annual report

2017–18 American India Foundation | www.AIF.org www.AIF.org 1 2 contents

From Our Leadership...... 5

AIF Programs:

Ability Based Livelihood Empowerment (ABLE)...... 6

William J. Clinton Fellowship for Service in India...... 8

Digital Equalizer...... 10

Learning and Migration Program (LAMP)...... 12

Market Aligned Skills Training (MAST)...... 14

Maternal and Newborn Survival Initiative (MANSI)...... 16

Rickshaw Sangh...... 18

Our Coverage...... 21

Partnerships...... 23

Outreach and Engagement...... 24

Financials - U.S...... 26

Financials - INDIA...... 28

People...... 30

Supporters...... 37

Photographs featured in this Report...... 45

3 4 from our leadership

Dear Friends,

India’s most precious resource is its people and the major challenge is how to ensure that all Indians have access to the necessities of life such as education, health and dignified livelihoods. India’s demographic dividend is wasted when a child is not able to learn in school, when a mother loses her child due to lack of adequate health facilities, and when young people don’t have the skills needed for meaningful work. It doesn’t have to be this way.

The American India Foundation (AIF) is working with a range of partners, including various governments in India, to build human capital so people living in poverty have the opportunity to realize their true potential. We address this by building innovative systems that empower communities and leverage cross-sector partnerships and by building bridges to connect people, cultures, and ideas between the world’s two largest democracies – India and the United States.

Focused on women, children and youth and leveraging technology, during the last 18 years, AIF has contributed to impact the lives of more than 4.6 million of India’s poor through innovative programs in education, public health and livelihoods. The results indicate that there are good returns on our investments.

The public health program, Maternal and Newborn Survival Initiative (MANSI), has helped to reduce newborn mortality by 46% and child mortality by 44% in the geographies it operates.

The Learning and Migration Program (LAMP), one of our education interventions, created learning improvement by nearly 3 times in math, science and language and improved the high school transition rate by 93%.

The livelihood programs have provided employability skills to more than 134,000 unemployed people including 14,000 people with disabilities that are often left behind.

The William J Clinton Fellowship for Service in India has empowered around 450 young Americans and Indians through an opportunity to serve organizations working to bring about lasting social change through replicable, scalable and sustainable projects.

Working across the verticals of public health, education and livelihoods, AIF’s programs have holistically enriched the lives of those we serve and strengthened and uplifted communities and eco-systems. All AIF programs and activities contribute directly to the UN Sustainable Development Goals or SDGs, which are a universal call to action to end poverty, protect the planet and ensure that all people enjoy peace and prosperity.

As we look back at the past year, we are grateful to you, our supporters, who have made so much possible for the people we serve. Our people and our Board colleagues are passionate advocates for putting our shoulder to the wheel to enable all Indians, regardless of their circumstances, to have the best possible access to jobs and quality of life. We look forward to a future where India is defined by harnessing its immense resources and opportunities and not by its limitations.

Lata Krishnan Nishant Pandey Mathew Joseph Co-Chair Co-Chair CEO Country Director

5 ABILITY BASED LIVELIHOOD EMPOWERMENT (ABLE)

6 Gokul’s dream has come true and so has ours, thanks to his job. Before, people ignored him, almost like he didn’t exist. Today, he is respected,” says Bharathi Prasath, Gokul’s mother with great pride.

J. Gokul Prasath has a disability navigating his way through the bustling city which prevents him from being able to confidently. He is financially independent and comprehend, learn and problem-solve. In contributes to his family. India, disability is met with dismissiveness, avoidance, fear, and stigma especially in “He loves his job and feels he is contributing employment. People with disabilities find to society. At Diwali, he spent his first salary it difficult to get employment and care for of `3500 on celebrations with us,” says themselves and their families. Of those who Gokul’s mother. do find work, an overwhelming 98.5% work in the informal economy, lacking access to At work, he efficiently packs and arranges critical social and financial services. products and cleans the store. The skills training he received at the ABLE program, 8,534 Gokul’s family income was a meagre `12,000 have enhanced his personality and improved jobs for persons with disabilities a month. Despite this, when Gokul was his inter-personal skills, enabling him to created five years old, his parents enrolled him in a communicate well with customers and store special school hostel, where he showed an colleagues. affinity and keenness for sports. Soon, he began to excel in sports, worked hard, and Radhalakshmi Ganesan, Gokul’s manager at won many prizes. His parents were convinced Gold Super Market is pleased with Gokul’s that Gokul could do better by developing performance and says he is a good worker. other skills, if he received the right guidance and training. In keeping with the UN Sustainable 14,276 Development Goals (SDGs), through its ABLE persons with Gokul enrolled in AIF’s Ability Based program, AIF promotes and advocates full disabilities trained in Livelihood Empowerment (ABLE) program, and equal participation of Persons with workplace which trains persons with disabilities and Disabilities (PwDs). The program offers an readiness and facilitates their entry into the job market inclusive environment for empowerment, industry skills through advocacy, thus promoting inclusive skill development training and employment growth in India. At the Anbalaya Special opportunities for sustainable livelihoods (SDG School for the Intellectually Challenged, Gokul 8). And, through disability inclusion, AIF has cleared his class 10 exams, learned to make been accelerating reduction in inequalities paper cups and tried his hand at catering. (SDG 10).

With newly acquired skills, Gokul has emerged as a confident young man. He works as a store assistant at the Gold Super Market in Chennai, travelling to work on his own,

7 clinton fellowship

8 This experience helped me prove to myself something I knew all along: I am strong and resilient. I can face challenges on my own. I am more than capable of transforming discomforts into growth opportunities.” — Crystal L Williams

Crystal is one of the 30 fellows in the AIF admires Crystal’s courage, perseverance 2017-18 cohort under AIF’s William J. Clinton and humility in addressing her personal and Fellowship for Service in India. She believed professional challenges during her Fellowship. that her life’s mission was to inspire people It applauds her success in making a positive to use their gifts to create a positive impact impact on her host organization. Utilizing her in the world. Working in a non-profit and skills and experience, Crystal added value to government program, she utilized her skills to the Video Volunteers team. She developed 23 promote individual and community change. a ‘one stop shop’ employee handbook, a states strategic fund-raising plan, training manuals The Fellowship helps shape the next and a Goals, Objectives, Strategies, Tactics generation of leaders committed to impactful (GOST) framework. She developed grant change. It pairs a select number of highly proposals of which almost half were funded. skilled young professionals with leading NGOs and social enterprises in India, to accelerate AIF’s Fellowship program is aligned with UN impact and create effective projects that are Sustainable Development Goals, as it provides 202 replicable, scalable, and sustainable. a framework for collaboration to talented partners building young professionals from America and capacity to achieve their missions During her ten months at Video Volunteers India to work with select non-governmental in education, (VV) in Goa, Crystal developed solutions to organizations (NGOs) in India for a period of livelihoods, public strengthen human resource practices, and ten months. health, and beyond supported fundraising and strategic planning for an education-based project. “I had to prove The program has been a strong model for something to myself and this Fellowship would Partnerships for the Goals of SDG 17 as it serve as my litmus test,” shares Crystal. The builds next generation of leaders committed high point for her involvement was helping to lasting change for underprivileged marginalized people, which was closely communities across India, while strengthening aligned with her personal story and journey. the civil society sector with replicable and 452 scalable solutions in the field of education, fellows in service During her journey, Crystal experienced an livelihoods and public health. with NGO’s and unexpected personal tragedy, when she lost social enterprises across india her father. “I did not know how to handle this, but I remembered why I was here and how proud my Dad was that I was taking this journey for myself,” she says.

9 DIGITAL EQUALIZER

10 Computers make learning easy. Before, I couldn’t understand diagrams which were explained theoretically. Now, with Digital Equalizer, Science is fun,” says Srinivas.

Srinivas is a grade 7 student of Zilla Besides quality education, Digital Equalizer Parishad High (ZPH) Government School in focuses on the overall growth of students as Karimnagar district, Telangana. Like many individuals. It empowers them to be more government schools, ZPH struggled with lack self-reliant, boosts their confidence and 2,846,177 of finances, teachers and trainers, and poor helps them develop career goals and address children empowered student attendance and retention rates. crucial topics like hygiene and sanitation. with interactive stem learning Enter AIF’s Digital Equalizer program, Srinivas’ sister, Anjali appreciates his well- experiences which uses digital technology to bridge the rounded behaviour as a student, a teenager, educational and digital divide in India. It and a brother. “He is good at his studies and transforms under-resourced schools into helpful at home. He fetches water from a dynamic places to teach and learn through nearby canal, buys vegetables, and cooks basic collaborative, project-based learning. foods such as omelettes, rice etc,” she says.

The program equipped Srinivas’ school with Srinivas’ parents couldn’t afford to educate a computer lab, edu-kits, flipped classroom their older children but want Srinivas to 15 and digital content for Science, Mathematics, complete his education. “I want to become an states Social Studies, English, IT literacy and engineer. My financial literacy classes will help Financial literacy. The school and students me to save money and construct a house for experience subjects through the digital lens. my family,” says a confident Srinivas. This has improved their comprehension and made learning an engaging and fun AIF’s Digital Equalizer program empowers interaction. students like Srinivas to take small steps towards their dreams. It bridges the digital 12,473 The students have access to quality education divide in government schools in India to schools transformed and a robust learning environment, usually ensure that quality education is accessible through innovative teaching and available only in private schools. Digital to them. learning practices Equalizer has resulted in improved learning outcomes and better retention rates amongst In keeping with the UN Sustainable students of ZPH school. Teachers acknowledge Development Goals (SDGs), the focus the positive impact of the integration of on quality education (SDG 4), the Digital technology as a pedagogical tool. Equalizer program lays the foundation of sustainable development by preparing A. Venkateshwarlu has taught Science for students to be self-reliant. It boosts economic 131,930 eight years. “The Experi-fun Science Learning growth by enhancing their skills for better teachers trained kits have enhanced the comprehension livelihood opportunities and promotes in stem and abilities of students. They understand the gender equality (SDG 5). technology-focused more complex concepts and topics, because pedagogy of the hands-on experience,” he says.

11 LEARNING AND MIGRATION PROGRAM (LAMP)

12 I enjoy being at the Hostel. I have made new friends and am learning new things. I want to become a doctor when I grow up,” says Preeti.

Preeti’s parents are sugarcane cutters Through LAMP, Preeti and other children from Zaran village in Dang, Gujarat, and like her have been able to boost learning trapped in a cycle of poverty. For her and her outcomes dramatically. They have more three sisters, a good education was impossible confidence, a greater sense of awareness 468,502 and the risk of being trafficked and forced into about their future education and career children impacted by child labor, very real. aspirations and are empowered to break quality education traditional gender roles. opportunities Every year at the end of monsoon season, the family migrated to Bagumara, 120 kilometers At the LAMP Seasonal Hostel, Preeti explored from their home, where sugarcane was her talent in sports and music and became a abundant. Cutting sugarcane is seasonal and talented archer. “Preeti sings well and mingles hard work, with insufficient return. The money with other children. Last year she cried and Preeti’s family made barely put food on the refused to stay back in the Hostel, but this year table and had to stretch for the entire year. she is adapting well,” says Mangalbhai, Preeti’s warden. 12 Preeti’s mother, Sita, wanted a different and states better future for her four daughters. “I didn’t Through LAMP, the Seasonal Hostels and want them to have my kind of life. I couldn’t Learning Resource Centers (LRCs), several UN study as I had to support my family. I want my Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) are daughters to study.” covered. For example, covering children at risk of migration and promoting their good Fortunately, AIF’s Learning and Migration health and well-being (SDG 3); empowering Program (LAMP) was the opportunity Sita communities to take ownership for their 41,990 was looking for. It offered a Seasonal Hostel children’s quality education (SDG 4), and community for children with caretakers and facilities to gender equality, especially girls (SDG 5) by members trained meet their needs while their parents migrated. promoting their increased participation Children in the program stayed in their through enrollment drives, trainings for School villages and benefitted from a familiar and Management Committee members and positive environment, without a break in their creating volunteer groups in villages. education.

