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Aug 2010 18

I continue to think of The YP Foundation as an organization in the present tense, and not really a figment of the past. I think it holds relevance to me personally, and certainly to my work today. I can say the same for many others whom I have known, worked with and interacted with over the course of my association with the organization.

I remember my first meeting at Tarini Barat’s house over 4 years ago, with team facilitator Harsh Malhotra, both of whom now alumni of the organization, and also dear friends today. To me this is the true relevance of TYPF – it creates lasting relationships and relevant situations for young people to converge and converse, and to create conventional, and sometimes exceptionally unconventional change.

I never believe in pivotal turning points in time, an “aha” moment – they is illusory. One of the key values I learnt during my time working with TYPF as a team member and staff member was perseverance. I worked in the Facilitative Branch (project on the Indian Education System), and as the Administrative Coordinator (2007-2008) with a host of projects. Subsequently to leaving the staff team, in 2008 I worked on another project of which I am very proud – a cultural exchange project with Afghan students in Delhi through film, art, literature and dialogue. TYPF gave me 100% freedom and creativity to source, compile and edit and design a 180-page magazine featuring work on the issue of “Understanding Afghanistan Today”. I can’t think of any other organization that would do that!

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Mar 2010 06

MB-flat-resizedMusic Basti
in association with
Bridge Music Academy
presents

A concert featuring

Dr Madan Gopal Singh and group (sufi folk)
with
Adil & Vasundhara (RnB and jazz)
& a special performance by
The Yale Gospel Choir (part of their Spring India 2010 tour)

An evening of diverse musical artistes coming together to support awareness about child rights.

Date: 10th March, 2010
Time: 7pm onwards
Venue: Amphitheater, India Habitat Center, Lodhi Road, New Delhi
Contact: musicbasti@gmail.com / +91 9818453347
www.musicbasti.org

Music Basti is supported by
The YP Foundation
EFICOR
Bridge Music Academy
Aman Biradari
American Center
Furtados Music India
Gibson
and others

Poster Design by: Noel Braganza

_______________________________
ABOUT MUSIC BASTI
Music Basti’ began in 2008 to work with and empower street children through music. The program is currently working with 200 children in Delhi with organization Aman Bidarari and The YP Foundation. It is working to develop a music program that teaches basic music education, coupled with human rights education and life skills. It focuses on helping the children to develop self- identity, value orientation and attitudes. Alongside this, it endeavors to join together community needs of children at risk, particularly street children, with the efforts of the music community.

Music Basti is run by IDEA (Integrated Development Education Association), and supported by The YP Foundation. It works with Aman Biradari, and Bridge Music Academy. Music Basti was selected for the Change Looms development and assessment program in July 2009 (Pravah and Ashoka) and Vikalp: Searching for Alternates (UNESCO, UNFPA and The YP Foundation.). The project combines professionals and student volunteers and musicians. It aims to develop a collaborative and positive relationship between the music community, individuals and institutions, and through them raise awareness about the issue of child rights, and the use of the arts, particularly music to create this awareness.

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Nov 2009 08

blending-spectrum

Blending Spectrum – Health, Education and Peer Based Counseling

Launched in 2006, Blending Spectrum connects urban young people through a peer-to peer community interaction with street and slum children, with the aim of increasing sensitivity between street and slum children and the urban youth. Blending Spectrum provides healthcare and non-formal education (including Life Skills Based Education), facilitating the potential of children with limited access to opportunities.

The project works in two locations at the Nizamuddin Basti and at the Sarai Hostel (with partner Aman Biradiri) in South and North Delhi respectively. Bending Spectrum currently supports over 160 children and works with 30 volunteers. In the past year, we have incorporated 60 children into mainstream education by equipping them with basic knowledge of math and English. Blending Spectrum is supported by the Global Fund for Children.

project-19

Project 19: Know Your Body, Know Your Rights

Project 19 trains young people to become Peer Facilitators on the issue of HIV/AIDS, Sexuality, Health and Rights. Peer Facilitators develop independent research case studies, produce their own short films and literature and conduct yearlong awareness campaigns that include hosting public discussions and workshops with young people.

