Challenge for Change
Contact us: KhadiOrganics@gmail.com
Sadhana Prasad and Joshua Schmidt, the founders of Khadi Organics, undertook the climb to the South base camp of Mt. Everest over a three week period in December 2008. The goals were global and across Canada: To raise funds for children in need on Vancouver Island and the Gulf Islands, to raise funds for equipment on the Medicine Program at St Mary’s Hospital in Kitchener-Waterloo, and to assist the village Naya Wathoda in India to become self-sufficient through socially and environmentally sustainable initiatives.
The trek was both a personal challenge, and a challenge to the general population to make a lasting difference for those in need.
WHO BENEFITTED FROM THE FUNDS RAISED?
All proceeds were donated. 
ONTARIO DONATIONS: to the Geriatric Services / Medicine Program of St. Mary’s General Hospital (SMGH). The funds were used to purchase much needed bladder scanner, vital signs monitors, pulse oximeter, bariatric wheelchair/ stretcher/ bed, and external hearing augmentation devices. The equipment will be used in the Emergency Room and throughout the hospital.

BRITISH COLUMBIA DONATIONS: to support the Queen Alexandra Foundation (QAF) for Children in support of the QA orthotics, prosthetics, and wheelchair seating program for Island kids in need. This program is one of only two public pediatric orthotic and seating programs in BC and the money will be used to fund safety checks, customization, and repairs of the equipment used by 500 children and youth with special needs.
INDIA DONATIONS FOR PROJECTS:
1.IRRIGATION PIPELINE (Naya Wathoda Village, Maharashtra, India)
Currently, farmers of Naya Wathoda are completely dependent upon the monsoon rains to water their crops, and can only harvest one crop per season. This single crops income stretches only so far after paying for costly chemical fertilizers and pesticides resulting in many farmers having no choice but to borrow from moneylenders with rates as high as 10% per week. Even worse, some of these farmers are pushed to commit suicide from the shame of being unable to care for their families.
However hope lies within a nearby canal which can provide water to their fields year round, allowing for two or even three crops a year! These extra crops will allow the farmers to prosper during the dry season and, with the inspiration of the village elder, adopt organic agricultural methods. All they need is access to a water irrigation system to transport the water.
2.SEED BANK (Vidarbha region, Maharashtra, India)
The Vidarbha region of India has been using industrial methods of farming since the Green Revolution, and now most farmers have lost any knowledge of organic methods of agriculture relying purely on genetically modified seeds and the costly chemical fertilizers & pesticides required to make them grow.This cycle, however, can be broken by building a Seed Bank to provide hundreds of farmers within the area access to heritage seeds and the education needed to successfully make the transition to organic agriculture. These farmers will in turn replenish seed stocks using their own crops, protecting the bio-diversity of India’s plant life and replenishing the eco-systems of their fields.www.Navdanya.com
3. FENCE FOR FIELDS GROWING HERITAGE SEEDS