It was difficult for Sita to leave her daughters 1,873 at the Seasonal Hostel. However, she knew villages impacted Preeti and her sisters would be safe and taken by migration care of, have access to quality education, resources and activities and be empowered with skills they needed to thrive.

13 MARKET ALIGNED SKILLS TRAINING (MAST)

14 My mother gave me confidence that I could do something in life. Right now, after sending `4000 home and paying off my monthly expenses of `5000, I manage to save `2000 every month,” shares an ecstatic Shukoor.

But this was not always so. Mohammad of the training, qualified candidates are placed Abdul Shukoor’s father passed into entry-level jobs, thus creating a path to away in 2012 and he and he, his mother financial independence. MAST curricula aligns and sister were dependent on his uncles with the framework of the National Skills for financial support. This lasted for a year Development Corporation (NSDC). 89,804 and despite his degrees in Commerce and jobs created Computers, Shukoor lacked appropriate skills After completing his three-month vocational across retail, IT, for the job market. training in retail, Shukoor was placed through Hospitality, electrical, the MAST program at a Lifestyle store, automative and other He took on jobs with low salaries and kept Inorbit Mall. industries switching to earn a little extra to support the family. He worked as a salesman earning Mr. Ratan Roy, Store HR Business Partner, says `5000 a month for a year, and then worked as “In the beginning he found it difficult, but he is a data collector at a Veterinary Hospital for six hardworking and willing to learn new things. months. We hope that Shukoor will have a long career with us.” His search for a better paying job brought 119,739 him from Nizamabad to Hyderabad, where Through the MAST program, AIF has disadvantaged young he heard about AIF’s Market Aligned Skills contributed to furthering the UN Sustainable people trained on Training (MAST) Program, which trained Development Goals (SDGs). This includes workplace readiness disadvantaged youth in skills needed for promoting increased participation of women and industry skills successful employment. in the workforce (SDG 5), creating inclusive and sustainable livelihoods (SDG 8), and reducing The MAST program begins with a labor market inequalities (SDG 10). scan in each region, working closely with employers to develop the market-aligned The MAST program empowers underprivileged training curricula that forms the heart of the youth with skills training and access to formal program’s skills training. employment opportunities. Additionally, job 202 creation and promoting an entrepreneurship centres The three-month training combines culture is crucial to achieving economic growth foundational, workforce readiness skills in India, which further accelerates the progress with industry-specific skills, ranging from towards the Sustainable Development Goals. retail, basic IT, healthcare to hospitality, creating multi-sector job opportunities for marginalized young people. Upon completion

15 MATERNAL AND NEWBORN SURVIVAL INITIATIVE (MANSI)

16 According to our local custom, a mother should eat only once in a day. But MANSI has helped me break this taboo. I now eat more meals and nutritious foods as explained by ASHA Didi,” says Dhanlakshmi Korra.

ASHA K. Kondamma performs the many roles empowering local communities to care for of a health activist, educator and a their mothers and children, while improving care provider. She is a ray of hope for the the local health systems. ASHA Killo trained mothers like Dhanlakshmi, who in Home-Based Maternal, Neonatal and Child live in the remote tribal area of Paderu in Care (HBMNC) under MANSI, acts as the link Andhra Pradesh. between the tribal community and the public health system. 65,165 ASHA is the Accredited Social Health newborns treated Activist scheme, implemented by the Indian Dhanlakshmi lived with her husband and government, under its National Rural Health mother-in-law in Rangaseela village of Paderu. Mission. Women are selected from villages, They survived on the meager income of `800- trained to work as an interface between the 1500 per week that Dhanlakshmi’s husband, community and the public health system, and K Mohan Rao earned by driving an auto. are accountable to the villagers. “My mother-in-law starved me. ASHA Most of the tribal population in Paderu Kondamma helped me understand that I live below the poverty line. There is poor must eat a balanced diet to ensure good 81,300 connectivity and infrastructure, poverty, and health for me and the baby. I wash my hands pregnant women illiteracy, as they struggle to meet the basic before feeding my baby to keep him safe from served requirements, including good healthcare for infections and diseases. I feed him at regular mothers and babies. intervals and vaccinate him. I will have only two children and ensure that they get the best The most affected are women and girls who of everything, especially health and education,” face socio-economic inequality in a highly says Dhanlakshmi. patriarchal system. They are restricted to their gender-based roles which keep them from In keeping with the UN Sustainable making choices in and outside their homes. Development Goals (SDGs) the MANSI 3,657 With the help of ASHA workers like Killo, AIF’s program stresses the significance of a asha (community Maternal and New-born Survival Initiative clean and hygienic environment (SDG 6), health workers) (MANSI) is saving lives of mothers and babies breaking taboo of gender roles (SDG 5). The trained in these rural and impoverished areas of India. communities have healthier behavior practices (SDG 3). such as eating a balanced and MANSI utilizes a public-private partnership nutritious diet. model to reduce maternal and child mortality by providing resources and support, thus

17 RICKSHAW SANGH

18 The rickshaw business helps me to support my family and pay my school fees,” says Pavel Kumar.

Eighteen-year-old Pavel is a busy young uniform. They mobilize drivers into collectives man. In the mornings he attends classes and link them to credit facilities in the formal at the R.M.P. Inter College in Sitapur, Uttar financial sector. Rickshaw collectives take joint Pradesh. In the afternoons he is transformed responsibility for a group of loans, guaranteed into a small businessman, selling saris from a by AIF, repaying them in weekly repayments, rickshaw in the neighboring villages of Sitapur. over a period of one year. And, most important, they own the rickshaws. Neelam Devi, Pavel’s mother is the brain behind the business idea. She buys the saris “Our lives have been transformed. I have never at wholesale prices from the nearby town of owned anything. Now I jointly own a rickshaw Biswan. “We sell saris in remote rural areas, with my son,” says Neelam Devi. where women do not have access to them,” 120,859 she says. Each sari sells for `250, which earns With joint ownership, the Rickshaw Sangh rikshaw drivers them a small profit, but is a huge support for provides women an equal chance to launch with asset the family. their own micro-enterprise. It has empowered ownership Neelam Devi to overcome gender-based roles Once the family depended on the daily wage that earlier defined and controlled her life. of Pavel’s father, Swaminath Kumar, who She enjoys her new identity of being a small works as a motor mechanic earning `300 a businesswoman. day. They could barely meet their basic needs, so education for the three sons was out of Rickshaw Sangh creates a sense of security question. and economic freedom among the joint 604,295 borrowers of the vehicle. After paying the total Swaminath and Neelam Devi felt helpless instalments on the loan, Pavel pays his and his beneficiaries in the face of high rates of illiteracy and brothers school fees. impacted unemployment in their area. Sitapur has an average literacy rate of 61%, way behind the “I own the rickshaw, have the freedom to focus national average of 74.04%. With a female on my studies, and earn with dignity,” says literacy at 50%, women were further subjected Pavel. to socio-economic inequality and gender bias. In the spirit of the UN Sustainable Swaminath and Neelam Devi learned about Development Goals (SDGs), through Rickshaw the AIF program of rickshaw collectives in their Sangh, AIF creates economic freedom community. The Rickshaw Sangh program and sustainable livelihoods (SDG 8, 10), secures an identity for individual rickshaw and ensures a dignified profession while drivers through key social benefits – an promoting gender equality (SDG 5). identity card, driver’s license, permit and a

19 *Key ABLE = Ability Based Livelihood Empowerment CFP = William J. Clinton Fellowship for Service in India DE = Digital Equalizer LAMP = Learning and Migration Program MAST = Market Aligned Skills Training MANSI = Maternal and Newborn Survival Initiative RS = Rickshaw Sangh

20 Our Coverage

1. DELHI ABLE / CFP / DE / MAST 2. UTTARAKHAND CFP / DE / MANSI / MAST 3. UTTAR PRADESH CFP / LAMP / RS 4. BIHAR CFP / LAMP / RS 5. ASSAM CFP / RS 6. WEST BENGAL ABLE / CFP / MAST / RS 7. JHARKHAND ABLE / CFP / MAST / MANSI 8. ODISHA 12 DE / LAMP / MANSI 9. MADHYA PRADESH LAMP 13 10. CHHATISGARH 14 LAMP 2 15 11. TAMIL NADU 1 ABLE / CFP / DE / MAST 3 12. JAMMU & KASHMIR 16 5 CFP / MAST 4 13. HIMACHAL PRADESH MAST 17 9 7 6 14. PUNJAB 10 DE / MAST 8 15. HARYANA 18 ABLE / DE / MAST 16. 21 RAJASTHAN CFP / DE / LAMP 17. GUJARAT 19 20 22 ABLE / CFP / DE / LAMP / MAST 18. MAHARASHTRA ABLE / CFP / DE / MAST 19. GOA 11 CFP 20. KARNATAKA ABLE / CFP / DE / MAST 21. TELANGANA ABLE / CFP / DE / MAST 22. ANDHRA PRADESH ABLE / MANSI

21 22 partnerships 2017-18

ABLE • Lokmitra (confirmed from Annual Report) • ACE Social Foundation • Nidan (confirmed from the website) • Cheshire Homes India- • Organisation for Early Literacy Promotion • Leonard Cheshire Project Nagapattinam • Prayas (Organisation for Sustainable Development) • Livelihood Resource Centre– Cheshire Homes India (Bangalore) • Samerth Charitable Trust • National Association for the Blind (India) • Shikshan ane Samaj Kalyan Kendra • NAB Centre for the Blind Women and Disability Studies • St. Xavier’s Nonformal Education Society • SNS Foundation • Swadeep Shikshan Vikas Sanstha • Trust for Retailers and Retail Associates of India (TRRAIN) • Swapath Trust • Youth 4 Jobs Foundation • Unnati- Organization for Development Education WILLIAM J. CLINTON FELLOWSHIP MARKET ALLIGNED SKILL FOR SERVICE IN INDIA TRAINING (MAST) • Avani (confirmed from the Annual Report) • Aide - et -Action South Asia (AEAI-SA) • Bempu Health (confirmed from the website) • Aman Public Charitable Trust (confirmed from • Bhasha Sanshodhan Praskashan Kendra the website) • Foundation for Social Transformation Enabling North East India • Anudip Foundation for Social Welfare (confirmed from • Fair Trade Forum- India the website) • IFMR Lead (confirmed from the website) • Association for Promoting Social Action (APSA) • Indus Action Initiatives (confirmed from the Annual Report) • Bhartiya Micro Credit (BMC) • Jaipur Rugs Foundation (confirmed from the website) • CAP Foundation (confirmed from the website) • Kattaikuttu Sangam (confirmed from the website) • iDaa Foundation • Keystone Foundation • I-Succeed • Lok Sahabhagi Sansthan (confirmed from the website) • Medha Learning Foundation • Medha Learning Foundation (confirmed from their financials) • Mount Valley Development Association (MVDA) • Naz Foundation India Trust • Rural Education and Action for Liberation (REAL) • Nizamuddin Urban Renewal Program- Aga Khan Trust • SAATH Charitable Trust for Culture • Social and Development Research and Action Group • North-East Affected Area, Development Society (NEADS) (SADRAG) • Project Potential (confirmed from the website) • SNS Foundation • Shaishav Child Rights Trust (confirmed from the website) • Sparsha Trust • Snow Leopard Conservancy India Trust (SLC-IT) • Udayan Care • Srijan Foundation (confirmed from the website) • Garware Institute of Career Education & Development, • Switch On (confirmed from the website) University of Mumbai • The Goat Trust (confirmed from the Pan card on their website) • Turn Your Action Into Concern Foundation (TYCIA) MATERNAL AND NEWBORN SURVIVAL • VAAGDHARA (confirmed from the Annual report) • Video Volunteers INITIAVE (MANSI) • Anchal Charitable Trust • Youth 4 Jobs Foundation • Gram Utthan Samiti • Government of Odisha Digital Equalizer • Government of Jharkhand • Government of Delhi • Government of Uttarakhand • Government of Gujarat • Integrated Tribal Development Agency, Paderu, • Government of Haryana Government of Andhra Pradesh • Government of Karnataka • Society for Education, Action and Research in • Government of Maharashtra Community Health (SEARCH) • Government of Odisha • Srujana Welfare Association, Andhra Pradesh • Government of Rajasthan • Tata Steel Rural Development Society • Government of Uttarakhand • Village Development Society • Government of Telangana • Government of Tamil Nadu RICKSHAW SANGH LEARNING AND MIGRATION • Bharatiya Micro Credit (BMC) • Centre for Rural Development (CRD) PROGRAM (LAMP) • Centre for Rural Entrepreneurship and Technical • Agha Khan Rural Support Program Education (CREATE) • Cohesion Foundation Trust • Jeevan Jyoti Kala Kendra (JJKK) • Lokadrusti • Sahara Utsarga Welfare Society (SUWS)

