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What Happens When We Really Listen

Author(s):
Megha Suhas, Prapti Foundation

I didnโ€™t set out to start a foundation. I just wanted to sit with the children. Tell them stories. Watch them laugh.

But what I witnessed in that Anganwadi broke something in me. And, maybe, stitched something else back together.

This story isnโ€™t about an organization. Itโ€™s about a little girl in a frilled dress, whose tears taught me that silence protects no one.

Prapti was born from that momentโ€”not as an act of charity, but as a promise: that no child should ever fear the very place meant to nurture them. I still carry her eyes with me. But now, I carry the joy tooโ€”of seeing children safe, learning, smiling. Thatโ€™s the work. Thatโ€™s the promise.

Inside a cramped Anganwadi, one moment of cruelty sparked a quiet rebellionโ€”and gave birth to a foundation built on healing, safety, and the right to a gentle childhood.

It started with a childโ€™s question.

โ€œWho are you?โ€ came a tiny voice from inside a cramped garage-turned-classroom. Curious eyes looked up at me. I hesitated, then smiled gently. โ€œIโ€™m Megha. Whatโ€™s this place?โ€

โ€œOur Anganwadi!โ€ another child piped up, proud and shy. The term was unfamiliar to me. I stepped inside. Scattered mats, peeling alphabet posters, and a rusted cupboard filled the small room. In one corner, a kitchen with food stacked precariouslyโ€”it didnโ€™t feel safe.

A helper came over, looking slightly uncomfortable. โ€œMadam, the teacher isnโ€™t here today.โ€

โ€œCould I sit with them a while?โ€ I asked.

She shrugged, cautious but accepting. I sat on the mats among the children, telling them a simple story. Laughter quickly filled the tiny space, echoing warmly off the bare walls. This became our daily ritual.

Every afternoon, their eyes lit up when I arrived, hungry for the stories that let their imaginations soar beyond the garage walls.

Until one day, everything changed.

A new child had joinedโ€”barely two and a half, small and trembling. Her tiny fingers clutched a frilled dress, the kind mothers choose to make their daughters feel special. She clung to the wall, softly crying.

The teacher arrived later, already irritated.

โ€œStop crying, or youโ€™ll be burnt in the Anganwadi!โ€ she snapped.

My heart stopped. Surely, this wasnโ€™t real. Yet the childโ€™s widened eyes told another storyโ€”one of fear she shouldnโ€™t know at her age.

The next day, the little girl was still crying. Frustrated, the teacher marched over to the kitchen, grabbed a gas lighter, and pressed it near the childโ€™s trembling lips.

โ€œWill you still cry now?โ€ she mocked.

In that instant, something inside me snapped. I rushed forward, pulling the girl safely into my arms.

โ€œWhat are you doing? Stop!โ€

The room fell silent. Wide-eyed children stared, motionless and pale.

My voice shook, anger and fear entwined.

โ€œThis isnโ€™t teaching. Hurting a child wonโ€™t solve anything.โ€

The teacher glared defiantly.

โ€œThis is how itโ€™s done here, madam. Donโ€™t interfere.โ€

โ€œI will interfere,โ€ I said firmly. โ€œIf you hurt these children, people will know.โ€

โ€œLeave my Anganwadi right now!โ€ she shouted.

I left, heart heavy and bruised. As I looked back, the little girl still stood clutching her special dress, tears streaming down her cheeks.

That night, sleep eluded me. Her fear-filled eyes haunted every thought. The damage done to her tender heart felt irreversible.

And that was the night the Prapti Foundation was born.

Praptiโ€”a promise made in darkness, a wish fulfilled with hope. A commitment that no child would ever experience such cruelty again.

We would build safe spaces where children learn without fear, train teachers to nurture them and guide parents to support them lovingly.

It wasnโ€™t just an ideaโ€”it became our mission.

Months later, I entered another Anganwadi we had recently transformed. A child ran towards me, eyes sparkling, clutching a bright storybook.

โ€œAkka, look! New books!โ€ she exclaimed.

I knelt beside her, smiling. โ€œYes, and thereโ€™s much more to come.โ€

Prapti Foundation is a journey from heartbreak to hopeโ€”one child at a time.

About the Author
Megha Suhas, Founder of Prapti Foundation, is a visionary social entrepreneur with over 25 years of experience in advancing education
and empowerment. She has transformed Anganwadis, trained teachers, empowered women and girl students in digital and financial
literacy, and fostered community awareness, creating inclusive, sustainable learning environments.

About the Storytelling Fellowship
This fellowship was created to give people working at the heart of social change a rare space to pause, reflect, and writeโ€”not reports or case studies, but real stories. Ten fellows came together to explore what it means to witness, to listen, and to share experiences that are often left unseen. With time, mentorship, and care, they shaped narratives that move beyond data or impact statementsโ€”stories that evoke, that remind us what it truly means to care, to act, and to stay present.

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