“There would be no life without eyesight,” says Vinit, the proud father of twin girls, Ayan and Vyan.
Last summer, Vinit and his wife Anchal learned that their baby girls were born with Retinopathy of Prematurity (ROP). Together, the family has faced a challenging journey, witnessing the incredible growth and resilience of their precious daughters.
ROP is a serious eye condition that affects premature and low-birthweight infants and is the primary cause of childhood blindness in this demographic. Vinit and Anchal know just how frightening ROP can be.
In June 2022, during her seventh month of pregnancy, Anchal gave birth to twin girls in Moradabad, India. Both babies weighed just three pounds and were breathing rapidly. They were rushed and admitted to the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) to receive treatment for lung infections.
While in the NICU, the doctor treating the girls recommended that they both undergo screening for ROP at the C.L. Gupta Eye Institute, our partner hospital in Moradabad. Following the screening, both girls were diagnosed with severe cases of ROP.

Vinit and Anchal had never heard of ROP before, nor did they have any idea how severe the condition can be. They feared their children wouldn’t be able to see. After the girls’ diagnoses, the doctor guided Vinit and Anchal through the screening process and showed them images of their daughters’ conditions.
There are five stages of ROP and treatment no longer works in the last two stages, ultimately resulting in childhood blindness. However, if identified and screened within one month of pre-term birth, ROP in stage three is completely treatable. This is why early detection is critical.
From the outside, nothing appeared wrong. However, when Vinit looked at the screens, he saw the severity of ROP. Both Ayan's and Vyan's screens showed blood leaking inside their eyes. The doctor explained to the parents that if the girls didn’t receive timely treatment, they would have further complications and possibly lose their vision.
I feel so lucky we came to know about ROP at the right time," says Vinit. "If we had delayed a month, then there would be no possibility of a cure."
Vinit, father of twins Ayan & Vyan
At just five weeks old, both babies received treatment at the C.L. Gupta Eye Institute. They underwent injections in both eyes, followed by laser treatment later on. Now, Vinit and Anchal take their daughters for regular monthly checkups at the hospital.
Thanks to the generosity of our donors and the early diagnosis and treatment provided by local doctors, both girls have fully recovered and are thriving today.
Vinit and Anchal are grateful to Operation Eyesight and the C.L. Gupta Eye Institute. "Every parent hopes the best for their baby and that they are well and grow properly," explains Vinit. "The hospital has made things very easy. Otherwise, there would be no life without eyesight."

We began addressing ROP three years ago in the Moradabad District of the state of Uttar Pradesh, India. A local team now regularly visits 40 maternity centres in the area to examine preterm newborns, and the screening programs are working.
As of June 2023, the program, known as “Born Too Soon”, has screened 253 premature babies, of which 49 were diagnosed with ROP and provided treatment. That is 49 infants who have had their sight preserved thanks to early intervention.
You can help expand our Born Too Soon program and ensure more families like Vinit's experience a life free of avoidable blindness.
Calgary, Canada June 25, 2023 – Operation Eyesight is pleased to celebrate 60 years of partnering with communities worldwide to give the life-changing Gift of Sight through quality, accessible and affordable eye health care. Together with its global community of donors and partners, over the past six decades the organization has grown to become a global leader in eye health.
“2023 is a milestone year for Operation Eyesight. Through the generosity and compassion of our donors, partners and staff, we are transforming more lives than ever before,” says Operation Eyesight President & CEO Kashinath Bhoosnurmath. “As one of the oldest and most well-established organizations in the global eye health sector, we are continuing to grow and evolve as we set our sights on a future free of avoidable blindness.”