23 outreach and engagement United stateS new york chicago richmond

For its annual Gala, AIF’s New York Chapter brought together over 500 attendees to Pier 60 at Chelsea Piers to honor the Community Ashwini inspired supporters at AIF’s 12th Annual Dr. Bela Sood was honored at the Virginia Health Workers of MANSI and celebrate the Chicago Gala on November 4th, 2017 at the Chapter’s 4th Annual Gala on September 17th, accomplishments of Rohit Kapoor, Vice Chairman Field Museum. An ABLE beneficiary, Ashwini 2017, which raised over $60,000 and attracted & CEO of EXL Service Holdings Inc., and Krishna was born differently-abled - now she has her 80 guests. From left to right: Rupa Agnihotri, Veeraraghavan, Partner at Sullivan & Cromwell dream job at Dell, and owns her own home. Anupama Agarwal, Dr Bella Sood, Sunita Gupta, LLP, who received the Corporate Leadership The event attracted 400 guests, and honored Sanjay Mittal. Award and Emerging Leader Award respectively. Underwriters Laboratories, Inc., and Keith The event took place on June 21st, 2017, Williams, company President and CEO. It BAY AREA and raised $1.3M. From left to right: Krishna raised $850,000 to support AIF’s work in India. Veeraraghavan, Rohit Kapoor, Sahiya Mamta Clockwise from left: Mukta Purohit, Suma Mahato, Ajay Banga. Shastry, Ritu Jain, Ashwini Ramesh.

washington philadelphia

On March 24th, 2018, the Bay Area Chapter held its 17th Annual Gala at the Hilton Union Square in San Francisco, CA. The evening was attended by more than 500 guests and raised more than $1.3M. The Gala honored Vijay The Washington, D.C. Chapter closed out the AIF’s 2nd Annual Philadelphia Gala took place Goradia, Founder and Chairman of Vinmar calendar year with its Annual Gala on November on February 25, 2018 at the National International and Lynne Twist, Founder and 10th, 2017, which brought together over 180 Constitution Center. The Gala honored President of the Soul of Money Institute. guests at the Congressional Country Club in Chintu Patel and Chirag Patel, Co-Founders, From L to R: Nishant Pandey, Pradeep Kashyap, Bethesda, MD. Pradman Kaul, President and CEO Co-Chairmen, and Co-CEOs of Amneal Vijay Goradia, Lata Krishnan, Ash Lilani, of Hughes Network Systems, LLC. was honored. Pharmaceuticals. It raised over $190,000 and Vimal Bahuguna, Swati Narayan, and The Gala raised over $300,000 for the William highlighted AIF’s Maternal and Newborn Survival Diaz Nesamoney. J. Clinton Fellowship for Service in India. From Initiative (MANSI). From left to right: Senator left to right: Pradeep Kashyap, Pradman Kaul, Vin Gopal, Raj Gupta, Chintu Patel, Steven Ambassador to the United States Navtej Sarna, Collis, Chirag Patel, Consul General Sandeep orange county Mahinder Tak. Chakravorty, Kavita Gupta, Rani Emandi.

new england

Kevin Parikh, Global CEO and Senior Partner at Avasant, was honored at the Orange County Chapter’s 5th Annual Gala on March 17th, 2018 at the Paséa Resort in Huntington Beach, CA. More than 250 supporters attended the event, raising more than $500,000 to support The New England Chapter held its 12th Annual Gala on March 31, 2018 at the Renaissance Boston AIF programs. The gala was chaired by MS Waterfront Hotel. The event featured the theme ‘Connect: Connect with a Cause, Connect with International, Inc and Tarsadia Foundation. Ideas, Connect with the Community’. It attracted 400 guests and raised $850,000 to support From left to right: Shiv Grewal, Nita Parikh, AIF’s work in India. Tinnie Grewal, Kevin Parikh.

24 outreach and engagement outreach and engagement United stateS india

able clinton fellowship

AIF Clinton Fellow Priya Charry during the Gender, Livelihoods and Environmental Conference with Jagori Grameen in Dharamshala, Himachal Pradesh. LAMP

Walk to Freedom organized at India Gate in New Delhi on the occasion of World Disability Day by AIF, National Centre for Promotion of Employment for Disabled People (NCPEDP) and Oil and Natural Gas Corporation (ONGC). Digital equALIZER

Shri Bhupendrasinh Manubha Chudasama, Hon’ble Education Minister, Government of Gujarat, received a memorandum from SMC Federation members for recommending specific changes in RTE rules of Gujarat during 4th State Level SMC convention. mast

The Support My School “Mission Recycling Campaign” launched in Delhi on 14 December, 2017. The Phase 2, under AIF’s Digital Equalizer (DE) Program focuses on “Recycling” and will work with children and teachers of 5000 schools across 10 states. Mathew Joseph, Country Director, AIF, presented graduation certificates to students trained under mansi AIF’s MAST & ABLE programs at SNS Foundation in Gurgaon. rickshaw sangh

The Deputy Commissioner of Saraikela- Kharsawan district, Shri Chhavi Ranjan (IAS) felicitated Sahiya Sathis for their active participation in AIF’s MANSI program in Jharkhand. Nishant Pandey, CEO, AIF, launched 500 rickshaws at an event in Kolkata.

25 FINANCIALS United stateS

STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL POSITION STATEMENT OF ACTIVITIES as of March 31, 2018 for the year ending March 31, 2018 2018 2017 2018 2017 ASSETS SUPPORT & REVENUE Cash & Cash Equivalents 13,24,996 16,97,392 Contributions & Grants 24,63,600 16,23,343 Investments 45,85,304 43,21,889 Benefit Events Income (net) 53,40,960 43,33,020 Unconditional Promises to Give 18,90,431 4,32,418 Investment and Other Income 3,26,418 92,067 Prepaid and Other Assets 1,95,095 3,73,322 TOTAL SUPPORT & REVENUE 81,30,978 60,48,430 Property and Equipment (net) 18,577 39,298 UTILIZATION TOTAL ASSETS 80,14,403 68,64,319 Program Expenses

LIABILITIES & NET ASSETS Education 11,61,305 13,39,260 Grants Payable Livelihood 11,07,983 13,60,438 Accounts & Other Payable 10,18,350 4,63,128 Public Health 8,75,294 6,91,373 TOTAL LIABILITIES 10,18,350 4,63,128 Digital Equalizer 13,00,050 11,25,832

NET ASSETS Clinton Fellowship 9,43,307 8,82,520 Unrestricted 17,47,972 15,91,074 Education, Awareness & Engagement6,50,632 6,20,762 Temporarily Restricted 46,48,081 42,10,117 Program Services - Total 60,38,571 60,20,185 Permanently Restricted 6,00,000 6,00,000 Management and General 5,12,786 5,54,404 TOTAL NET ASSETS 69,96,053 64,01,191 Fundraising Expenses 9,84,759 10,02,531 TOTAL LIABILITIES & NET ASSETS 80,14,403 68,64,319 TOTAL EXPENSES 75,36,116 75,77,120 INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS 5,94,862 (15,28,690)

support & Revenue utilization

Investment & Management and Other Income General 3,26,418 5,12,786

Contributors Fundraising & Grants Expenses 24,63,600 9,84,759

Benefit Events Income Program Services (net) Total 53,40,960 60,38,571

The combined revenue for AIF in the US and AIF Trust (AIFT) in India was $ 10.9mm. The breakup between AIF and AIFT was as follows: AIF: $8.1mm AIFT: $2.8mm Total: $10.9mm

26 FINANCIALS United stateS

eighteen year revenue and Expenses

12000000

Income Expenses 10000000

8000000

6000000

4000000

2000000

0

2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017

SUPPORT & UTILIZATION TRENDS

Financial Year Income Expenses 2001 65,66,682 32,21,916 2002 49,06,374 33,93,706 2003 33,97,630 32,13,441 2004 56,53,276 54,03,197 2005 79,13,760 68,75,704 2006-2007 1,00,29,646 1,01,68,280 2007-2008 92,51,271 97,82,873 2008-2009 95,84,062 86,75,947 2009-2010 79,63,333 83,76,686 2010-2011 73,64,056 71,40,853 2011-2012 71,23,923 71,76,917 2012-2013 70,32,832 70,22,358 2013-2014 62,46,216 61,49,698 2014-2015 67,89,325 58,39,126 2015-2016 68,13,551 62,23,435 2016-2017 60,48,430 75,77,120 2017-2018 81,30,978 75,36,116 12,08,15,345 11,37,77,373

27 FINANCIALS INDIA

STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL POSITION APRIL 1, 2017 - MARCH 31, 2018

Amount in INR

PARTICULARS FY 2017-18 FY 2016-17 FCRA INDIAN TOTAL FCRA INDIAN TOTAL ASSETS Cash and Cash Equivalents 7,76,45,041 6,49,28,037 14,25,73,078 6,78,38,159 3,41,58,267 10,19,96,426 Investments - 1,28,85,000 1,28,85,000 - 5,79,85,000 5,79,85,000 Prepaid Expenses & Other Assets 45,23,756 68,33,965 1,13,57,721 67,87,756 76,17,713 1,44,05,469 Property & Equipments (net) 14,81,114 2,05,202 16,86,317 1,85,63,443 2,14,01,607 3,99,65,050

TOTAL ASSETS 8,36,49,911 8,48,52,204 16,85,02,116 9,31,89,358 12,11,62,587 21,43,51,945

LIABILITIES AND NET ASSETS Accounts Payable & Accrued Expenses 14,41,493 14,79,481 29,20,974 8,43,744 1,10,000 9,53,744 Other Payables 84,16,062 80,44,238 1,64,60,300 51,35,027 6,77,672 58,12,699

Total Liabilities 98,57,555 95,23,719 1,93,81,274 59,78,771 7,87,672 67,66,443

NET ASSETS Unrestricted Funds 2,14,59,255 2,14,59,255 2,65,95,865 2,65,95,865 Temporarily Restricted 7,37,92,356 5,38,68,230 12,76,60,586 8,72,10,587 9,37,78,050 18,09,88,637 Permanently Restricted 1,000 1,000 1,000 1,000

