GOONJ FOUNDATION
http://www.youthkiawaaz.com/2010/06/did-you-hear-the-goonj/
The eldest among four siblings, he came from a big middle-class family with limited resources. His
upbringing taught him the relevance of making the most of the little. An understanding further imbibed
from his mother who has played a profound influence in his life. A brilliant mind, he studied journalism
as well as Advertising & Public Relations from Indian Institute of Mass Communication, and then
Masters in Economics. While still a graduate student in 1991, he traveled to Uttarkashi, North India
after a major earthquake. Missing out on his classes, he lived in tents for days and helped in the relief
efforts. This shocked his urban sensibilities. After completing his studies, he joined the corporate
sector. Insatiate, he craved for that feeling of satisfaction that went beyond one’s personal goal and
self-interest. His longing to give back to society, do something different to benefit thousands and
involve people’s participation inspired an idea. He ultimately left Escorts as Manager, Corporate
Communications in 1998 to work full time on his idea.
Goonj, his dream for many years, was set up in the same year. From collecting clothes from his own
house, relatives and friends and distributing them on the roads in the chilly winter nights of Delhi, his
dream has come a long way. He has organized an effective distribution channel for disposing off
reusable resources lying in urban, well-off households.
Through shifting surplus urban resources to some of the poverty-stricken rural areas, he is making a
difference in the lives of thousands who lack the basic resources needed for survival. He has
witnessed cases where a few pieces of clothing has freed up meager resources of the poor for more
pressing needs and families being saved from a debt cycle for borrowing to buy clothes before a
festival or even as a dire necessity. Clothes do not involve heavy investments, but protect millions
from extreme weather, shelter the homeless from the elements. His nationwide movement
‘Vastradaan’ is geared toward this end. Working with local grassroots organization operating in rural
areas, Goonj has built a network of about 60 distribution partners with bases in West Bengal, Assam,
Uttaranchal, Kashmir and Jharkhand.
His uniqueness lies in thinking and putting in place an efficient, systematic distribution channel on a
nationwide scale and the establishment of a nodal agency for generating vital resources for the rural
poor. His idea is also the first effort where instead of focusing on a limited target group or limited
product, he is trying to spread awareness at such a level that anytime an urban household thinks of
disposing off reusable materials it is aware of a channel to its fullest utilization. His organization Goonj
has a strong network of 300 Volunteers, works with corporate houses, schools, transporters, resident
welfare associations, neighborhood communities and local grassroots organizations working in rural
areas. Though Vastradaan operates as a continuous process, a part of his strategy has been also to
focus on disaster preparedness. The idea is to spread the network in such a way that any time a
disaster strikes, Goonj can reach them the relief material at the earliest. It made a difference in
Gujarat riots where Goonj was able to collect truckloads of material within a few days’ time and
support thousands. Beginning with 67 items of clothing from his own closet to initiate Vastradaan, he
has been sending 3,000-5,000 kg of material every month. He has already reached out and benefited
lakhs of people. He has meticulously linked the urban affluent and the rural poor. His idea tends to
bridge the gap between the supply that exists due to the urban phenomena like space constraints and
rising consumerism on one hand and demands for basic commodities that exists with millions in the
country. His aim is to ultimately make large-scale resource mobilization a reality and to further apply
his model with clothing to other critical resources such as medicines, books.