HelpAge India

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  • C-14 Qutab Institutional Area, New Delhi-110016, India
Area served
IndiaWebsitewww.helpageindia.org

HelpAge India is an Indian organization focused on the concerns of elders and support geriatric initiatives. Established in 1978,[1] The aim is to serve disadvantaged elders in a holistic manner, enabling them to live active, dignified, and healthier lives.[2][3]

History

HelpAge India began in the late 1960s when the speaker of the Lok Sabha visited his counterpart in the House of Commons of the United Kingdom, who was also honorary secretary of Help the Aged. He came back with a vision of setting up something similar in India.

In March 1974, when Jackson Cole, founder of HelpAge International visited India, Samson Daniel, a philanthropist, approached him for financial help to set up a member organization in Delhi. Cole instead offered to train him to raise funds. After a three-month training course in London, Daniel and his wife returned to India and organized a sponsored walk with schoolchildren in Delhi. It was so successful that in 1975 HelpAge International recruited more staff to cover Bombay, Madras, and Calcutta.

HelpAge India is one of the founding members of HelpAge International,[4] a high-profile body having 97 member countries representing the cause of the elderly at the United Nations. It is closely associated with Help the Aged, UK[5] and has received a special testimonial from the United Nations for "Dedicated service in support of the United Nations Programme on Ageing".[6] HelpAge India is also a full member of the International Federation on Ageing.[7]

In April 1978, HelpAge India was registered in Delhi. Within three months it became autonomous as financial support ceased from the UK. Soon after, in July, the society was awarded Certificates of Exemption under Sections 12A and 80G of the Income Tax Act, 1961.[8]

In the year 2020, HelpAge India received the UN Population Award for the care of elderly disadvantaged persons and senior citizens, a first for an NGO institution in India, in recognition of its work on population issues and efforts in the realization of rights of older persons in India since its inception.[9][10] The award was presented to mark Human Rights Day, at a virtual event held at UN headquarters in New York.[10] JRD Tata was the last Indian individual laureate to be conferred with this award about 28 years ago in the year 1992.[9]

The award highlights the issue of aging with India being a place for an estimated 140 million elderly and with 42 years of field work with a presence in 125 districts across 25 states.[10]

Programs