TOTAL NET ASSETS 7,37,92,356 7,53,28,485 14,91,20,842 8,72,10,587 12,03,74,915 20,75,85,502

TOTAL LIABILITES AND NET ASSETS 8,36,49,911 8,48,52,204 16,85,02,116 9,31,89,358 12,11,62,587 21,43,51,945

statement of financial position

Total Liabilities Total Assets 1,93,81,274 16,85,02,116

Total Net Assets 14,91,20,842

28 FINANCIALS INDIA

STATEMENT OF activities APRIL 1, 2017 - MARCH 31, 2018

Amount in INR

PARTICULARS FY 2017-18 FY 2016-17 FCRA INDIAN TOTAL FCRA INDIAN TOTAL SUPPORT & REVENUE Contribution and Grants 26,98,74,050 8,67,98,568 35,66,72,617 28,61,76,976 8,62,95,299 37,24,72,275 Benefit Events Income (net) Investment and Other Income 41,86,942 61,55,060 1,03,42,001 66,52,725 34,86,661 1,01,39,386

TOTAL SUPPORT & REVENUE 27,40,60,991 9,29,53,628 36,70,14,619 29,28,29,701 8,97,81,960 38,26,11,661

PROGRAM EXPENSES 1. Education 4,85,72,780 33,98,001 5,19,70,781 5,38,16,864 31,07,805 5,69,24,669 2. Livelihood 5,05,07,484 3,17,66,569 8,22,74,053 6,70,52,139 93,70,159 7,64,22,298 3. Public Health 3,78,81,054 3,15,506 3,81,96,560 2,64,57,233 2,64,57,233 10033598 4. Digital Equalizer 7,29,88,071 6,41,41,871 13,71,29,942 9,19,21,997 3,65,53,748 12,84,75,745 5. Clinton Fellowship 1,54,61,451 7,75,974 1,62,37,425 1,19,27,333 25,98,924 1,45,26,257 6. Communication, Awareness 1,36,15,700 24,28,389 1,60,44,089 77,12,377 77,12,377 & Engagement

TOTAL PROGRAM EXPENSES 23,90,26,540 10,28,26,310 34,18,52,850 25,88,87,942 5,16,30,636 31,05,18,578

Management and General 3,46,65,405 59,18,313 4,05,83,718 2,56,26,153 97,987 2,57,24,140 Fundraising Expenses 32,86,286 13,89,707 46,75,993 44,69,170 - 44,69,170

TOTAL EXPENSES 27,69,78,231 11,01,34,330 38,71,12,561 28,89,83,265 5,17,28,623 34,07,11,888

5 YEAR REVENUE & UTILIZATION OF FUNDS SUPPORT & UTILIZATION TRENDS

45,00,00,000 Income FINANCIAL YEAR INCOME EXPENSES 40,00,00,000 Expenses 2017-2018 36,70,14,619 38,71,12,561 35,00,00,000 2016-2017 38,26,11,661 34,07,11,888 30,00,00,000 2015-2016 30,86,21,313 27,18,85,759 25,00,00,000 2014-2015 21,57,39,769 17,55,94,576 20,00,00,000 2013-2014 16,25,81,080 14,93,03,270 15,00,00,000 1,43,65,68,442 1,32,46,08,054 10,00,00,000 5,00,00,000

2017-18 2016-17 2015-16 2014-15 2013-14

29 PEOPLE

Jay Tambe BOARD OF DIRECTORS, Partner, Jones Day FY April 1, 2017-March 31, 2018 Victor Menezes Ajay Banga, Co-Chair Retired Senior Vice Chairman, Citigroup Chairman Emeritus President & Chief Executive Officer, Master Card American India Foundation

Lata Krishnan, Co-Chair Chief Financial Officer, Shah Capital Partners COUNCIL OF TRUSTEES*

Pradeep Kashyap, (Vice Chair through November 2017) Honorable William J. Clinton (Honorary Chair) 42nd President of the United States of America Venkat Srinivasan, Vice Chair Founder & CEO, Rage Frameworks Arjun Aggarwal Managing Director, Healthscape Advisors Alex Counts Anuradha Aggarwal President & CEO, American India Foundation through October 23, 2017 Ravi Akhoury Akhoury Foundation Vimal Bahuguna Ginny Akhoury President, Drona Group, LLC Rani Bahadur Ashish Dhawan (Board member as of January 16, 2018) Michigan-based Philanthropist Founder and Chairman, Central Square Foundation B N Bahadur and Ashoka University Vimal Bahuguna Rohit Kapoor (Board Member as of Jan 16, 2018) President, Drona Group LLC Vice Chairman and CEO, EXL Bulbul Bahuguna Ash Lilani Managing Partner & Co-Founder, Saama Capital Raj Bhatia Managing Director—Wealth Management, Kumar Malavalli (Board member through December 2017) The Bhatia Group, Merrill Lynch Private Banking Co-founder, Chairman & Chief Strategy Officer, and Investment Group Glassbeam Inc. Seema Bhatia

Swati Narayan (August 15, 2017 to May 22, 2018) Satjiv Chahil Past President, EkDisha Foundation Innovation Advisor to President Sony Electronics, Ltd

Diaz Nesamoney Navneet S. Chugh President & CEO, Jivox Corporation Attorney, C.P.A. The Chugh Firm Ritu Chugh Nishant Pandey, CEO, American India Foundation as of October 24, 2017 William Comfort Managing Partner, Court Square Capital Partners Arvind Raghunathan, (Board member through Nathalie Comfort December 2017) Founder, Chief Executive Officer and Chief Investment Tushar Dave Officer of Roc Capital CEO & Co-Founder, Enlighted, Inc. Reshma Dave Anjali Sharma Chairperson, Philanthropic Engagement, Vinod Dham American India Foundation Founder and Executive Managing Director, IndoUS Venture Partners Raj Sharma Sadhana Dham Managing Director and Private Wealth Advisor, Head of Sharma Group at Merrill Lynch Private Banking Jasvir Gill and Investment Group CEO, Alert Enterprise, Inc. Kaval Kaur Michael Steinberg CFO, Start Up Farms, Inc. Managing Partner, Steinberg Asset Management Anil Godhwani Harit Talwar, (Vice Chair as of November 2017) Co-Founder, Green Era Capital Managing Director, Goldman Sachs Mrs. Jyoti Godhwani

30 PEOPLE

Vijay Goradia Bharat Desai Chairman & CEO, Vinmar International Co-Founder and Chairman, Syntel Inc Marie Goradia Ajay Shah Tinnie Grewal Managing Partner, SilverlakeSumeru Lata Krishnan Vinod Khosla Chief Financial Officer, Shah Capital Partners Founder, Khosla Ventures Neeru Khosla Rupesh Shah Santhana Krishnan President, MS International, Inc. Founder, Asian Art Gallery & Managing Partner, Mona Shah, JD, MPH Om Ventures Health Policy Consultant and Former Staff Director, Namita Krishnan US Senate Subcommittee on Children and Families Engineering Manager, Red Hat Inc. Dave Sharma Kumar Malavalli Chairman, TTA Group of Companies Co-Founder, Chairman, & Chief Strategy Officer, Glassbeam Raj Sharma Vijaya Malavalli Managing Director and Private Wealth Advisor Victor J. Menezes Head of Sharma Group at Merrill Lynch Private Banking Retired Senior Vice Chairman, Citigroup and Investment Group Chairman Emeritus, American India Foundation Nalini Sharma Tara Menezes Vivek Sharma Tania Mirchandani CEO, Piramal Critical Care Vice President, Private Wealth Management (PWM) Group, Vandana Sharma Goldman Sachs Venkat Srinivasan Dinesh Mirchandani Founder & CEO, Rage Frameworks President and Co-Founder, Sindulge Pratima Srinivasan Anil Monga Sanjay Subhedar CEO, Victory International (USA), LLC Managing Director, Storm Ventures Rajni Bala Monga Suniti Subhedar Diaz Nesamoney Harit Talwar President & CEO, Jivox Corporation Managing Director, Goldman Sachs Usha Nesamoney Reena Talwar Bhikhubhai Patel Ravi Tilak Chairman, Tarsadia Foundation Co-Founder & CEO, ALMEX USA Pushpa Patel Vandana Tilak Mukesh Patel President, Bombay Pictures, Inc. Managing Partner & Founder, Invati Capital Raj B. Vattikuti Harsha Patel Chairman, Vattikuti Ventures & Foundation Nimish Patel Padmaja Raj Vattikuti Vice Chairman, Mitchell Silberberg & Knupp LLP Nancy Patel Krishna Veeraraghavan Partner, Sullivan & Cromwell Brian J. G. Pereira, MD Sejal Shah President & CEO, Visterra Dermatologist Sunita Pereira, MD Tufts Medical Center Romesh Wadhwani CEO & Managing Partner, Symphony Technology Group Ravi Reddy Kathy Wadhwani Co-Founder and Managing Partner, Think Capital LLC V. Neerja Sethi Chairman & CEO, Fairfax Financial Holdings Limited Co-Founder and Vice President, Syntel Inc. Nalini Watsa

31 PEOPLE

Ambassador Frank G. Wisner Carl Pope International Affairs Advisor, Squire Patton Boggs (US) LLP Former Chairman & Executive Director, Sierra Club Judy Cormier Kavita Ramdas *As of 2018-19, this volunteer group has been replaced Senior Advisor to Ford Foundation’s President by Founder’s Circle Srinath Reddy INDIA TRUSTEE BOARD President, Public Health Foundation of India

Nishith Desai Nitin Sacheti Founder, Nishith Desai Associates Senior Analyst, Charter Bridge Capital

Anuranjita Kumar Chirag H. Shah Managing Director of Human Resources, Royal Bank Deutsche Asset & Wealth Management of Scotland International SudhakarShenoy Nirupama Rao Chairman & CEO, Alyx Technologies Former Ambassador of India to the United States Harjiv Singh Ajay Relan Co-Founder and Co-CEO, Founding Chairman, CX Advisors LLP Gutenberg Communications, LLC

Shankar Venkateswaran Shraysi Tandon Advisor, Corporate Sustainability & CSR News Reporter, CCTV America

U.S. ADVISORY COUNCIL Professor Amartya Sen (Chair Emeritus) Thomas W. Lamont University Professor, Ambassador Frank G. Wisner (Chair) Professor of Economics and Philosophy, International Affairs Advisor, Squire Patton Boggs (US) LLP Harvard University Maya Ajmera Founder, The Global Fund for Children INDIA ADVISORY COUNCIL President & CEO, Society for Science & the Public Deepak Parekh Marshall M. Bouton Non-Executive Chairman, HDFC Limited President Emeritus, The Chicago Council on Global Affairs Isher Ahluwalia Lincoln Chen Chairperson, Indian Council for Research on International President, China Medical Board, USA Economic Relations Kamran Elahian Chairman And Co-Founder, Global Catalyst Partners Sushmita Ghosh Chair, Changemakers; Former President, Ashoka Maneesh K. Goyal Founder and President, MKG & Live In The Grey Pramit Jhaveri CEO, Citi India Raj Goyle Co-Founder, Bodhala Vijay Mahajan Founder & Chairman, Basix, A “Group Of Livelihood Bakul Joshi Promotion Institutions” Founder & President, Multiple Access California Corporation R. A. Mashelkar Kailash Joshi President, Global Research Alliance AIF Co-Founder, Retd. IBM Gen. Mgr. Sanjay Nayar Tarun Khanna CEO, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co. (KKR), India Advisors Director of South Asia Institute, Harvard University Private Limited

Neil Lachman, CPA,CGMA Ranjit Pandit Senior Advisor, Finance, American India Foundation Owner, Bambolli Holdings Jacqueline Lundquist VP Corporate Affairs and Chief Serendipity Officer, Chairperson, Apeejay Surrendra Park Hotels Waterhealth International

32 PEOPLE

Jerry Rao CHICAGO COUNCIL OF GOVERNORS Founder & Chairman, Value and Budget Housing Hitika & Abhinav Anand Corporation; Earlier Founder of Mphasis Jasma & Rahul Ghai Savera & Mayur Gupta Rajiv Tandon Varsha & Ashish Kaura Technical Director for Mnchn+A, Path India Mukta & Kailash Purohit Adil Zainulbhai Rahul Roy Chairman, Network 18, Chairman, Quality Council of India, Masha & Rohan Sajdeh and Senior Advisor, McKinsey & Co. India Arvind & Neeta Singh Parita & Alex Singla Mani Venkataram & Vinita Subramani AMBASSADORS Rohit Vishnoi