Operation Eyesight was started by Calgary businessman Art Jenkyns in 1963. From humble beginnings fundraising to support cataract surgeries in India, the organization has grown into an international development organization that is making quality and affordable eye health care available to those who need it most. Today, it has established programs in eight countries across South Asia and sub-Saharan Africa. With work underway to expand into three more countries, Operation Eyesight is staying true to its mission to prevent blindness and restore sight.
“Our approach has evolved, but our mission remains the same. Whether it is a simple pair of eyeglasses or more advanced care such as eye surgery, we believe everyone has the right to sight,” Bhoosnurmath adds. “Our innovative model and focus on communities and leveraging their unique strengths continues to make us a global leader in eye health.”
In 2022, the organization screened nearly 2.76 million people globally for eye health conditions and provided sight-restoring eye surgery to more than 160,000 people.
Partnership with local governments and hospitals, and investment by these agencies into project costs, helps ensure the organization’s projects are sustainable and that impact is felt long after Operation Eyesight leaves a community.
Operation Eyesight’s model is both replicable and sustainable because it is focused on addressing the root causes of vision loss. Today, its teams’ work is about so much more than providing eyeglasses and surgeries – it is also about improving access to healthcare, bringing clean water to communities, and supporting education and rights for women and girls.
“Our work is made possible through support from our global community of staff, local physicians and community health workers, like-minded partners, local government departments, generous donors and communities themselves,” Bhoosnurmath says. “On behalf of all of us at Operation Eyesight, I would like to thank our global community for their commitment to our shared vision of the elimination of avoidable blindness. Happy 60th anniversary to us all.”
Operation Eyesight is a Canada-based international development organization working to prevent blindness and restore sight in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia. In June 2023, Operation Eyesight will celebrate 60 years of collaborating with local hospitals and government partners to invest in sustainable eye health treatment, blindness prevention and community development.
To learn more, visit operationeyesight.com/60years.
Iten, Elgeyo-Marakwet County, Kenya, March 21, 2023 – More patients living in Elgeyo-Marakwet County, Kenya and surrounding areas will have access to advanced eye health care, thanks to a new operation theatre now open at the Eye Unit at Iten County Referral Hospital.
Made possible through the generosity of Operation Eyesight’s donors, the operation theatre was established in partnership with the county government and the Ophthalmic Services Unit at Kenya’s National Ministry of Health. The facility will provide the space and equipment needed to provide sight-restoring eye surgery to patients.

“Healthy eyes and vision care change lives. For a parent, it can mean the chance to provide for their family. For a child, it can mean the chance to attend and thrive at school,” says Alice Mwangi, Operation Eyesight’s Country Director for Kenya, pictured above with Kashinath Bhoosnurmath, President & CEO.
“We are bringing quality eye health care to people’s front doors, and this new operation theatre builds on the success of other eye services that have recently been added to the community.”
To support the new operation theatre, Operation Eyesight has provided training for three ophthalmic workers, supported the purchase of consumables and eye medicine, and conducted community outreach activities. The organization also supported the construction of the Iten Eye Unit, which opened in October 2021, providing much-needed space for doctors and patients.

“In the past, the eye unit operated out of two small rooms. Many patients and families previously faced barriers to accessing eye health care, including cost and lack of locally-available services,” explains Mwangi. “Today, we are able to better meet demand while also raising awareness about the available services in the surrounding community.”
Operation Eyesight began working in Elgeyo-Marakwet County in 2008. As part of its Hospital-Based Community Eye Health Programs, Operation Eyesight has trained 36 local community health volunteers to deliver health education, screen community members for eye problems and refer them for treatment if needed. To date, 180,000 local residents have been screened for eye conditions and over 75,000 people have received treatment, including more than 3,500 people who have received sight-restoring cataract surgeries.

So far, Operation Eyesight and partners have declared 35 villages as avoidable blindness-free, which means the communities are free of any untreated cases of vision loss.
Through the program, OneSight EssilorLuxottica Foundation has donated over 1,000 pairs of readers for community members.
Operation Eyesight is a Canada-based international development organization working to prevent blindness and restore sight in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia. In June 2023, Operation Eyesight will celebrate 60 years of collaborating with local hospitals and government partners to invest in sustainable eye health treatment, blindness prevention and community development.
Calgary, Canada October 12, 2023 – Today on World Sight Day, Operation Eyesight is reminding everybody, everywhere to love their eyes and prioritize their eye health.
This year, Operation Eyesight teams worldwide are joining the International Agency for the Prevention of Blindness and the global eye health community in focusing on the world’s workforce, reminding everyone of the importance of loving their eyes at work.

“Healthy eyes mean people can work, care for their families, support themselves and contribute to the economy. That’s why eye health at work is more important than ever,” says Kashinath Bhoosnurmath, Operation Eyesight’s President and CEO. “World Sight Day 2023 is extra special for Operation Eyesight, as we are also celebrating 60 years of preventing blindness and restoring sight.”
With the support of donors and partners globally, over the past six decades Operation Eyesight has transformed the lives of millions of children, women and men worldwide, by bringing sustainable eye health care to communities that need it most.

