Sewa International gets USD 500,000 reconstruction grant

Press Trust of India  |  Houston 

Sewa International, an Indian non-for-profit organisation, has been awarded with a USD 500,000 grant to rebuild devastated by last year in the US state of

In the next 18 months, Sewa will help reconstruct 11 completely destroyed and 24 partially-damaged homes, benefitting 154 people.

"This grant from the is an affirmation of the good work done by Sewa. The total cost for rebuilding and repairing at Rosharon for this project is estimated to be about USD 675,000, and Sewa International's donors are contributing USD 175,000 towards this cause," said a Sewa

Sewa also received a USD 397,000 grant awarded by the Community Foundation (GHCF) in December 2017, providing case management help for 600 individuals. Completing the work in record time, ended up helping 1,600 individuals from minority and underprivileged communities, the said.

The team members in were instrumental in raising funds from its supporters across the US.

In less than a year since hit, Sewa raised over USD 2 million, including the latest grant of USD 500,000, for disaster recovery.

"Despite generous support of funding agencies, the task at hand is enormous," Achalesh Amar, of Sewa told

"The experience of rebuilding Rosharon has been demanding, sometimes frustrating, but more often rewarding and always an optimistic one. The American Red Cross grant allows us to lay the foundation, literally one home at a time -- to rebuild and revitalize Little Cambodia," Amar said.

Gitesh Desai, of the Houston Chapter of said the American Red Cross grant further strengthens Sewa's resolve to fulfill "our mission of giving back to the society through selfless service".

One of the most affected communities was Rosharon in which suffered major damage. Known as Little Cambodia, Rosharon with a population of approximately 1,400, is 30 miles south of Houston.

Home to predominantly Cambodians refugees, and some Laotian and Mexican refugees, the majority eke out a livelihood in this insular setting through subsistence farming.

Families here had fled in the late 1970s escaping the genocidal regime of the Nearly fifty per cent of the families are involved in growing water spinach, a staple of Asian cuisine. When roared through South Texas, it devastated "Little Cambodia", bringing down houses, rendering people homeless, and leveling greenhouses thus destroying livelihoods.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, August 08 2018. 05:25 IST