Rahul Bose AIF CHICAGO JUNIOR GROUP Actor and Director Aditya Badlani Deepak Chopra Maya Behl Founder, The Chopra Center for Well Being Pranav Doradla Anchal Kumar Gurcharan Das Arjun Kaura Author Arun Lal

Madhur Jaffrey DALLAS LEADERSHIP COUNCIL Author and Actress Rajesh & Krisan Swaminathan Amiya Setu & Richa Aparajita Mira Nair Lina Shah Filmmaker, Mirabai Films Seema Deshpande

Gloria Steinem HOUSTON LEADERSHIP COUNCIL Author and Activist Rick Pal Swati Narayan

AIF Chapters NEW ENGLAND LEADERSHIP COUNCIL ATLANTA LEADERSHIP COUNCIL Raj & Nalini Sharma Amitabh Sharma (Chair) Venkat & Pratima Srinivasan Jagdish Sheth Dr. Brian J.G. Pereira & Sunita Pereira Beheruz Sethna Vivek & Vandana Sharma Lani Wong Santhana & Namita Krishnan Phil Bolton NEW ENGLAND COUNCIL OF GOVERNORS Jeffrey A. Rosensweig Andy Gupta BAY AREA LEADERSHP COUNCIL Farida Kathawalla Swati Advani Nimit Nathwani Lata Krishnan & Ajay Shah Sangita Thakore Bakul Joshi Srini Ambati Ash Lilani Vikram Mahidhar Anne Marie & Joe Macrae NEW YORK TRI-STATE LEADERSHIP COUNCIL Usha & Diaz Nesamoney Rohit & Shikha Kapoor Renuka Pullat Pradeep Kashyap Rohan Shah Victor & Tara Menezes Cherra Singh Arvind Raghunathan Saurabh Tandon Anjali Sharma Riaz Taplin Krishna Veeraraghavan & Sejal Shah Salima Taplin Harit and Reena Talwar Leigh Wasson Frank G. Wisner

CHICAGO TRUSTEES ORANGE COUNTY LEADERSHIP COUNCIL Bulbul & Vimal Bahuguna Tinnie & Shiv Grewal (Chairs) Seema & Raj Bhatia Mike Colaco Lewis Rosenbloom & Elizabeth Kaplan Sona & Anand Gala Reena & Harit Talwar Nithin Jilla

33 PEOPLE

Nita and Kevin Parikh John Hayden Jessie Patel Staff Accountant, New York Maya & Sunil Patel Pushpa & BU Patel Bhupendra Jadav Nivedita Pidaparty & Murthy Simhambhatla Assistant Finance Controller, New York Sandhya & Ram Rao Sarah J. A. Koclar Mona & Rupesh Shah Development Associate, Washington D.C Rika & Manu Shah Suchitra Krishna PHILADELPHIA LEADERSHIP COUNCIL Outreach and Events Associate, Boston Kavita & Sanjay Gupta (Chairs) Rani Emandi & Danny Hirji Katja Kurz Anita & Pankaj Paul Program Officer, William J. Clinton Fellowship for Service in Prema Roddam & Karun Pothacamury India, New York

RICHMOND LEADERSHIP COUNCIL Luz Pacheco Sunita Gupta & Sanjay Mittal (Chair) Outreach and Events Manager, California Nupa Agarwal & Amit Acharya Chiranth & Janani Nataraj Arnaz Patel Ajoy & Vasudha Ranga Human Resources and Administrative Associate, New York Venkatesh Raghavendra & Arathi Kashipathi Joshua A. P. Patel Rupa & Sahil Tak Manager Annual Giving, New York Peter & Julie Woo Jasleen K. Singh* WASHINGTON DC CHAPTER LEADERSHIP COUNCIL Human Resources and Administrative Associate, New York Sudhakar Shenoy Suresh & Neena Shenoy Preena Soni Geoffrey Stewart Development Associate, California Mahinder & Sharad Tak Ranvir & Adarsh Trehan Pratibha Srinivasan Chief Financial Officer and Chief Operations Officer, New York US STAFF Venkatesh Raghavendra* Senior Director Philanthropy and Development, Richmond Alexander M. Counts* President and CEO (through October 23, 2017), New York Barbara T. Weber* Senior Advisor Philanthropy and Organizational Development, Nishant Pandey Seattle CEO (as of October 24, 2017), New York Mandy Wong Nandini Ansari Database Administrator, New York Senior Operations Manager, New York Interns Nicole R. Asbury* Nishant Bhushan, New York Database Administrator, New York Tamanna Chhibbar, New York

Bhawna Chawla *Staff that left during the year Deputy Director, Development, California

Shelby Crowell INDIA STAFF Development and Communications Associate, New York Nishant Pandey (through Oct 23, 2017) Andrew C. Foxman* Country Director Senior Director, Marketing and Communications, California Mathew Joseph (as of 19 March, 2018) Mugdha Gangopadhyay Country Director Deputy Director Development, New York Aamir Aijaz Nirmala V. Garimella* Program Manager, Rickshaw Sangh, Livelihoods Head of Development, New England Aishwarya Durgia Program Associate, Livelihoods

34 PEOPLE

Ajay Rajpal Dr. Amit Chatterjee Project Manager, Public Health M&E, Uttarakhand Director, Public Health

Akhila Betsy George G. Srinivasa Rao Project Officer, MAST, Livelihoods MEL Assistant, Public Health (Paderu- Andhra Pradesh)

Aman Rathore* Garima Gautam Accountant Program Associate - William J. Clinton Fellowship for Service in India Amanpreet Kaur Program Officer- William J. Clinton Fellowship for Service in India Gaurav Sharma Accountant (Dehradun) Amit Shukla* Accounts Officer Geeta Ram Chamoli District Coordinator, Public Health Uttarakhand Amol Parmar Program Assistant, LAMP Gurvinder Singh Sr. Manager – Finance Anindya Dutta Gupta Program Officer, LAMP Hanumant Rawat Sr. Advisor Livelihoods Anshul Jain* Program Officer- Livelihoods Harinder Singh* State Coordinator, DE Punjab Anuj Srivastava* Officer- Strategic Partnerships Ishika Kumar Manager- Learning, Evaluation and Impact Anupam Sarkar Program Manager, Public Health J Sundar Krishnan* Director- Digital Equalizer Arjun Sanyal* Director, Education Jagdeep Singh Program Associate, MAST, Livelihoods Arpita Saxena* Program Manager- William J. Clinton Fellowship for Service in India Katrina Dikkers Director- William J. Clinton Fellowship for Service in India Ashish Chandra* State Program Manager, DE Krishnendu Sengupta Strategic Partnerships Manager Asif Alam Mazumdar Associate Communications Manish Kumar Program Manager, ABLE Avinash Suryawanshi Program Manager,DE Manoranjan Bhoi Associate, DE Odisha Azhad Ali Manager, Learning, Evaluation and Impact Medini Nautiyal District Coordinater- MANSI, Uttarakhand Baskaran D State Program Manager, DE Tamil Nadu Meenu Anand Manager - Human Resources Bharti Dangwal State Program Manager, Public Health, Uttarakhand Meenu Sharma Program Officer, ABLE Bholanath Sangram Office Assistant Mrinalika Dhapola Operations Director, DE Punjab & Haryana Biswanath Senapati Accountant Nafees Ahmed Associate, DE Telengana Dharmendra Kumar Project Coordinator Nawaz Hussain Associate, DE Telengana Divya Murali Regional Coordinator, DE Tamil Nadu Neeraj Kumar Program Associate, DE Delhi

35 PEOPLE

Niresh Kumar Shanker Dayal Sharma Director- Strategic Partnerships State Program Manager, DE Gujarat

Pratim Basu Sheryl Shankar State Program Manager, DE Punjab Program Officer, Strategic Partnerships

Pratyush Das Shilpa Sharma Senior Program Manager, DE Delhi Associate, Human Resources

Puneeth T. Shivangi Sharma State Program Manager, DE Karnataka Associate, Strategic Partnerships

Raj Rishi Siddiq Ahmed Sr. Program Associate, DE Haryana Associate, DE Telengana

Rajvinder Kaur Sona Grover Program Associate, ABLE Program Officer, DE Delhi

Rakesh Verma SrikrishnaPaleru MIS Officer Program Manager, Public Health, Andhra Pradesh

Renuka Bhagat Subrat Sarkar Program Associate, ABLE Operations Director, DE Odisha

Richa Dobhal Sudhakar R. Bhandari District Coordinater, MANSI Uttarakhand Regional Coordinator, DE Karnataka

Robin Satyarthi Sudhir Chillarega Accountant State Program Manager, DE Uttarakhand

Rohini Roy Sunil Kumar Program Officer, DE Uttarakhand Program Associate- DE Delhi

Rowena Kay Mascarenhas Sunil Seth Director, Communications & Advocacy Director, Finance and Administration

Sajit Menon Tamana Salathia* Head of Programs Assistant, Human Resources

Santanu Mishra* Tapas Satpathy Sr. Associate, DE Odisha State Program Manager- LAMP Gujarat

Santosh Singh* V. Alexander Program Manager, DE Punjab Regional Coordinator, DE Tamil Nadu

Sanyukta Chaturvedi Varna Sri Raman Director, Digital Equalizer Director, Learning, Evaluation and Impact

Saranya Suresh Vinay Sanam Program Associate, DE Karnataka Sr. Program Associate, DE Telengana