Unaddressed visual impairment continues to have a serious impact on workplace productivity, and a third of workers worldwide have uncorrected vision that could be improved. Additionally, people are working differently, including at home, and are also working longer hours.
Operation Eyesight is challenging everyone to consider the health of their eyes and to book their annual eye exam. Staff and employers can also visit operationeyesight.com/worldsightday for tips and resources on keeping eye health in focus in the workplace.
“Across sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia, our teams are marking World Sight Day with screening events at various workplaces, as well as celebrations with government and hospital partners,” says Dr. Ritu Ghosh, Operation Eyesight’s Global Director, International Programmes.
“We know that almost everyone on the planet will experience an eye health issue in their lifetime, but more than a billion people do not have access to eye care services to correct, treat or prevent vision loss. That’s why World Sight Day is such an important annual event.”
To learn more or make a donation, visit operationeyesight.com/worldsightday.
Operation Eyesight is a Canada-based international development organization working to prevent blindness and restore sight. In 2023, Operation Eyesight celebrates 60 years of collaborating with local hospitals and government partners to invest in sustainable eye health treatment, blindness prevention and community development.
World Sight Day, observed annually on the second Thursday of October, is coordinated by the International Agency for the Prevention of Blindness (IAPB) and supported by almost 200 IAPB member organizations, including Operation Eyesight.
For further information, please contact:
Colin Zak
Communications Specialist
Operation Eyesight Universal
ZakC[at]operationeyesight.com
@OpEyesight
Calgary, November 23, 2022 – Operation Eyesight is pleased to welcome Dr. Fatimah Gilani to the Operation Eyesight Canada Board of Directors.
As an ophthalmologist, Dr. Gilani is involved in both research as well as clinical practice, specializing in treatment and management of a variety of eye conditions, ranging from cataracts to refractive surgery procedures, as well as a range of retinal diseases and conditions. Dr. Gilani attended medical school at the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland and subsequently completed her medical internship and ophthalmology residency at universities across the United States, including at the Baystate Medical Center, an affiliate of Tufts University. Having grown up in Kenya, she brings an international perspective to her practice and throughout her career has participated in charitable work in Kenya, Pakistan, Vietnam, Mexico and Honduras.

“As an ophthalmologist, seeing the difference the gift of sight makes in someone’s life is the most rewarding part of my job,” Dr. Gilani says. “I’m excited to be joining a global community that impacts not only the lives of individuals, but entire communities, regions and countries.”
Operation Eyesight is also pleased to welcome Jaspreet Grewal to its Canadian Board of Directors.

As a clinician, venture partner and published researcher, Jaspreet Grewal brings to the Board nearly two decades of experience in the life sciences industry.
Jaspreet has held several positions in various healthcare organizations, which has given her a broad skill set and robust healthcare and investment network while working in Canada, the United States, the United Kingdom and Bermuda.
She holds a Master’s in Clinical Vision Sciences from Georgetown University, an Executive Certificate in Public Health from Harvard University and an Executive MBA from the London School of Economics and Political Science. Her research interests have focused drug and device trials within a range of clinical areas, including ophthalmology and paediatrics.
“I’m passionate about building ecosystems, supporting innovation, and exploring the potential of new and forward-thinking therapies for patients and families,” Jaspreet says. “Operation Eyesight is focused on partnership and leading innovative approaches to care and programs. I’m excited to be part of that. Having interned at Operation Eyesight during my undergraduate years, it’s a delight to be able to continue my contribution at a Board level and work with such an impactful, global team.”
In addition to her volunteer role with Operation Eyesight, Jaspreet is the CEO of Knowde Group, a global life sciences consulting firm. She is also a Board Director with BioAlberta and Heroic Hearts Project Canada. Additionally, Jaspreet is an Expert Advisor with Innovate Calgary, the Global Life Sciences Consultant for Calgary Economic Development, Chair of the Clinical Research Association of Canada and a Founding Member of the Alberta Life Sciences Investment Committee.
Operation Eyesight is a registered charity in Canada, the United States, the United Kingdom and India, with active boards of directors in the United States, the United Kingdom, India, Ghana, Kenya and Zambia. Learn more about our boards here.

