Wednesday 27th November 2024
Close
COPYRIGHT © 2024 Thamarai

Giving Back – charity and third sector networking | Tamil Association of Professionals (TAP)

Event Details

  • Address

    Jamie's Bar Moorgate (Upstairs) Alban Gate 125 London Wall Barbican EC2Y 5AS

    View Map
  • Date

    Tuesday 23rd April 2019

  • Time

    19:00 - 21:00


London based Tamil Association of Professionals (TAP) invites you to their spring 2019 networking drinks with a spotlight on some of the charities and non-profit groups working for the betterment of the Tamil community in the UK and their native homelands.

The third sector is often overlooked and under-appreciated within the Tamil community as well as broader society. Here is a shortlist of the groups attending. Please do come and join TAP to hear from these brilliant organisations, and if you are interested, get involved.

ANBU – Abuse Never Becomes Us
anbu.org.uk

ANBU stands for Abuse Never Becomes Us. ANBU, founded in Canada in 2016, is now also a UK registered charity supporting survivors of childhood sexual abuse in the Tamil community. Our mission is to raise awareness and provide healing and empowerment through holistic support, resources and advocacy on behalf of Tamil people impacted by childhood sexual abuse.

Building Blocks
buildingblocksuk.org

Building Blocks is a charity project set up with the aim of helping and supporting children living in areas of poverty around the world. Their aim is not only to provide a safe haven for these children, but to provide them with the medical, optical, dental and educational provisions to aid their well-being.

Comdu.it
comdu.it

Comdu.it is a growing global network of diaspora changemakers committed to the sustainable development of the North and East of Sri Lanka. They currently operate in Canada and Germany.

Their mission is to help shift diaspora engagement from charity to sustainability, from aid to economic development, and from supporting remittance economies to building knowledge economies by conducting volunteer projects with local partners.

The Little Things
thelittlethings.org.uk

The Little Things is a student-led charity aiming to improve healthcare in developing countries. By providing vital medical equipment to poorly funded and inadequately equipped hospitals, we hope to improve access to healthcare for innocent, vulnerable patients.

The hospitals that The Little Things works with are under-resourced; thus, they do not have the capacity to effectively and suitably manage the patients that are admitted every single day. The little things focus on the little things that can be done in hospitals, to vastly improve healthcare for patients and subsequently their quality of life.

Pace4Life – Reusing Pacemakers
pace4life.org

UK Charity Pace4Life, like organ donation reuses donated pacemakers in the developing world, implanting them for free. Implanting in Ghana, Sierra Leone, Kenya and Sudan to date.

The idea for Pace4Life came out of a chance conversation with a mortuary technician who mentioned that the cupboards in her lab were being cluttered up with discarded pacemakers.

Researching pacemakers and their background further, founder, Lavan discovered significant research that supported the recycling and reuse of pacemakers and thus an idea was born.

Pace4Life is now seeking to establish a robust process for pacemaker reuse, whereby people/patients donate old pacemakers to Pace4Life to be tested, and either reused or recycled with the long term aim of leaving a legacy in the recipient countries by implanting devices for those less fortunate whilst upskilling local doctors who can then continue our efforts on an ongoing basis.

Tamil Community Housing Association
tamilhousing.org.uk

Tamil Community Housing Association was initially constituted in 1986 as the Tamil Refugee Action Group (TRAG) – a self-help initiative, to support and ensure the welfare of Tamil refugees.

In 1996, TRAG changed its role and was re-launched as Tamil Community Housing Association with the dual objective of looking after the housing needs of refugees, as well as supporting the aspirations of the community. Today, we own and manage over 300 homes and function broadly as a ‘community anchor’.

Centre for Community Development
ccduk.org

Centre for Community Development (CCD) was established in 2004 and supports marginalised people from the Northeast and Upcountry of Sri Lanka, including those living in the UK. We strive to improve the living conditions of these communities by supporting and creating opportunities for the underprivileged, and making partnerships with and strengthening local ground-level organisations and institutions.

Our programmes include: Elders Empowerment Project, Tamil Women Development Forum, Healthy Mind Project, and War Widows Project.

To book a free ticket, please click here