Our impact


Our Founder

In 2003, our founder Usman Mehandi’s sisters convinced the family to move from their village to a nearby town in search of better education and livelihood opportunities. The decision was driven by the lack of access to education beyond Class 8 in their village. Both Usman and his sister were full of hope, ready to begin a new chapter

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His sister was an exceptionally bright student, a district-level math champion, while Usman himself was still finding his footing in studies. But their hopes were soon dashed when they discovered that even the town had no government school beyond Class 8. Due to financial hardship, the family made a heartbreaking choice, they stopped his sister and enrolled Usman in a private school. Despite her talent and passion, she was denied the opportunity. The silent and unsettling question—“Why me, and not her?”—has stayed with Usman ever since.

As he began working at the grassroots level in 2013, training youth and government school teachers in rural Uttar Pradesh, the answer slowly began to reveal itself. He saw firsthand how poverty, patriarchy, and systemic neglect quietly erased the dreams of many girls, especially after a certain age and class.

IIn 2017, while pursuing his M.Phil at the Tata Institute of Social Sciences, Usman began a deeper exploration into the realities of girls’ education in Western Uttar Pradesh and the plains area of Uttarakhand. During one poignant interaction, a young girl said to him:
 “हम स्कूल से बाहर इसलिए हैं क्योंकि हम लड़की हैं,
**और यही हमारा गुनाह है।”
**(We are out of school because we are girls—and that is our only crime.)
That one sentence struck him deeply. It gave voice to the silent question that had haunted him since childhood.

As he progressed into his Ph.D., Usman engaged with hundreds of adolescent girls who had dropped out of school. He realized that most out-of-school girls want to learn—but they lack the tailored support and flexible pathways to do so. The existing ‘one-size-fits-all’ system was simply not built for their realities.

To change this, Usman developed the “Addressing Needs and Promoting Solutions” model—designed to reintegrate dropout girls into education by addressing the academic, emotional, and social barriers that keep them away.

In 2024, he founded Panth Foundation with Rani, a grassroots social worker and former school dropout herself, who has two decades of experience in empowering grassroots women. Together, they envisioned an organization rooted in empathy, research, and action.

Today, Panth Foundation is not just a nonprofit. It’s a pathway for girls who were told to stop—to start again.  It’s a space where dreams are not paused, but nurtured. Where education is not a privilege, but a right. Panth means path—and this path leads girls to dignity, knowledge, and a future they truly deserve

Our Founder

In 2003, our founder Usman Mehandi’s sisters convinced the family to move from their village to a nearby town in search of better education and livelihood opportunities. The decision was driven by the lack of access to education beyond Class 8 in their village. Both Usman and his sister were full of hope, ready to begin a new chapter

Read More

His sister was an exceptionally bright student, a district-level math champion, while Usman himself was still finding his footing in studies. But their hopes were soon dashed when they discovered that even the town had no government school beyond Class 8. Due to financial hardship, the family made a heartbreaking choice, they stopped his sister and enrolled Usman in a private school. Despite her talent and passion, she was denied the opportunity. The silent and unsettling question—“Why me, and not her?”—has stayed with Usman ever since.

As he began working at the grassroots level in 2013, training youth and government school teachers in rural Uttar Pradesh, the answer slowly began to reveal itself. He saw firsthand how poverty, patriarchy, and systemic neglect quietly erased the dreams of many girls, especially after a certain age and class.

IIn 2017, while pursuing his M.Phil at the Tata Institute of Social Sciences, Usman began a deeper exploration into the realities of girls’ education in Western Uttar Pradesh and the plains area of Uttarakhand. During one poignant interaction, a young girl said to him:
 “हम स्कूल से बाहर इसलिए हैं क्योंकि हम लड़की हैं,
**और यही हमारा गुनाह है।”
**(We are out of school because we are girls—and that is our only crime.)
That one sentence struck him deeply. It gave voice to the silent question that had haunted him since childhood.

As he progressed into his Ph.D., Usman engaged with hundreds of adolescent girls who had dropped out of school. He realized that most out-of-school girls want to learn—but they lack the tailored support and flexible pathways to do so. The existing ‘one-size-fits-all’ system was simply not built for their realities.

To change this, Usman developed the “Addressing Needs and Promoting Solutions” model—designed to reintegrate dropout girls into education by addressing the academic, emotional, and social barriers that keep them away.

In 2024, he founded Panth Foundation with Rani, a grassroots social worker and former school dropout herself, who has two decades of experience in empowering grassroots women. Together, they envisioned an organization rooted in empathy, research, and action.

Today, Panth Foundation is not just a nonprofit. It’s a pathway for girls who were told to stop—to start again.  It’s a space where dreams are not paused, but nurtured. Where education is not a privilege, but a right. Panth means path—and this path leads girls to dignity, knowledge, and a future they truly deserve