LIVE UPDATES:

X no. of patients in remote villages were helped with cataract surgeries from Jan to Mar 2022 by Operation Blessing India.

YOUR GIFT IS CHANGING LIVES

A nonprofit humanitarian organization you can trust.

OUR MISSION

Operation Blessing India and our partners are dedicated to empowering people to live with dignity and to alleviate human need and suffering in India.

WHAT WE DO

Hunger Relief

YOU are helping fill hungry bellies and fight hunger-related health problems through compassionate hunger relief programs in schools and communities

Clean Water

Water is essential to life and with Operation Blessing India YOU are bringing clean water to the poor and suffering through thoughtful and innovative clean water solutions that have the power to shape a brighter future.

Disaster Relief

From floods and cyclones here in India, to earthquakes and humanitarian crises, your partnership helps Operation Blessing India to be first on the ground with relief and long-term recovery for those facing devastation and loss.

Medical Care

Through medical brigades, community health awareness, women's health programs and life changing surgeries, YOU are helping to heal the sick and hurting with kindness and care.

OUR STORY

Khatima, is a town and a municipal board in Uddham Singh Nagar district in the foothills of the Himalayas. People in the community majorly belong to Schedule Caste and Schedule Tribe. The primary occupation of the people in this area is agriculture and is well known for its paddy crop in the state or in India. Operation Blessing began its community development project here in August 2018. Watch how Operation Blessing’s Micro Enterprise & Livelihood (ME&L) project has empowered women by mobilizing them to enhance their community participation and sustain livelihood.

A Hope Unimagined and a Smile Restored

MADHYA PRADESH, INDIA – 22-year-old Durga Uikey was living a normal life, as best as she could, when suddenly, two years ago, she began experiencing extreme pain in her lower jaw. Being daily wage workers, she and her parents could only afford going to a small, local clinic and a government hospital in Betul.
Read More…

A nonprofit humanitarian organization you can trust.

DONATE NOW

A FAMILY’S CRY FOR HELP
DEOGARH DISTRICT, JHARKHAND – Meet Dular Murmu, a 30-year-old woman from Pandanatan village of the Deogarh district in Jharkhand, India. She belongs to the Santhal tribe, the third largest tribe in India. The occupation of the Santhals revolves around the forests in which they reside. Their basic needs are fulfilled from trees and plants of the forests. They are also engaged in hunting, fishing and cultivation for their livelihood. Dular lives with her husband and three children. Her husband works as a daily wage labourer. Her family became an outcast in the village due to caste issue and were prohibited to fetch water from the community wells. ​