We all nurture a passion but few translate it into action. A passion left unanswered results in a dry life; an act driven by passion can transform lives. This defines the journey of Vashishth Anand Saini and the dream he nurtures.
Vashishth is Social worker working for street and underprivileged children in Bihar. The idea behind the noble venture was the sheer number of street children in Bihar that totals over a lakh. What are these vulnerable kids falling prey to? Drugs, beggary, pick pocketing and prostitution to name a few. Vashishth discovered a zeal among these children to do something meaningful in their lives; they only needed support.
Today, Social worker has a school in the name of Saini Education located in Basudeopur in Krishna Bhawan where 200 children are provided necessities such as education and taught crafts. The organization also conducts workshops with street children under the flyovers, in the red light areas and at the railway stations to aware them against drug addiction and tobacco intakes.
Vashishth can recall vividly a scene of a group of street children playing enthusiastically, cheering and chirping. But what did they play with? Discarded tyres, empty plastic bottles and stones.
At the age of 18, Vashishth was worked for tribal women, against naxalism and in the red belt area in the state of Jharkhand.
Also, he has worked for three years with blind, deaf and dumb children.
In many rural and urban areas of Bihar Vashishth worked
Saharsa, Supaul, Madhepura, Triveniganj, Araria, Arwal, Katihar, Kishanganj, Khagaria, Gaya, Patna, West Champaran, Puarnian, East Champaran, Patna, Begusarai, Bhagalpur, Bhojpur, Madhubani, Munger, Lakhisarai, Vaishali and Muzaffarpur in various areas go. The circumstances of the areas they are seen
Professionally, Vashishth is working for a Company named Moral Group of Companies as branch manager from the last three years.
Vashishth's aim is to see every woman stand on her feet and every kid enjoy a normal childhood. he feels that every one of us must give back to the society in any way possible, be it voluntary or monetary services. he says that if we go into these shunned areas and have a first-hand experience of the lives the dwellers lead, we'll know how valuable our lives are.