Calgary, November 16, 2022 – Charity Intelligence Canada has named Operation Eyesight one of the Top 10 Impact Charities for the fifth consecutive year, and one of the Top 10 International Impact Charities for the third year in a row.
Each year, Charity Intelligence reports on more than 800 charities. In 2022, Operation Eyesight was among the top performers when it comes to measurable demonstrated impact. Organizations are rated based on several factors, focused on the positive change created by every dollar received through donations.
“Operation Eyesight is a leader when it comes to our focus on the unique needs of individuals and communities. This translates into community buy-in, which ensures that our impact is both sustainable and long-lasting,” says Kashinath Bhoosnurmath, President and CEO of Operation Eyesight. “Everything we do is made possible thanks to our global community of supporters – our donors, our local partners, and our amazing staff and volunteers. They have joined us in our mission because of our unique and evidence-based approach to addressing the root causes of vision loss.”
Restoring sight and preventing blindness is connected with a host of other international development issues, including education, access to fresh water, equality for women and girls and whole-person health. That’s why Operation Eyesight partners with local governments and hospitals to bring eye health care to the most remote and underserved communities and address the underlying causes of vision loss.
This ensures the impact of our work is felt long after we leave a community.
Across the globe, more than one billion people are living with vision loss, of which 90 percent is preventable or treatable. In many cases, a simple eye exam and a pair of prescription eyeglasses are all that is needed to restore someone’s sight. In other cases, access to clean water and eye health education can prevent loss of sight. Through our partnership with communities, Operation Eyesight impacts the lives of individuals by restoring their independence, helping them break the cycle of poverty, and empowering them to build brighter futures for themselves and their communities.
Operation Eyesight is a Calgary-based charity that currently works in Bangladesh, India, Nepal, Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya, Liberia and Zambia.
To learn more, visit operationeyesight.com or charityintelligence.ca/charity-profiles/top-10-impact-charities.

For more information or to arrange an interview, contact:
Colin Zak
Communications Specialist
Operation Eyesight Universal
Phone: +1 403-471-0722
zakc@operationeyesight.com
About Operation Eyesight
Founded in Calgary in 1963, Operation Eyesight is an international development organization working to prevent blindness and restore sight. In collaboration with local hospitals, governments and community partners, Operation Eyesight invests in sustainable treatment, prevention and community development activities to address specific eye health problems as well as the root causes of avoidable blindness. To learn more or make a donation, visit operationeyesight.com | Twitter/Instagram @OpEyesight | Facebook/LinkedIn @OperationEyesightUniversal

CALGARY, August 30, 2022 – Operation Eyesight is pleased to announce that we have been granted Consultative Status with the United Nations (UN) Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC).
Operation Eyesight was granted special consultative status – a status granted to NGOs that have a special competence in a field – for our expertise in global eye health.
“It is humbling for our collective work and expertise in delivering eye health care to be recognized on the international stage. This would not be possible without our partners, donors and communities of work worldwide,” says Kashinath Bhoosnurmath, our President and CEO.
“This gives us the voice to influence the direction of public health policy and will also provide a platform to table issues related to eye health, education, clean water and infrastructure.”
ECOSOC is one of the six principal bodies of the UN which oversees the economic and social fields of the organization. With 54 elected members and 1,600 NGOs, the Council gathers every July in a central forum to curate policy suggestions based on current, international economic and social issues.
Along with ECOSOC, Operation Eyesight will have the opportunity to work with other UN bodies working with NGOs, such as the General Assembly and Human Rights Council.
“There is close alignment between our work and the UN Sustainable Development Goals. As an international development organization, we are excited to collaborate with more partners globally, and ultimately impact more lives,” Bhoosnurmath adds.
UN officials will regularly review the actions of Operation Eyesight, which will encourage our organization to evolve and innovate, as we continue to establish high levels of accountability across all departments and programs.
Calgary, July 27, 2022 – Operation Eyesight is pleased to welcome Rob Ohlson to the Operation Eyesight Canada Board of Directors.
Rob is President and Owner of Calgary custom home builder Maillot Homes. He first got involved with Operation Eyesight in 2005 as a way of celebrating his late father’s life and career in India. In his honour, Rob funded the Bob Ohlson Centre for Sight in Visakhapatnam, India and later travelled overseas to inaugurate the centre in person.