The project has reached out to over 1,500 young people through its workshops and has also expanded nationally, to host The Project 19 Annual Festival, that brings together over 600 at risk and marginalized group and urban youth together in Delhi from 12 states in India to lobby and articulate their collective rights to their sexual reproductive rights and health. Project 19 has been supported by NACO, UNDP, UNAIDS, UNICEF, The Ford Foundation, The Packard Foundation and TARSHI and worked in partnership with companies like Punj Lloyd and Moser Baer.

RTI

What Does Your Vote Want? Young People, Citizenship and Governance

The Right to Information Branch develops young people’s engagement with legislative research, increased awareness on laws in India and their application to our daily lives. What Does Your Vote Want?’ is a non political, non partisan project both initiated and run by young people in 2008 that aims at sensitizing young voters, by giving them relevant and necessary information regarding the Indian Electoral System. Last year, the project successfully registered more than 4000 people in Delhi and Raipur, Chhattisgarh.

The natural question, post Elections 2009 was, what next? How do we make young people active in governance processes? The project is training a group of young peer educators on using The RTI Act in India, further conducting college workshops, panel discussions, meet your leader accountability sessions and other methods of community advocacy.

The campaign has partnered with Channel V, Live Mint and Radio Mirchi. In partnership with Sony, The YP Foundation released ‘Say Something’ featuring renowned international artists such as John Mayer, The Fray, Michael Jackson, Pink etc in May 2009, a music album that promotes the What Does Your Vote Want campaign across India.

voices

V.O.I.C.E.S – The School Project – Addressing Life Skills and Mental Health

V.O.I.C.E.S – The School Project is a peer education project that aims at developing stronger life skills and informed decision making with school going adolescents, addressing mental health issues that continue to grow in importance in urban schools. VOICES conducts a yearlong module, training 20 University Peer Educators on a range of issues including depression, bullying, substance abuse and eating disorders linked to peer pressure, stereotyping and the influence of appearances on adolescents.

V.O.I.C.E.S provides a safe, non-judgmental space for adolescences to express and formulate their attitudes on issues relevant to them. A recommendations report is provided to each school at the end of the process, to suggest further, self-sustaining steps the school can engage in, to continue an open dialogue. V.O.I.C.E.S engages 20 volunteers and has worked with The Shri Ram School, Sanskriti School, DPS RK Puram, Bluebells International School and Vasant Valley School amongst others. DELL and Milkfood have supported the project.

butterfly-project

The Butterfly Project – Supporting Film & Literature

The Butterfly Project runs:

  • The Bridge, an independent magazine series run by young people, on issues that they are personally committed to. The Bridge is edited, designed, produced and funded by young people. 6 editions have been released since 2004.
  • The Film Series, an annual film festival that encourages amateur and professional filmmakers to share short films on social issues. Last year, over 500 people attended the film festival over 2 days where 12 movies were screened from all over the country.
  • Digital Storytelling: We with the Global Fund for Children and the Center for Digital Media and Storytelling to train young people to create their own digital media stories.

The Butterfly Project works with a team of 20 volunteers and has been supported by the Global Fund for Children, IDEA, The Idea Works, Punj Lloyd and the Nishit Saran Foundation.

silhouette

Silhouette – Enabling the Arts

Silhouette creates stronger platforms to showcase young artistes and develops resources to exchange information and raise awareness on music education and theatre. Silhouette works under two initiatives:

  • The Open House Series: An innovative conversation space designed for young people to explore the many faces of the arts. Silhouette conducts workshops and forums created to question, reinvent, challenge and reveal perspectives in music and theatre.
  • Impromptu: A performance showcase that focuses on giving artistes working with theatre and music in Delhi a space to showcase their work, making their idea, process and ‘product’ accessible to new audiences.

Since 2005, Silhouette has supported establishing young people’s initiatives in the arts, from Wide Aisle Productions, a theatre production group to acclaimed music group Artistes Unlimited. Silhouette curated The 15 Minute Fringe Festival in December 2006 for Kri Foundation and Kat Katha and partners extensively with The American Centre. Platform Magazine, News X, Traffic Life Magazine, Punj Lloyd and Hit 95 FM have supported Silhouette.