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It started as a reunion. It became a quiet movement.

Voice: Arpita Desai, Founding Member · TAP Charity Inc.
Source: Team Disha interview, Feb 2025

In 2020, a college class from Bombay regrouped on a Zoom call — not to reminisce, but to ship oxygen concentrators across India. Five years later, that small act of classmates-helping-strangers is a 501(c)(3) reaching fifteen states, four causes, and a hundred professionals who refuse to look away.

There is no single founder of TAP Charity. There is, instead, a graduating class — Thadomal Shahani Engineering College, batch of 1989 — and a pandemic that gave them a reason to find each other again. The work has had that shape ever since: many hands, one direction, no spotlight.

“We first got together during the Covid pandemic,” Arpita Desai recalls, “and donated funds towards helping the needy in various ways, including providing oxygen concentrators to different corners of the country.” Out of that one season of urgency came something that, in hindsight, looks almost inevitable: a registered charity in the United States, governed by alumni, funded by alumni, and answerable — in the most literal sense — to the people they had once shared a classroom with.

Today TAP is open to all TSEC alumni and their families. It has grown without ever pretending to be large. Its members are engineers, executives, founders, mothers, retirees. They live in the United States and India and points between. They meet every other month. They vote on every new partnership. And they have built, in roughly five years, a way of giving that is unusual enough to be worth telling you about.

The framework: four letters, four Tees.

TAP organises its work around an acronym — H.E.L.P. Health, Education, Livelihood, Psychosocial. Every partnership the membership votes for has to live inside one of those four pillars. It’s a deliberate fence. “Any partnership forged or activity undertaken,” Arpita says, “is in one or a combination of the above areas.”

🏥

H — Health

When a child needs a cancer diagnosis this week, not next quarter.

📚

E — Education

First-generation learners staying in school — and then in college.

💼

L — Livelihood

Women turning seed grants into businesses, and businesses into agency.

🤝

P — Psychosocial

The forgotten — incarcerated, undertrial, displaced — treated as people again.

The second framework is what makes TAP unusual. Most charities measure their contribution in dollars. TAP measures it in four currencies, and only one of them is money.

I

Time

Hours given to a partner — teaching, mentoring, sitting in on cases.

II

Talent

Whatever a member happens to be good at — finance, code, English, design.

III

Ties

The connections a member can open: hospitals, employers, schools, lawyers.

IV

Treasure

The funds — raised, matched, and routed to the field with zero overhead.

The reason this matters — and why it should matter to a prospective donor — is that almost no part of TAP’s structure is about its members and almost all of it is about leverage. Every partner NGO is assigned a dedicated TAP member, called a TAP-principal, whose job is to know that partner’s work as intimately as anyone outside the organisation can. They sit in on programmes. They review utilisation reports. They report back to the membership, and they push back when something can be done better.

Collaboration is the only way that we could have made a difference. To make a difference on the ground, partnership with organisations operating in our focus areas is a must.

Arpita Desai

Where the work actually happens.

The clearest way to understand TAP is to look at the partners. Each one tells you something different about how the model works in practice.

P
Psychosocialfield action project

Prayas (TISS)

Walking with the people the system has already filed away.

Prayas is a field-action project of the Tata Institute of Social Sciences in Mumbai. Its caseworkers sit with people awaiting judgement in India’s criminal justice system — mothers in shelter homes, undertrial men in district jails, children whose parents have disappeared into a process designed not to release them. Prayas counsels these individuals, supports their families, and partners with other NGOs to rebuild lives that have been quietly disassembled by paperwork.

“This would have been extremely challenging, if not impossible, even for India-based TAP members to do on their own,” Arpita says. So TAP doesn’t try. Instead, it funds the social worker who can. It pays for the bus fares to the police station, the photocopies for the application form, the salary that lets one person keep showing up at twelve different government offices until a single ration card is finally issued.

Between April and June 2025 alone, Prayas’s single social worker reached 29 children. Three of them finished their degrees. Two had bank accounts opened in their names. The work is small. The work is everything.

29
children reached
3
finished their degrees
2
bank accounts opened

Source: Prayas (TISS) quarterly report, Apr–Jun 2025.

G
Educationall four Tees

Guruji Education Foundation (GEF)

GEF came to TAP the way most partnerships do — a member’s recommendation, followed by a presentation, followed by a vote. The TAP member knew the GEF founder, Dr. Pradeep Waychal, personally. He vouched. The membership listened. Three years later, the partnership has spread across all four Tees: TAP funds GEF programmes; TAP members teach Spoken English to GEF students every week; senior members run specialised career sessions on topics like the Future of IT.

A Wednesday evening, on Zoom:

  • A TAP member dials in from California after his work day. A GEF student dials in from rural Maharashtra before hers begins.
  • The class is forty minutes. The subject is conditional tenses. The student, sixteen, will use English in a job interview in two years.
  • Sometimes the call is the same TAP member. Sometimes it is a different one. The partnership is now old enough that students have favourites.

