Gender Should Not Decide Who Gets to Live with Dignity

At Amma Nanna Anada Ashramam, we witness it far too often — stories that begin in abandonment but find their turning point in compassion. One such story began in the early morning hours when someone left a mentally challenged girl near the gates of our Ashram. She couldn’t speak. She couldn’t understand why she was left alone. Her only crime — she was born a girl, with a disability, in a world where both are often treated as burdens. Her story is not rare. Across India, gender inequality still thrives silently — in villages, cities, and even in so-called modern homes. A girl is not just denied education; she is denied the right to be born, to be loved, to be cared for, to live with dignity. At Amma Nanna, we don’t ask their gender, caste, or condition. We ask only one thing: “Do they need love, food, and a safe place to live?” The answer is always yes. Because being human is enough for us to care. We have taken in dozens of abandoned girls — some mentally challenged, some orphaned, some left in temples, roadsides, hospitals. These souls don’t need our pity — they need respect, affection, and a chance to smile again. Also Read: The Power of Local Communities in Healing the Helpless Through our daily efforts — from providing 600+ meals a day, to building the Sri Punyalingeswara Swamy Temple in their honor — we are fighting not just poverty, but the cruel judgments of a society that weighs life’s value by gender. Dignity is not a privilege. It is a right. And gender should never take it away. If you believe in a world where every soul — boy or girl, able or disabled — deserves love and respect, stand with us. 👉 Donate 👉 Volunteer 👉 Share their stories 👉 Help us build a world where no girl is ever made to feel unwanted again Because at Amma Nanna Anada Ashramam, we don’t rescue the forgotten — we love them like family.