BBC News: India's Abandoned Widows Struggle to Survive
BBC News spotlights the state of widows in Vrindivan, and includes Maitri India's work with them:
"India is home to an estimated 40 million widows - approximately 10% of all women.
Ageing women are more vulnerable than men. Without any financial security or welfare infrastructure, many of them are abandoned in Vrindavan- where they live off charity while they wait to die."
"Considered inauspicious, widows are ostracised by many and have few sources of income."
"Helping these women with their finances are non-profit organisations such as Maitri.
'The social welfare system in India is practically non-existent,' says Winnie Singh, the founder of Maitri.
All widows over the age of 60 are eligible for a small government pension worth less than $5 (£3) a month.
But most are illiterate and do not have bank accounts to access even that.
'How can someone getting 300 rupees, or less than $5, survive?' says Ms Singh.
'How are they going to hire a room to live, buy rations etc? Even if you give them a below-the-poverty-line card, that doesn't give them anything free.'"
"In a nation without social security and state healthcare, there is growing anxiety about how India will care for its elderly."
"In Vrindavan, some non-profit organisations are tackling the problem of food and healthcare at a micro level.
At Maitri's centre, about 500 widows converge at midday for a free hot meal.
They are given health advice and free medicines as well.
With families struggling to care for their elders at home, the plight of these women is likely to become increasingly common."
Read the full article at http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-24490252