Sarla Yadav Vivek Wandhile Finance Manager Project Manager, LAMP Gujarat

Sarmistha Pattanayak *Staff that left during the year Project Manager, DE Odisha

Shama Shanmugam Administrative Officer

36 PEOPLE SUPPORTERS APRIL 1, 2017 - MARCH 31, 2018

Jones Day Capital IP US DONORS JP Morgan Chase Caterpillar Inc. Deepak and Christina Kamra Anonymous LEADERSHIP Rohit and Shikha Kapoor Krishnan Chandershekhar and Erica ($100K AND ABOVE) Seema and Somesh Khanna Oahler Ajay and Ritu Banga Kirkland & Ellis, LLP Naveen and Alka Chandra Sumir Chadha KPMG LLP Carrie Chatterjee Vijay and Marie Goradia Santhana and Namita Krishnan Drs. Sanjiv and Amita Chopra The Hans Foundation Joe and Ann Marie Macrae The Clinton Family Foundation Lata Krishnan and Ajay Shah Mahadeva Family Foundation Cognizant US Corp Kumar and Vijaya Malavalli Vikram Mahidhar and Kunjan Anjaria Sean Collins Diaz and Usha Nesamoney MasterCard Worldwide Comerica Bank Pramod and Roshni Patel McKinsey & Company, Inc. Kelly and Monty Corley Rural India Supporting Trust Merck & Co., Inc Crawford & Company The Sarva Mangal Charitable Trust MicronTechnology, Inc. Dinyar and Aashish Devitre Anonymous Sundari and Samir Mitra Dhanam Foundation Venkat and Pratima Srinivasan Anil and Rajni Monga Sanjay and Anjali Dhawan Harit and Reena Talwar Morgan Stanley & Co. The Dow Chemical Company Riaz Taplin and Salima Taplin Anonymous DowDuPont Tarsadia Foundation Anonymous EK Disha Non-Profit Inc. George and Karen Oliver Ernst & Young BENEFACTORS ($50K - 99,999) The Ostler Family Charitable Fund EXL Service Bank of the West PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP FedEx The Fascitelli Family Foundation Qatar Airways FICO The Harold and Mimi Steinberg Arvind Raghunathan and Sribala Final Mile Consulting LLC Charitable Trust Subramanian First Manhattan Consulting Group Victor and Tara Menezes Sumit Rajpal and Deepali Arvind Desai Matthew Fleming Carl Pope and Shahnaz Taplin Harvey Schwartz Anand and Sona Gala Julian Salisbury Raj and Nalini Sharma Deepak Garg Anonymous Sullivan & Cromwell GEP Saxena Family Foundation TD Bank, N.A. Charles and Dianne Giancarlo Silicon Valley Bank Trans Union, LLC The Glades Foundation Sanjay and Suniti Subhedar Underwriters Laboratories Inc. Gautam Godhwani VISA, INC. The Vattikuti Foundation Shiv and Tinnie Grewal Whirlpool Corporation Romesh and Kathy Wadhwani HSBC Bank USA, N.A. Wipro Limited Huge PATRONS ($25K - 49,999) IWCO Direct Abbott Laboratories VISIONARIES ($10K - 24,999) Rama and Sonia Jager Acxiom Corporation Accenture Ajit and Tinku Jain Amneal Pharmaceuticals Anindya and Deepa Acharya-Gupta Ashish and Ritu Jain Avasant Foundation Vijay and Swati Advani JP Morgan Chase Foundation Bain Capital Ventures Anilesh and Tania Ahuja K&L Gates LLP Kishore K. Bopardikar Akhoury Foundation, Inc. Pradeep and Reena Kashyap Lisa Brighton Rummana Alam and Nadeem Yunus Ashish and Varsha Kaura CA Technologies American Express Foundation The Kaye Family Foundation Capgemini AmerisourceBergen Services Sajal Kohli and Rohini Dey Satjiv S. Chahil Corporation The Kolluri Family Fund Tasneem Chipty and Aleksander Franz Anonymous Mahantesh and Mamta Kothiwale Citi Sunisha and Neeraj Arora Sankar Krishnan James and Patti DeWaele The Arun I & Asmita Bhatia Family Sandeep and Purvi Kunwar EdgeVerve Systems Foundation Matthew and Minyoung Kustel Anil and Jyoti Godhwani Atlassian Leo Burnett Goldman, Sachs & Co. Matching Gift Vimal and Bulbul Bahuguna Leo J. Shapiro & Associates Program Bahwan Cybertek Inc. Levi Strauss & Co. Harman International Industries, Inc Shiv and Nandita Bakhshi Ash Lilani Roger and Stephanie Hochschild Anu and Kapil Bhavnani Raja A. Mahajan Hollister Incorporated BlackRock Financial Management, Inc. Naitry and Rick Marini Icon Medical Holdings LLC Bonfare Markets Charitable Foundation Market Strategy Group

37 SUPPORTERS APRIL 1, 2017 - MARCH 31, 2018

Samuel and Shanti Mathan fund of Silicon Valley Community Harit and Parul Doshi Sanjay and Sangeeta Mehrotra Foundation Thomas and Gayane Ebling Aashish Mehta and Emily Shamsuddin The Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati eHealthObjects Karl Mehta Foundation Emandi Law Firm P.C. Siddharth and Swati Mehta Winston & Strawn LLP Vish Emani Ivan and Shibani Menezes XL Catlin Karen and Andy Fisher Michael E. Marks Family Foundation FMC Corporation Nalin Miglani CATALYSTS ($5K - 9,999) Gems Holdings, LLC Mlegal Consulting, Inc. Abel Noser Corp. Biri and Sukhjit Gill Neal and Hema Mohan Adobe Systems Incorporated Justin Gmelich NB Ventures, Inc Geetha Agadi Bruce Goldberg The Nima Taghavi Foundation Ajay and Kate Agarwal Google Inc. Nuveen Investments Holdings Anupama Agarwal Mark and Rebecca Graf Arun and Neeru Oberoi Rajesh Alva Leo and Emilia Greenstein Mukesh and Harsha Patel Abhinav and Hitika Anand Mandeep Grewal and Sudeep Dhillon Namrata Patel Hazim Ansari Anita and Ashwini Gupta Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Aptinyx, Inc. Rajiv and Kamal Gupta Garrison LLP Brian Arcara Gupta Family Foundation Drs. Sunita and Brian J.G. Pereira Arch Telecom Inc. Hite Hedge Asset Management, LLC Priya Living LLC Mir Arif and Suki Kim Hughes Network Systems, Inc. Renuka Pullat and Krishna Pillai Pavan Bagar Irfan Kathwari Foundation, Inc. Kailash and Mukta Purohit Bank of America Charitable Foundation Nickhil Jakatdar and Sudnya Shroff Vish S. Ramakrishnan and Anuradha Bank of America Matching Gifts Rajive and Indrani Johri Chitrapu Barclays Adam and Rita Kablanian Realize, LLP Vasudev and Virinda Bhandarkar Rajiv and Susan Kamilla The Reddy Foundation Srini and Smita Bharadwaj Santosh Karande SAP America, Inc. Biogen Idec Nitin Karnani Schlumberger BitWise Inc. Sudha Kashyap Gaurav and Elizabeth Seth BMO Capital Markets Kayne Anderson Capital Advisors Anil and Preeti Shah William and Joan Boecke Foundation Riyad and Aarifa Shahjahan Anirban and Manjari Bose Tarun and Ruhi Khanna Anjali and Deven Sharma The Boston Consulting Group, Inc. Deepak Krishnan Anonymous Mike and Susan Boush Anonymous Silicon Valley Community Foundation Terrence and Cynthia Brady Narindar Kumar Silver Lake Technology Management, Edward Breen Ash Lilani LLC Bryan Cave LLP Preeti and Anu Mahajan Simran Foundation David and Helene Buchen Ajay and Suhani Mody Ashok Singh Seema Byahatti and Samir Shah Madhukar and Radhika Namburi SMART Modular Technologies, Inc. Canaccord Genuity Corp. Barbara Nash Garen and Sharalyn Staglin Rashmy Chatterjee Navigant Consulting Michael Stark Anshul Chaturvedi Una M. Neary Shivan and Jyothi Subramaniam Rahul Chaudhary Gary and Trudy Neilson Jayant and Priya Tambe Rohit and Sonal Chopra Nitin Nohria and Monica Chandra Suzanne Tanajerski The Chugh Firm Krish and Nina Panu Nainoor and Sangita Thakore Amy Cline Jiten Parikh Trehan Foundation, Inc. Steve and Toni Collis Geeta Pasi UBS Financial Services Christopher and Cindy Combs Amol and Mansi Patel Ujala Foundation ConAgra Foods Raju Patel Unilog Content Solutions LLC Thomas and Laura Connolly Pimco Investments LLC Sheena and Vijay Vaidyanathan Edith Cooper Rajiv Prabhakar Akshay and Alison Vaishnaw Rahul Danodra Prism Healthcare Partners, LTD Krishna and Sejal Veeraraghavan Hemang and Theresa Dave Priya Harbert Fremont LLC Robin and Liselotte Vince Raj Desai Anil and Asha Punyapu Vijay Vishwanath and Gita Iyer Andrew DeYoung Zainul and Lubaina Raj Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz Vinod and Dolly Dham Madhavan Rangaswami and Constantin Warburg Pincus LLC Arjun and Diana Divecha Delivanis Western Digital Corporation, an advised Dominion Energy Richard Friedman Family Foundation

38 SUPPORTERS APRIL 1, 2017 - MARCH 31, 2018

Robert W. Baird and Co. Incorporated Shazeen Ali William and Lea Bowmer Roopa and Subhash Makhija Nahid Aliniazee Bright Funds Foundation Foundation, Inc. W. Sanford and Madhur Allen Bruner Family Charitable Gift Fund S&P Global Ronaldo Ama Ronald and Barbara Bukovac Vinod and Gail Sahney Ashutosh Aman Geoff Burkholder Masha and Rohan Sajdeh Gunjan Amarnani Marcelo Camberos Vincent and Ellen Sakowski Srini and Nikhila Ambati Ram Capoor and Fereshteh Shahabi Prakash Sakraney American Express Gift Matching Yvonne Carrasco Salesforce.org Program Cheryl and Larry Carter Manoj and Monica Saxena Mitesh Amin Christopher Cartwright and Elisa Mark and Lara Scarborough Neil and Amishi Amin Giacomelli Stephen and Susan Scherr Shoham Amin Craig and Suzanne Castelein Sequeira Family Charitable Trust Harold Andersen Paul Cate Kamal Shah James and Karen Ansara Paroon Chadha Jai Shekhawat Joseph Arbeely Robert and Shital Chatwani Ragini Shekhawat Mason Argiropoulos Angela Chaudhari and Alpesh Patel Ashmeet S. Sidana Maximillian and Louise Armour Faiz Chawdri Silicon Valley Capital Partners L.P. Michael Aubrey Prashanth Cherukuri Silicon Valley Community Foundation Peter Aynsley-Hartwell Ahunawar Chhapgar Murthy and Nivedita Simhambhatla Zaid and Rana Ayoub Dimple and Vishal Chhibbar Ajay and Nidhi Singh Anita Bafna Rena Choe Harmit and Cherra Singh Baird Foundation, Inc. Paritosh Choksi Rajesh Singh Nandita Bakhshi Ameet Chopra Sinha Kikeri Foundation Esha Bandyopadhyay Aneesh and Rohini Chopra Esta Stecher Alka Banerjee Ash and Shaili Chopra Stradling, Yocca, Carlson & Rauth Pratip and Aleena Banerji Ratika and Puneet Chopra Mahinder and Sharad Tak Bank of America Employee Giving Anil and Sri Choudhary Gopal Tampi and Shub Mukherjee Campaign Anil and Shahenaz Churiwala Tech Mahindra (Americas) Inc. Arun Bansal Ram and Anjali Chuttani Viran Toor The Barry Friedberg and Charlotte Citizens Bank TTF Foundation Moss Family Foundation Christopher Clark Utopia Global Inc. Bartech Group Dustin and Steffani Cohn Rajeev and Dipti Vachani Harbans Bawa Vernon and Stephanie Colaco Venkat Subra Mani Venkataraman Behram Baxter Cooper-Horowitz Inc. Anonymous Nicholas and Divya Behl Alexander and Emily Counts Sean Wambold Ashok Belani Daniela Crofton Padmasree and Mohandas Warrior Belkin Burden Wenig & Goldman, LLP Jeffrey and Carol Cullen Leigh Wasson Michael Bender and Sheridan Prior Balamurugan Cumaresan and Vaithehi Susan Whitehead Nancy Z. Bender Muttulingam Elisha Wiesel Amarjeet Bhachu and Sanjana Sharma Anisa Daftari Lisa and Ted Williams Anita and Arjun Bhagat Jaleh Daie YFS Foundation, Inc. Ravnish Bhalla Udit Dalal Jonathan Young Guninder Bhalla The Dalal Charitable Trust Kim Young Mohit and Supria Bhalla Kesav Dama and Somya Kaushik Harish and Seema Bhandula Ranjan and Veena Damodar CHAMPIONS ($1K - 4,999) Anil Bhatia and Sushma Singh Ira Dang and Joy Dasgupta The 2001 Kariat Revocable Trust Sadhna and Raj Bhatia Lisa Daniels Alison Abbo T.T. Bhatt Anil Daryani Fairuz Abdullah Vinod Bhutani Krishnakshi Das Gagan Agarwala Vijay and Anita Bist Avijit and Meena Datta Alok and Sangeeta Aggarwal BNY Mellon Madhukar and Saira Dayal Sahil Aggarwal BNY Wealth Management Praveen Dayalu Guirish and Rashmi Agni Raja Bobbili Prafulla Deori Bharat and Sudha Agrawal The Boeckli Family Fund Samir and Nilima Desai Mahesh Madhav and Ruchika Agrawal Syed and Sabina Bokhari Desai Family Foundation Sanjiv and Anju Ahuja David Boone Desai Family Foundation c/o Aditi, Inc. Kamesh and Geeta Aiyer Raj and Sonia Boveja Rembert DeVilla