“It was incredible to see first-hand the impact that Operation Eyesight has in the lives of families and communities every day,” Rob says. “It’s the passion of our people and the impact we can have together that has kept me involved with Operation Eyesight over the years.”
Rob previously served on the Board from 2011 to 2019, but his support for Operation Eyesight has extended well beyond his service on the Board. In 2015, when a donor decided to run across Death Valley, a desert valley in California, to raise funds for Operation Eyesight, Rob volunteered to join her run crew and ended up running several kilometres across the hottest place on Earth.
The following year, Rob championed Operation Eyesight’s “Washing Away Blindness” campaign, bringing fresh water to 24 communities in Zambia and helping to prevent the spread of blinding trachoma. He was later featured as CTV Calgary’s “Inspired Albertan”.
Having grown up in Libya, Canada and Malaysia, Rob has a keen understanding of different cultures and international development issues. He has also spent time visiting Operation Eyesight’s programs in Ghana, Kenya, Rwanda, Zambia and India.
“Visiting Operation Eyesight’s various countries of work only inspires me more when it comes to our mission and the impact that we can have together,” Rob adds. “I’m excited to be part of that.”
Operation Eyesight is a registered charity in Canada, the United States, the United Kingdom and India, with boards of directors in the United States, the United Kingdom, India, Ghana, Kenya and Zambia. To view the full list of directors, visit operationeyesight.com/about/board-of-directors.
July 12, 2022 – Kenya and Tanzania are one step closer to eliminating blinding trachoma, as the two countries today launched a cross-border mass drug administration exercise.
The joint effort, led by Operation Eyesight in partnership with the ministries of health in both countries, as well as Sightsavers, will distribute antibiotics to more than 1.3 million people with trachoma or at risk of developing the painful bacterial infection. This will provide much-needed treatment to communities living along the Kenya-Tanzania border, across the counties of Kajiado, and Narok on the Kenyan side and the neighbouring districts of Ngorongoro and Longido on Tanzanian side.

In Kenya, trachoma is endemic in 12 counties, impacting a combined population of approximately 11 million people. If left untreated, this painful bacterial infection leads to irreversible blindness.
“Trachoma knows no borders, and many pastoralist communities in the area are semi-nomadic. Therefore, collaboration between governments is critical to ensure no patient at risk is unable to receive antibiotics,” explains Alice Mwangi, Operation Eyesight’s Country Director for Kenya. “Antibiotics are an effective and proven way to prevent the spread of trachoma. Together, we are eliminating trachoma from entire villages and communities.”

Teams of government health workers and partners like Operation Eyesight will begin efforts in Narok and coordinate work with teams in nearby Tanzania.
Mwangi says the upcoming Mass Drug Administration (MDA) builds on the success of the previous MDA in Narok County, which provided antibiotics to 460,000 people needing treatment last year. Previous efforts by both governments to distribute antibiotics saw sections of the local communities miss out on treatment as they moved in search of pasture.
“Collaboration with both ministries of health is a historic step towards eliminating trachoma from Kenya for good,” Mwangi adds.
We are partnering with national and county governments with the shared goal of eliminating trachoma from Kenya by 2025.
SAFE from trachoma
Although it can be treated with a simple dose of antibiotics, more than 1.9 million Kenyans and 116 million people across Africa are in immediate need of treatment of blinding trachoma. This bacterial infection causes the eyelashes to turn inwards, causing painful scarring on the cornea, leading to permanent blindness if left untreated.
Because trachoma is spread through flies and personal contact, women and children are most at risk of contracting or re-contracting this blinding condition.
Distributing antibiotics is just one part of the World Health Organization’s ‘SAFE’ strategy for eliminating trachoma:
“Eliminating trachoma goes beyond simply treating the disease. It’s also about issues like access to water and sanitation and bringing health education to communities. This plays an integral role in preventing re-transmission of the disease,” explains Mwangi.
“Community eye health activities like these are helping us shift the dial on not only trachoma, but other conditions as well.”
Neglected Tropical Diseases: diseases of poverty and inequality
Trachoma is one of 20 diseases classified as a Neglected Tropical Disease (NTD) – a group of diseases that have one thing in common: they debilitate and disfigure.
They also affect one billion people living in poverty worldwide.
Operation Eyesight is inviting governments, institutions and organizations globally to join us in signing the Kigali Declaration – a pledge to partner together to ensure that trachoma and other NTDs are eradicated, eliminated or controlled by 2030.
“Ending Neglected Tropical Diseases at its core is about addressing the root causes of these conditions – poverty and inequality. That’s why Operation Eyesight endorses the Kigali Declaration,” says Kashinath Bhoosnurmath, President and CEO of Operation Eyesight.
“As we move globally towards achieving universal health coverage and achieving the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals, we see each one of these are also steps towards ending needless vision loss.”
Bhoosnurmath says the Kigali Declaration is not just about eliminating trachoma and other NTDs, but also about taking steps to address inequality, strengthen health systems and leverage the unique strengths of communities.
“We hope that by signing this joint declaration, we can build on our success to date and take more steps forward as a global community.”

