Jas Kalra On Building Long-Term Care Systems For India’s Abandoned

Jas Kalra, President of The Earth Saviours Foundation, is building long-term residential care systems for abandoned elderly and vulnerable individuals in India, focusing on sustained support, and purpose-built shelter infrastructure.

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Jas Kalra
Jas Kalra
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In conversations around social welfare in India, the emphasis often rests on scale, funding, or policy intent. Far less attention is given to the day-to-day reality of caring for people who have been entirely abandoned by family and society, elderly individuals, people with mental disabilities, and those without documentation or social identity. Jas Kalra operates within this largely unseen space, where care is not episodic, but continuous.

Kalra is the President of The Earth Saviours Foundation, a Gurugram-based nonprofit organisation that provides full-time residential care to abandoned senior citizens and vulnerable individuals. The foundation currently operates shelter facilities in Bhandwari and Mandhawar, where residents receive food, medical attention, and daily support at no cost. Its work is built around sustained caregiving rather than short-term relief.

Founded by Kalra’s father, the organisation came under his leadership following his death. The transition placed Kalra in charge not only of continuing the foundation’s mission but also of managing its operational complexity. Residential care, unlike emergency intervention, demands consistent medical coordination, staffing, infrastructure upkeep, and long-term planning that extends beyond individual cases.

Many of the people brought into the foundation’s shelters are recovered from the streets, public spaces, or unsafe living conditions. Often, they arrive without identification or family contact. In some cases, families are traced, and reunification becomes possible. In others, abandonment is permanent, requiring long-term rehabilitation and supervised care. The organisation’s approach is deliberately non-transactional, with no fees or time limits placed on support.

An area of the foundation’s work that has drawn attention is its role in conducting dignified last rites for unclaimed bodies. For Kalra, this responsibility reflects a broader principle rather than an isolated act of compassion. He has previously described dignity as something that should not be contingent on utility, recognition, or visibility.

Beyond immediate caregiving, Kalra’s focus has increasingly shifted toward sustainability. Running residential shelters brings challenges that are rarely visible in public narratives, such as managing ongoing medical expenses, maintaining trained staff, and supporting individuals whose care needs may continue indefinitely. According to the organisation, addressing abandonment at scale requires purpose-built facilities rather than informal or temporary arrangements.

The Earth Saviours Foundation has outlined plans to develop larger, dedicated shelter infrastructure to respond to the growing number of abandoned elderly and vulnerable individuals in urban regions. These plans are framed as long-term responses to demographic and social change, rather than rapid expansion. Kalra has consistently emphasised that care systems must be designed to endure beyond individual leadership or public attention.

Kalra does not position his work as advocacy in the conventional sense. His observations stem from operational proximity to issues that are often avoided: ageing without family support, mental illness without institutional care, and death without recognition. The perspective he brings is shaped less by ideology and more by the realities of running systems that function every day, largely out of view.

As urbanisation reshapes family structures and social safety nets grow increasingly fragmented, the demand for long-term care institutions is likely to rise. Organisations working in this space operate with limited visibility yet increasing responsibility. For Kalra, the challenge ahead lies not in expanding personal legacy, but in building care systems capable of lasting well beyond individual effort.

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