39 SUPPORTERS APRIL 1, 2017 - MARCH 31, 2018

Vikram and Priti Dewan Anita Gupta Art and Ellen Kapoor Arnab Dey Anita and Mayank Gupta Namit and Nidhi Kapoor Gautam and Ritu Dhingra Anuj Gupta Ramesh and Susan Kapur Discovery Communications, Inc. Dinesh and Anita Gupta Suraj Kapur Ramesh and Veena Dolwani Adi and Rutti Guzdar Saila Kariat Marshall M. Dorr Carey and Jason Halio Sandhya and Sneha Kasera Steven Dostart Ian Hall Vinay Kashyap Sean Dowdall and David Landis Russ and Deborah Hall Imtiaz and Farida Kathawalla Matthew Driver Anuradha and Vivek Hans Sameer and Priyanka Katiyar Anil and Jennifer D’Souza Rahul Harkawat Katten Muchin Rosenman Foundation, Apurba and Jayashree Dutta Thomas Harney and Dorothy Wholihan Inc John and Christine Edwards Grace and Taylor Harris Jeffrey Katz Rani Emandi James Hawes and Ellen Hanson Maria-lnes Kavamura Emerson College Haywood Securities Sandesh Kaveripatnam Osborn S. Erickson Healey Family Foundation Christian and Jill Kemp Aaron and Mona Erter Bradley and Lisa Henderson Robert and Stacey Kertsman Karishma Rao and Sunil Etha Thomas Henderson The Ketan and Sheila Kothari Family Christine Evans Kunal Hinduja and Jessie Patel Fund Evercore Partners Services East LLC Wanda Holland Greene Scott Kettle Excel Asset Management Corporation Michael and Gail Horwath Akhil Khanna Les Fagen David Hultman Shiv Khemka Kathleen Farrell Matthew Hurd Neal Khosla FBR & Co. Avner Husen James and Susan King Federated Investors, Inc. IBM Corporation Employee Services Ujjal and Sarita Kohli Michael Ferris Center Anurag Kondapalli First Bank ICC Chemical Corporation Sam and Harsh Koppula Fortress Investment Group Prathima Iddamsetty Michael Krauss Inayat Fridosey Infinite Computer Solutions, Inc. Vasu and Mary Krishnamurthy Matthew Friestedt Intel Kroger Dayal and Meeta Gaitonde International Rubber Products, Inc. Akshya and Shalini Kumar Shruti Gandhi International Services, Inc. Heimant and Shilpa Kumar Amit Garg and Sonali Agarwal Garg Omer Ismail Monica Kumar Rajesh and Madhu Garg Ivy Funds Distributors Anupam and Ying Ladha Sarika Garg Eva and Ravi Jacob Vinod Lakhani Kenneth Gayer Keith and Jennifer Jacobson Ashish and Amrita Lakhanpal Genus Lifesciences Inc. Matthew Jacobson Rajiv and Suruchi Lal Meril Gerstenmaie Mahendra Jain Ranjan Lal and Sunita Mohapatra Jasma Ghai Kaikeya Jangbahadur and Srividhya Prithvi Legha Harinder P. Gill Ramakrishnan Jason Leibowitz Pranav Gill Romal Jasser Jill and Joe Lervold Raj-Ann and Pavan Gill Uma Jayaram Lincoln International Milind Godbole and Mona Bhoyar Indu Jindia The London Company Goldman Sachs & Co. Chetan Joglekar Loomis, Sayles & Company, L.P. Rakesh Gopalan Michael and Chris Johnson Georgie Lowe Subba Gopavarapu Johnson & Johnson Steven Lundeen Aruna and Dinesh Goradia Allen Jordan James and Joan Lynch Daniel and Alexandra Gourvitch Jason Jurgens Macquarie Group Foundation Limited Sanjay and Vidya Govil JustGiving Manju Madhavan Paul and Dedrea Gray Ravi and Anisha Kacker Rajiv Mahadevan Jeffrey Green Alpesh and Rajul Kadakia Mahal Family-Hemkund Foundation Jas Grewal and Suren Dutia Rupinder Kalia Ravi Mahalingam Arthur Groo Meena Kamath Andrew Malik David Gruenstein Aditi Kamdar Suvin Malik The Guardian Life Insurance Company Kim Puloma Kamdar Mahadeva Mani of America William Kane Vijay and Sumita Manwani Samidh Guha Tara Kangarlou Marti Family Fund, an advised fund of Sameer and Punita Gupta Akash and Rana Kapoor the Brooklyn Community Foundation

40 SUPPORTERS APRIL 1, 2017 - MARCH 31, 2018

Megan Martin James and Kathleen O’Hara Rajeev and Joan Ranadive Kedar Mate Arun and Shashi Ohri Ramgopal and Sandhya Rao Goran Matijasevic Stephen Older Soma and Rekha Rao Forrest Worthy McCartney Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe LLP Tejas Raval McGuireWoods Karin Orsic Karthik Ravula and Anjana Sukumar Karen Mecker Mark D. Otto Viresh and Karuna Rawal Neelu Mehrotra Pacwav LLC Wendell Reilly Chirag and Chhayal Mehta Asutosh and Rita Padhi Maxim Reshulskiy Guvantray and Ila Mehta Pavan Pamidimarri The Richard and Helen Greenberg Justin and Purvi Mehta Paranjape Family Trust Family Charitable Fund Ruhsabh and Ruchi Mehta Amit and Reena Parekh Norbert and Loan Riedel Sarah and Punit Mehta Ashish Parekh Scott A. Romanoff Vivek Mehta Roopa Parikh James and Sarah Rosen Melvyn Menezes Suneil and Rohini Parulekar Rahul and Anuradhika Roy Ryan Merchant Amit and Urvi Patel Ranjith Roy Yitzhak Meyers Anil Patel Paul Rufo Microsoft Matching Gifts Program Arvind Patel Nicholas Rytting Raymond J. Milchovich Atul Patel Mona Sabet Maureen Miles Bhadreskum and Amida Patel Vinay Sabharwal Nandini and Rajeev Minocha Bhanvin Patel Nitin Sacheti Mintz Levin Dinesh Patel Sumit Sadana Rajat Mishra Divyesh Patel Salil and Hema Sakhardande Vish Mishra Kiran B. Patel Ravinder and Rohini Sakhuja Mission Hills Family Dentistry, Inc Manish Patel Mathew Salter Nidhi and Sanjeet Mitra Minesh and Jayana Patel Nancy Saltzman Anjan and Emily Mitra Munira Patel Jasbir and Kiran Saluja Jasvant M. Modi Padmanabh and Sheetal Patel The Samarth Foundation Nikhil and Rahat Modi Purnima Patel Ranjit and Kuldip Samra Tejas Modi Rakesh Patel Balvinder S. Sangha Saurabh and Namrata Mohanty Roger and Chetna Patel Mythili Sankaran and Shekar Ayyar Saeed and Assal Mohasseb Sanjay Patel Ashok and Geetanjali Sathe Mondelez International Foundation Ushirkumar Patel and Ranjini Malavalli Sanjay Sathe Sean Monga Pranat and Naila Pathak Save The Date, Inc. Brian Monks and Eamon O’Grady Chandar Pattabhiram Taher Savliwala Gary Moon Mr. and Mrs. Bill Patton Arjun Saxena Ananta and Kumkum Mukerji Annette Philip Surya Kumar Selvam Jan Muralitharan Jay Phillip Mehmet Sezgin Paul and Cynthia Murray Adam and Dana Phillips Anish Shah Saranjit and Gurinder Mutti Rodney Pierce Divyesh and Priti Shah Jatinder Narang Douglas Pitman Himat and Asha Shah Rajaram Narayanaswamy Kevin Pleasant Kirit and Mrudula Shah Bhaskaran Natarajan and Teresa Chick Todd Pleune Neha Shah Rajeswari and G. Natesh Anurag Poddar and Nancy Virdi Rohan Shah Nimit Nathwani John and Shannon Porro Sabera and Ameer Shah Natixis Global Asset Management Porus Prakash Salim Shaikh Sandeep and Bulbul Nayyar Punjabi Heritage & Cultural Society Michael Shankman Ryan Nece Seth and Julie Rachlin Abhishek Sharma Brian and Kasia Neinhaus Venkatesh and Arathi Raghavendra Annu Sharma and Dev Ghose Prashanth Nekkalapudi Mandar Rahatekar Anupendra Sharma New York Life Foundation Manohar K. Raheja Ravi and Juhi Sharma New York Life Insurance Co Shanthini Rajendram and Ranajoy Sandeep Sharma Cosmos and Evelyne Nicolaou Sarkar Varun and Megha Sharma Atish and Ambika Nigam Anand Ramakrishnan and Deepa Jack Sheridan Vinit and Deepti Nijhawan Kartha Jagdish N. Sheth, Ph.D North Realty LLC Ravi and Meena Ramamurti Nandan Sheth Kathy O’Donnell Jayan and Vibha Ramankutty Rohan Sheth Adam Oestreich and Joselyn Cruz Arun and Kelly Ramappa Sheth Family Foundation Inc.

41 SUPPORTERS APRIL 1, 2017 - MARCH 31, 2018

Snehal and Pallavi Shinde Anil Tummalapalli Vandana Badlani Swapnil Shinde Peter and Kim Turek Ketan Patel Bali Ritu and Poonam Shrivastava William Bennet Turner Amit and Savita Banerjee Alexander and Irina Shubat The U.S. Bank Charitable Giving Aniruddha and Manju Banerjee Sidoti & Company, LLC Programs Siddhartha Banerjee Ravi Simhambhatla and Savi Ricardo and Julie Ugarte Rima and Amit Bansal Devarakonda Madhvesh Upadhya and Vishal Kalavar Anuradha Behari Arjan Singh Nakul Uppal and Ramita Chawla Brad Berstein Arvind and Neeta Singh Vacovec, Mayotte & Singer LLP Gordon Bhadra Ekta and Ashwini Singh Bindiya Valavil and PV Narayan Ashee and Seema Bhan Manny and Jennifer Singh Jacki VanEvery Sandeep and Anu Bhat Nithya and Navjot Singh Jensen and Chinnu Varghese Puneet Bhatia Tejinder Singh Sandeep Varma Sunil Bhatia and Faten Amireh Umesh and Niraj Singh Anita Varma Hart and Sarah Billings Vijay Singh Nisha Varma Veronica Brakus Vikram Singh Krishna and Uma Veeraraghavan Sunil and Anita Budhrani Yashpal and Anita Singh Ram Vemireddy Madanlal Goenka Chari Anupy Singla and Sandeep Gupta Satyaprakash Venkatarama Ranjit and Tonima Chatterji Atul and Parita Singla Abraham Verghese Priyanka Chaudhary Kiran Sinha Ashwin Verma Sonya Chawla Prabhakant and Anita Sinha Deepak and Nidhi Verma Tara Chklovski Jagadha Sivan Priya and Sandeep Vij Raj and Jhansi Chowdary Michael Snyder and Christine Costigan Kamala Kant Vijai and Girija Vijay Lyse Anne Clark Inder and Priya Sodhi Elizabeth Vilardo-Morgan Ganesh Rao T.K. Somanath Monica Virk Jai Dev Dasgupta Amirapu and Monisha Somasekhar Vincent Visceglia Rajesh Dash Somkum LLC VMware Foundation Pragna and Vivek Dave Vimal Soni Manjiv and Poonam Vohra Dharti Desai Rakesh Sood The Wadher Family Foundation Vikas and Nitigna Desai Carrie Soyland Ask Shilpa and Yogesh Wadhera Deutsche Bank Americas Foundation Srinivas and Sonali Srinath Hardeep Walia Kunal Doshi Ohm and Anandini Srinivasan Ranjit Walia Bryan Eckelman Sheryl Srivastava Waters Corporation Sara Edward Rajeev Srivastava Ryan Welch Dean Edwards Ankur Srivastava Wendell Family Foundation Kamal El-Wattar Nagaraja Srivatsan Daniel Wenzel Sheila Emami Brian Stephenson West Coast Consulting LLC Claire and Dwight Emanuelson Lakshmi Stockham Western Resourcing Inc. EOG Resources, Inc. Anand Subramanian and Yamuna Western Union Foundation Tom Falcone Ramachandran Keith and Kaori Williams Zafira Firdosy Sundar and Meena Subramanyam Paul Winum David and Marie Fredrick Lalit Sudan Frank Wisner and Judy Cormier Prasad L. and Jyothi Gadde Ike Suri M. Sue Woodward Kavitha Gandhi Rajesh and Krisan Swaminathan Walter and Elizabeth Wright Mala Gaonkar Garret Swart Mohib and Shifa Yousufani Manaswini Garimella Hem and Deepka Takiar Ostap Zagorodnyy Chandrani Ghosh Saurabh Tandon Ted and Amy Zook Vinay and Sanjili Gidwani Anand Tati Achint Goel Mary Rose Taylor INNOVATORS ($500 - 999) Kuntal Goradia Sam Thakkar Acorn Holdings Keith Greenfield Chetna and Ambrish Thanawala Neil Agnihotri Neal Gupta Robert Thomas Rafi and Lala Ahmed Vijay and Penny Gurbaxani Rebecca Tillet Anjali Ahooja Justin and Rebecca Gwilt Naveen Todi Maya Ajmera and David Hollander Mitch Hochberg Transtech Infrastructure, LLC Mr. and Mrs. Mathew Alexander Rimmi Hundal Andrew Tsao Joseph Alvarado Intel Charitable Match Trust Kelly and Brian Tufts Applied Materials, Inc. Shubha Iyengar

