Anwar Khan
Founder & President, OBAT Helpers
Dear Friends,
As I take a moment to reflect at the past 17 years, I am filled with overwhelming joy and pride. It has been an incredible journey and I am so grateful to be a part of it.This rewarding journey began when I read an article about the plight of the forgotten Urdu speaking community living in slum like camps in Bangladesh. It left a deep and lasting impact on me. With the support of family and close friends, I collected $1,700 and made plans to go and visit the camps to adopt a needy family.
Once there, I was shocked by the magnitude of suffering I witnessed. I realized that picking one needy family from among thousands of destitute people living in deplorable circumstances was not going to be an easy task.
As I was walking in the filthy, overcrowded camp alleys, I saw a group of children blocking one of the alleys. When I asked them the reason for not letting me through, I was told that it was the women’s turn to bathe by the water pumps in the alley. By blocking the alley, the children were creating a barrier to give them the privacy they needed. At that moment, I knew that I would use the $1,700 to build private bathrooms for the women. While visiting another camp, I was approached by an elderly lady, who took my hand and silently led me to where she lived. Her tiny, dilapidated home was on the edge of a river of raw, exposed, sewage. She told me about a six year old boy who had died just the week before, slipping into the sewage line and dying before anybody could see and save him. Before letting me go, she made me promise that I would help and wouldn’t let go until I did. After coming home to Indianapolis, I told my family and friends the story of my life changing trip. And as my friends told their friends this story, I had, by then, collected $20,000 in donations. That’s when OBAT was born. Our resolve was and is to bring hope to the forgotten camp residents, to provide them with the opportunities they need to empower themselves and to live a normal life, free of poverty and full of dignity.
The camp residents are like my extended family and even though the trials they face are endured by them and them alone, I experience their suffering and pain vicariously. I am proud of the several educational, health and self empowerment projects that OBAT has created in these 17 years for them. But, we are not stopping here. The need in the camps is immense and we still have a lot to do. In the coming years, we hope to achieve a lot more with your support. In 2017, we started serving the Rohingya refugees seeking shelter in Bangladesh, as well. Our Rohingya relief efforts focus on disaster preparedness, emergency disaster response, and community rehabilitation.
I want to extend my deepest gratitude to our hard working volunteers, employees, partners, and most of all our wonderful supporters, without whom all this could not have been possible. I hope that you will continue to walk alongside OBAT as it makes further strides towards its mission.
If you have any thoughts and ideas about how we can work better and smarter to serve the beneficiaries of our projects, I would love to know about them. You can share them with me at: anwarkhan@obathelpers.org.
I wish you all peace, health and love.
#president’smessage
Anwar Khan
Founder & President, OBAT Helpers
PILOT SURVEY PROJECT REPORT
Gain an insight into the lives of the camp population →
THE URDU SPEAKING COMMUNITY
The Urdu speaking community housed in the decrepit camps, have no access to clean water and live on less than a dollar a day. Their entire families live in tiny 8 ft. by 10 ft. tin and bamboo huts; the children don’t go to school so that they can help their parents make a living; they suffer from myriad health issues, including malnutrition; and the living conditions are unsanitary and shameful.
OBAT has established schools, health clinics, tutoring, computer training and vocational centers along with a self-empowerment program. Provision of basic amenities for the camp residents through infrastructure development, is a priority. Education and economic empowerment are the areas of focus as together, they have the potential to lift the camp dwellers out of dire poverty and hopelessness.
Through a judicious and strategic mix of aid, education, vocational training and self-empowerment initiatives, OBAT aims to improve the lives of these unfortunate people and to replace their misery with happiness, hope and self-worth.
WHERE WE WORK
Since October of 2017, OBAT also started responding to the critical situation that came about after an influx of Rohingya refugees who were escaping persecution and genocide in Myanmar, into Bangladesh.
The proximity of OBAT’s projects to the Kutupalong Rohingya refugees camp and the organization’s experience in addressing the needs of displaced people, placed it in a unique position to help. OBAT started several initiatives for them beginning with providing emergency relief items, cooked food and fulfilling the severe medical needs by holding medical camps. With time, OBAT started partnering with the UNHCR and several other local NGOS’s. At present, it is running a fully functional medical clinic (the clinic is staffed by volunteer doctors and treats about 150 patients in a day), and 10 learning centers. OBAT has also built shelters and bridges as well as community centers for the refugees.