF’s health programs reduce disease burden and malnutrition in underserved communities, helping families build long-term physical resilience.

Q: How do NGOs create better learning environments for children?

A: NGOs improve learning environments by refurbishing classrooms, setting up libraries, introducing digital tools, training teachers, and running supplementary programs like summer and winter camps. As an NGO for child education, TWF also supports early childhood care centers and STEM labs to ensure children learn in spaces that inspire curiosity and growth.

Q: What role do NGOs play in child protection and child welfare?

A: NGOs working in child welfare identify at-risk children, run awareness programs against abuse and trafficking, provide safe spaces, and partner with authorities to ensure child rights are upheld. TWF’s child protection programs are integrated within its education framework, ensuring every child it supports is both educated and safe.

Q: How do NGOs provide safe drinking water and sanitation facilities?

A: An NGO for water, sanitation, and hygiene designs and installs water purification systems, builds toilets, conducts hygiene training, and works with communities to maintain WASH infrastructure. TWF’s WASH programs have brought clean water and improved sanitation to thousands of households in underserved areas, dramatically reducing waterborne disease.

Q: What are WASH programs, and how do they improve community health?

A: WASH stands for Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene. WASH programs by NGOs ensure communities have access to clean drinking water, safe toilets, and hand-hygiene education. By addressing these three pillars together, NGOs like TWF prevent disease outbreaks, reduce child mortality, and create the basic conditions for a healthy, dignified life.

Q: How do NGOs support skill development for youth and women?

A: An NGO for skill development, like TWF, provides vocational training, digital literacy programs, entrepreneurship workshops, and career placement support. These programs are designed specifically for youth and women from underprivileged backgrounds, equipping them with market-relevant skills that lead to sustainable livelihoods and economic independence.

Q: How do livelihood programs help underprivileged families become self-reliant?

A: Livelihood programs run by an NGO for livelihood programs address the root causes of poverty by building income-generating capacities. TWF supports self-help women’s groups, dairy and livestock management, sustainable enterprises, and career connect initiatives — enabling families to move from dependency to dignity and self-reliance.

Q: How do NGOs promote youth and women empowerment in communities?

A: An NGO for youth empowerment and an NGO working for women empowerment, like TWF, runs leadership training, vocational programs, self-help group formation, and community mobilization initiatives. By investing in women and young people, TWF creates a multiplier effect — empowered women raise healthier children and empowered youth drive local economies forward.

Q: How do art and culture programs support community development?

A: Art and culture programs used by an NGO for community development help children and youth express themselves, build confidence, develop empathy, and connect with their cultural identity. TWF integrates art, music, drama, and cultural activities into its education and livelihood programs — using creativity as a tool for healing, engagement, and social cohesion in marginalized communities.