Making strides
Mwangi says the number of active trachoma cases in the region has steadily decreased due to the efforts of Operation Eyesight, governments and other partners. Rates of infection have steadily decreased from 2004 when trachoma infection rates in endemic areas of Kenya were above 30 per cent, to between 12.6 and 19.8 per cent in 2018.
The Kigali Declaration invites us all to a shared commitment to achieve the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals that target NTDs over the next decade.
“We have made great strides in eliminating trachoma from entire regions,” adds Mwangi. “But more work needs to be done in Africa in particular.”
Donate today to help prevent blindness and restore sight.
Operation Eyesight is one of 100 high impact NGOs across India selected by the GROW Fund to receive INR 80 lakhs (CAN $250,000) in funding over two years to build capabilities, resilience and future readiness.
HYDERABAD (INDIA) – Operation Eyesight India Trust is pleased to be selected as a recipient of EdelGive Foundation’s GROW Fund grant, in recognition of its critical and credible social impact work across India.
Operation Eyesight is one of 100 high impact NGOs across India selected by the GROW Fund to receive INR 80 lakhs (CAN $250,000) in funding over two years. This unique grant enables NGOs that are both impactful and community-based to build capabilities, resilience and future readiness.

This funding will support the expansion of programs and services of Operation Eyesight in India in order to reach more people suffering from vision loss and preventable blindness. It will also strengthen India’s health system by training women in the community to be Vision Technicians.
“Operation Eyesight continues to make strides by eliminating preventable blindness in entire regions in India,” explains Vikas Gora, Global Director of International Programs with Operation Eyesight. “It’s exciting to receive both recognition and support for the important and life-changing work our teams are doing in the community every day.”
Operation Eyesight has established 144 vision centres nationwide and has successfully declared 1,071 villages in India avoidable blindness-free. Each vision centre serves a population of approximately 50,000 people and brings quality eye health care closer to people who may not be able to travel to the nearest hospital. These centres act as a link between communities and partner hospitals, by providing eye exams, dispensing prescription eyeglasses and referring patients when specialist treatment is needed.
In 2021, Operation Eyesight has successfully launched 35 projects across 18 states in India, where vision loss and blindness remain a significant public health issue. This includes projects that support the integration of eye health care into India’s public health system, such as the Integrated Primary Eye Care Project in Arunachal Pradesh, which is a partnership between Operation Eyesight, Jhpeigo academic affiliates and the state Ministry of Health.
“Although 90 per cent of blindness is preventable, vision loss and blindness remain a significant driver of poverty and inequity across India and the globe,” says Operation Eyesight President & CEO Kashinath Bhoosnurmath. “The GROW Fund is unique because it is so forward-looking. This grant strengthens India’s entire health system because we prevent people from falling through the cracks when it comes to preventable blindness.”
By addressing organizations’ development needs, the GROW Fund aims to redefine philanthropy by creating NGOs that can become more resilient in the face of disruption and sustainable in the long-term.
“The cohort for GROW Fund grantees covers grassroots organizations working tirelessly with the underserved communities in diverse areas like poverty, health and sanitation, gender rights, education, climate, animal welfare and governance across 20 different states of the country,” says Vidya Shah, Executive Chairperson, EdelGive Foundation. “We remain steadfast in our commitment to enable these changemakers to tide over the challenges faced due to COVID-19 and increase their on-ground impact exponentially.”
Visit operationeyesight.com to learn more about Operation Eyesight and our work in India and across the globe.