At the edge of Mandawar village, where the land stretches wide and the wind moves without hurry, something extraordinary is being built. It isn’t ano
At the edge of Mandawar village, where the land stretches wide and the wind moves without hurry, something extraordinary is being built. It isn’t another monument to ambition, but to empathy – a vast home for those the world has forgotten. Here, The Earth Saviours Foundation (TESF) is creating what will become the world’s largest free-of-cost humanitarian shelter -a sanctuary designed to hold not just bodies, but broken lives, and to return to them one sacred, irreplaceable thing: dignity.
Known as Mandawar Sewa Dham, this growing sanctuary already shelters nearly 700 abandoned elders and mentally challenged individuals rescued from India’s streets, railway platforms, and hospitals. Even as construction continues, the space thrums with a rare kind of energy: residents sitting beneath trees sharing stories, volunteers tending to the frail with quiet precision, and the metallic rhythm of construction echoing against the hymns of evening prayer.
AVision Rooted in Humanity
The idea of Mandawar Sewa Dham began with Shri Ravi Kalra, the late founder of TESF and one of India’s most relentless humanitarians. His dream was simple, and yet immense – to create a home where no one dies nameless, and no life fades without honour.
Carrying that mission forward is his son, Jas Kalra – not as an heir, but as a reformer of legacy. While his father gave the Foundation its heart, Jas has given it its spine – merging empathy with discipline, emotion with order. His approach is not just sentimental; it is deliberate, almost architectural in its precision.. He doesn’t lead from a desk, but from the ground, walking barefoot through the construction site, sitting with residents, and asking the only question that seems to guide him: How much care can a human being truly give?
“This place isn’t just about systems or statistics,” Jas says. “It’s about people who were left behind, and proving that compassion is still stronger than cruelty.”
His presence at Mandawar is quiet but unmistakable – a rare mix of resolve and empathy. He talks to residents not as beneficiaries but as family, remembering their names, listening to their stories, and making sure no one here feels like charity.
Dignity in Every Life
When complete, Mandawar Sewa Dham will become a sanctuary for more than 5,000 residents – men and women once lost to neglect, homelessness, or abuse. Yet its essence lies not in numbers or buildings, but in the quiet revolution it nurtures every day.
Here, dignity is not a privilege – it is the starting point. Every person is seen, addressed with respect, and invited to take part in daily life. Meals are shared beneath open skies; hands once trembling with uncertainty now help others find balance. For those who have lived unseen, being treated with gentleness feels like rediscovering breath.
Even now, the Dham is more than a refuge – it is renewal in motion. Abandoned elders find companionship again. Women who have survived violence reclaim safety and self-worth. Those with mental disabilities receive steady medical and emotional care – not as patients, but as people rediscovering rhythm and meaning.
Building Humanity, Brick by Brick
The Dham rises slowly – through sweat, devotion, and stubborn hope. Every wall carries intention; every space is designed to let people live, not just survive. Open courtyards invite gathering, while quiet corners allow solitude. There’s order, but never authority. There’s rhythm, but no routine too rigid to hold emotion.
But beyond the architecture, Mandawar Sewa Dham stands for something far greater: a moral blueprint for what a nation can be when it refuses to abandon its own.
“The world keeps talking about progress,” Jas says. “But what is progress worth if people still die alone on the streets? If we can’t give dignity to the living, our buildings mean nothing.”
That conviction has made the Dham a living conversation between heart and hands – where compassion is not preached but practised. It proves that humanity, when anchored in action, can build something more enduring than any skyscraper – belonging.
Continuing a Legacy, Shaping a Future
Under Jas’s stewardship, The Earth Saviours Foundation has expanded beyond its earlier identity as a refuge. It is now a movement of reclamation – reclaiming forgotten lives, forgotten values, and a forgotten sense of duty towards one another.
“The measure of a nation is not in its wealth,” Jas says, his voice steady. “It’s in how it treats the people who have nothing left to offer it. If we can’t protect our most vulnerable, our progress means nothing.”
The construction at Mandawar continues – slow, steady, and sacred in its intent. At dusk, the site transforms. Workers put down their tools, residents gather in the open, the air fills with the sound of bhajans and birds returning home. The half-built walls catch the dying light -and in that glow, one can see the future taking shape.
When it reaches completion, Mandawar Sewa Dham will not merely be the world’s largest free shelter. It will be a living declaration – that dignity is not a luxury, compassion is not weakness, and service is not sacrifice.
It will stand as a reminder that even in a fractured world, humanity still knows how to build.


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