42 SUPPORTERS APRIL 1, 2017 - MARCH 31, 2018

Seth and Merrie Jaffe Moblize - AKM Enterprise Inc. Timothy and Mary Rivelli Niraj Jain Gitanjali Mohindra Anupam and Aruna Sachdev Sharad Jain Raj Sarkar and Madhubanti Mukherjee Gautam Sain Carleigh Jaques Yatin Mundkur Krishna and Pamela Sawhney Meghan Jasani Sara Mutti Dennis and Christina Self Vishal Jatav Sudhir and Raji Nagarkar Chirag H. Shah Mishita Jethi Shamal Nagia Mehul and Falguni Shah Vivek Jetley Vibhu Nagral Moorari Shah Nithin Jilla Ramesh and Deeta Nair Neil and Puja Shah Pervinder Johar Vikram S. Nangia Suresh and Indira Shah Seebu John Akin Odutola Susie Shah John Hancock Karen O’Malley Paddy Sharma Tapan and Smita Joshi Opus Bank Rakesh Sharma Alexander Kablanian Gouri Orekondy Emil Sheth Goutham Kadhaba Chandra Pabba Rajen Sheth Bill Kalra Avi Pai Anant Shukla Vinod Kapoor Surajit Pal Greg and Dilshad Simons Ashish Kapur Pankaj Pant Arjan Singh Teddy M. Kapur Pavan and Amee Pant Vijay P. Singh Kailesh Karavadra Pravin and Pallavi Parekh Priya Singhal Arun and Inder Karla Rasiklal and Hemalatha Parekh Biswajit Sinha and Swati Pal Harneet Kaur The Parekh Family Trust Pradeep Sinha Lakshmikant Keskar Chitrang Parikh Rajat Sinha Roma Khanna Nimesh Parikh Ade Sofolarin Ashish Khera Mahesh Parlikad Santhanakrishna Srinivasan Chaitan Khosla Atul Parvatiyar Mr. and Mrs. Nilendu R. Srivastava Pavan Kochar Ajay Patel Janet Szikszai Pooja Kondabolu Akash Patel Rupika and Sahil Tak The Kothari Saura Family Fund Arnaz Patel Rajendra K. Talluri Martin N. Krasney Bakula Patel Vidush Talwar and Valerie Liarikos John Krenitsky Chirag Patel Pradip and Roshni Tandon Krishna Kandarpa Fund Dhruvish Patel Doug and Cynthia Tapley Raghu Krishnamoorthy Haresh and Vina Patel Gaurav Tewari Mahesh Krishnan Joshua Patel Raj Thaker Bala and Mukta Kuchinad Julie Patel Himanshu Thakkar Anil Kumar Minish Patel Jean-Marc Torre Kaplesh Kumar Naren and Meghna Patel Nirmal Trehan M. S. Vijay Kumar Ramesh and Sheela Patel Tri State Accreditation Manesha Lakhiani Reshma Patel Thara Trivedi Anonymous Roshani Patel Chad and Kathy Tsitovich Avis Y. Lee Sumati Patel- Pareek Tudor McLeod Asset Management LLC Coline Son Lee Sarina Pattar Ubertal Inc. Woodrow Levin Arun and Rachna Paul Bijal Vakil Gerald Lowe Kshemendra and Nina Paul Sreekanth Vemuri Matthew and Anne Lynde Karun Pothacamury and Prema Vinay Venkataraghavan Rajendra Majithia Rodham Shameer and Inderjit Virk Mark Malatasra Power Integrations, Inc. VOYA c/o FRONTSTREAM Manju Malkani Qualcomm Jitu Vyas Nidhi Mastey Rudra and Amrita Rai Rahul Wadhavkar Thomas and Kathy McCabe Varun Raisinghani Komal Wadhwa Ila and Leena Mehta Jenifer Rajkumar Neal Wadhwani Madhuker Mehta Reena Ram Prashant and Meeta Walia Ravi Mehta Ramesh and Shanti Rastogi Paul Watson Shilpa Mehta Pranav Raval Metasys Technologies Inc. Apurba Kanti and Krishna Ray Muira Mishra Prashanth Reddy Samir Mittal Medha Rishi

43 SUPPORTERS APRIL 1, 2017 - MARCH 31, 2018

Patrons ($25K - 49,000) India Donors Cognizant Foundation EXL Service Leadership ($100k and above) PayPal India Private Limited DELL Arrow Electronics Citi Foundation VSO The Hans Foundation The Coca Cola Foundation Visionaries ($10K-24,999) Hero MotoCorp Limited ACC Cement Oracle India (through Charities Aid Foundation) Jindal Stainless Limited Franklin Templeton Asset Management Rage Frameworks Private Limited American Express Hexaware Technologies Boston Consulting Group

Benefactors ($50K - 99,999) Champions (1K - 4,999) Capgemini Technologies Services India Ltd Coimbatore Corporation AT&T Global Network Service Private Limited DELL EMC Corporation TATA Chemicals Society for Rural Development Nalanda Foundation Amazon India Private Limited

44 SUPPORTERS PHOTOGRAPHS APRIL 1, 2017 - MARCH 31, 2018 FEATURED IN THIS REPORT

COVER: MARKET ALIGNED SKILLS TRAINING LAMP – Gujarat Large Photo: Md. Abdul Shakoor, beneficiary of AIF’s MAST Preeti, an LRC student under AIF’s LAMP program in program, at his workplace, the Lifestyle store in the InOrbit village Zaran, district Dangs, Gujarat, implemented by AIF’s Mall, Hyderabad. partner Swapath. Photograph by Prashant Panjiar, November 2017 Photograph by Prashant Panjiar, November 2017 Small Photo: Md. Abdul Shakoor, beneficiary of AIF’s MAST program, at his residence which he shares with 3 others TABLE OF CONTENTS: flat-mates. He received his training at the LEAP-MAST-BEST Rickshaw Sangh training centre at Toli Chowky, Hyderabad and now works JLG Meeting at AIF’s partner BMC Centre in Muslim Nagar, in the Lifestyle store in the InOrbit Mall. Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh. Photograph by Prashant Panjiar, November 2017 Photograph by Prashant Panjiar, May 2017 MATERNAL AND NEWBORN SURVIVAL INITIATIVE: FROM OUR LEADERSHIP: Large Photo: K. Dhanalaxmi with her 13-day old child at Maternal & Newborn Survival Initiative the Anganwadi Centre in Rangaseela village, Paderu ITDA, ASHA workers and MANSI community mentors walk Andhra Pradesh. together during a training session in Y Sonaba village, Photograph by Prashant Panjiar, October 2017 Paderu ITDA, Andhra Pradesh. Small Photo: MANSI mentor Nirmala Sagri with the Photograph by Prashant Panjiar, October 2017 ASHA K. Kondamma and the Anganwadi worker at the ABILITY BASED LIVELIHOOD EMPOWERMENT: Anganwadi Centre in Rangaseela village, Paderu ITDA, Large Photo: Gokul Prasad at his home in Thiruvottriyur, Andhra Pradesh. Chennai. He is an alumnus of Anbalaya Special School Photograph by Prashant Panjiar, October 2017 for the Intellectually Challenged, trained under AIF’s ABLE RICKSHAW SANGH program, Tamil Nadu. Large Photo: Beneficiaries of AIF’s Rickshaw Sangh, in Photograph by Prashant Panjiar, November 2017 partnership with BMC, in village Akoiyya, Sitapur, Uttar Small Photo: Gokul Prasad, trained under AIF’s ABLE Pradesh. program, at his work place, Gold Super Market, in Photograph by Prashant Panjiar, May 2018 Thiruvottriyur, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, on Nov 5, 2017. Small Photo: Neelam, a beneficiary of AIF’s Rickshaw Photograph by Prashant Panjiar Sangh (in partnership with BMC) sells sarees from her CLINTON FELLOWSHIP: rikshaw trolley in village Akoiyya, Sitapur, Uttar Pradesh. Large Photo:AIF Fellow Crystal at her workplace, host Her son Pavel drives the rickshaw trolley. organization Video Volunteers, in Goa. Photograph by Prashant Panjiar, May 2018 Photograph by Prashant Panjiar, May 2018 OUR COVERAGE: Small Photo: AIF Fellow Crystal during a Spoken Word Student Sumaya during a DE computer class being performance in Goa. conducted in the computer lab at the Zilla Parishad High Photograph by Prashant Panjiar, May 2018 School, Jillela village, Telangana. This school is covered under AIF’s DE program. DIGITAL EQUALIZER: Photograph by Prashant Panjiar, November 2017 Large Photo: Student Srinivas during a DE class in the computer lab at the Zilla Parishad High School, Challur PARTNERSHIPS: village, Karimnagar, Telangana. This school is covered A DE class at the Zilla Parishad High School, Challur village, under AIF’s DE program. Telengana. This school is covered under AIF’s DE program. Photograph by Prashant Panjiar, November 2017 Photograph by Prashant Panjiar, November 2017 Small Photo: Student Srinivas with his classmates at the Zilla Parishad High School, Challur village, Telangana. Pages 46 & 47 Photograph by Prashant Panjiar, November 2017 Children at an LRC run under AIF’s LAMP program in village Jamanyamal, district Dangs, Gujarat. LEARNING AND MIGRATION PROGRAM: Photograph by Prashant Panjiar, November 2017 Large Photo: Preeti, a student under AIF’s LAMP program, run by implementing partner Swapath, with her mother at BACK COVER their home in village Zaran, district Dangs, Gujarat. Baby Nandini with her mother Pramila, ASHA Padma Killo Photograph by Prashant Panjiar, November 2017 and MANSI mentor K Bhavani at a community meeting conducted under the MANSI program in Tokuru village, Small Photo: Preeti, a student of the LRC under AIF’s LAMP Paderu ITDA, Andhra Pradesh. program, with implementing partner Swapath, in village Photograph by Prashant Panjiar, October 2017 Zaran, district Dangs, Gujarat. Photograph by Prashant Panjiar, November 2017

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