However,
the sense of futility and hopelessness was questioned by many of us. A motley
group of housewives, doctors, engineers, accountants and men and women from many
other professions gathered in the summer of 1987 to examine the feasibility of
reaching out to the poorest of children - primarily those whose home is
the street, who live out their entire childhood in hunger and filth to become
incorrigible predators of the future, forever eyeing the pockets of others. The
meeting was intense with discussions, debates and votes. The consensus was that
a simple project was to be started to help "street children" at a
location most of us were already familiar with - Calcutta - and we
would then move on to other areas in India as well as to other countries as our
funds allowed. We agreed the work would be difficult but not impossible. We dipped
into our own pockets, hired a lawyer, attended to the nitty gritty details, elected
our officers, vowed to do our best, and Street Children International sprang to
life. Project Calcutta swung into action in 1990 when 12 children were picked
up from the Calcutta Streets for shelter and education and vocational training.
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