“It is extremely satisfying for TAP,” Arpita says, “when students look back fondly on what they have gained as a result of having attended the classes.” The phrasing is careful, but the meaning is not subtle: they remember us.

E
Livelihoodmember recommendation

Ekalavya India Foundation

Eklavya was another member’s recommendation. The TAP representative who took on the partnership did the prescribed job — track reports, ask hard questions, send funds — and then quietly did more, helping the partner meet emergent needs that weren’t on any quarterly plan. “The spirit of partnership,” Arpita says, “extends to making a difference in the lives of the target audience.” This is the language of a person who has noticed that the best volunteers are the ones who do not stop where the job description ends.

L
HealthTata Memorial Hospital, Mumbai

Leukemia Lymphoma Foundation, Tata Memorial Hospital

The Health pillar lives, in large part, at Tata Memorial Hospital in Mumbai. TAP funds blood-cancer diagnostics and the first stretch of treatment — the days when a family’s savings have already been spent and the public system has not yet kicked in. TAP members travel to TMH whenever they can. They sit with patients. They watch how a hospital that handles one of the heaviest cancer caseloads in the world actually works.

“Every single member visiting TMH and LLF has come back hugely impacted,” Arpita says, “and with a renewed commitment to work towards making a difference.”

The visits are not for show. They are part of the model. The model assumes that contributors who see the work give more, give longer, and bring others in. So far the assumption is holding.

$70K+
grants distributed (2025)
15+
Indian states reached
100+
global professionals involved

By the numbers (2025): $70K+ grants distributed · 15+ Indian states reached · 100+ global professionals involved · 4 pillars · 4 Tees · 0% overhead.

The currency that doesn’t appear on the spreadsheet.

If you asked Arpita what TAP runs on, she would not say money. She would say trust. The membership votes on every partnership because trust has to be earned in public. The TAP-principal exists because trust has to be maintained by a single person who can keep faith with both sides. The reports flow both ways, and the moment one of them is late or imprecise, the relationship is one phone call away from being repaired or one silence away from being damaged.

Trust, once lost, is difficult to rebuild. Be honest towards your contributor, including for abnormal situations. Report accurately and in a timely manner.

Arpita Desai, on how partnerships actually last

This is, frankly, a quiet revolution. Charity in the abstract is easy. Charity that survives a difficult conversation about a delayed report, an unexpected expense, a campaign that under-delivered — that is the work most organisations cannot do without losing either the relationship or the discipline. TAP, by Arpita’s account, has done it for five years across four pillars and more than a dozen partner NGOs, because nobody on either side has been asked to pretend.

What it looks like to grow without growing.

TAP has not chased scale. It has chased depth. The bi-monthly meeting still happens. The vote still happens. The TAP-principal still gets assigned, by name, to each partner. When members felt that one particular partner could absorb more — that the marginal impact of an extra dollar was unusually high — TAP ran a special campaign in the offices where its members work. The campaign cleared its target. There will be more campaigns. There will not, by design, be more bureaucracy.

  • 2020 — The reunion
    The TSEC class of 1989 gathers on Zoom during COVID. Oxygen concentrators ship across India.
  • 2021 — The registration
    TAP Charity Inc. is incorporated as a 501(c)(3) in the United States.
  • 2022 — The model takes shape
    H.E.L.P. pillars adopted. The 4 Tees become how members describe what they give.
  • 2023 — The doors open
    Membership expands beyond ’89 to all TSEC alumni and their families.
  • 2024 — Year of partnerships
    Prayas, GEF, Eklavya, LLF×TMH deepen. TAP-principal roles formalised across the roster.
  • 2025 — $70K+ distributed
    15+ states reached. The campaign-in-workplaces model proven. The work is invisible, and it is happening.

Why your gift, here, moves more than it would somewhere else.

TAP is 100% volunteer-driven. There is no fundraising team taking a cut. There is no executive director drawing a salary. Every dollar that arrives is voted on by a roomful of people who will, themselves, also give time and talent against it. When you give to TAP, you are not buying a programme. You are buying a programme plus the months of a TAP-principal’s attention, plus the network they will bring to bear, plus the visit they will make to the field to be sure your money is doing what you were told it would.

That is the leverage. That is the difference.

If you want to go fast, go alone. If you want to go far, work together.

The principle — in Arpita’s words

The next bus ride. The next ration card. The next graduation.

None of it is heroic. All of it is patient. Your gift pays for the social worker who keeps walking back to the same office until the door opens. Choose where on the map your contribution lands.

$100

One month of English classes for a GEF student.

$500

A quarter of field-visit costs for the Prayas team.

$2,500

Funds early diagnostics for blood cancer patients at Tata Memorial Hospital.

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