About Us
Our Vision
A future where Himalayan communities flourish with good health, thriving ecosystems, and sustainable livelihoods, rooted in their cultural and environmental heritage
Our Mission
Strengthen Himalayan communities by promoting health awareness, environmental stewardship, and sustainable livelihoods through grassroots-driven initiatives and systemic collaborations






Our Story
The Himalayas have a way of calling you back. Maybe it’s the stillness of the peaks, the warmth of the people, or the wisdom carried on the wind.
In 2024, that call brought us to Uttarkashi. What began as a personal return to the land grew into a collective journey—one of care, solidarity, and service.As we listened to stories by smoky hearths and walked village trails, we saw both strength and struggle. Families facing fragile healthcare systems. Traditions giving way to uncertain livelihoods. A precious environment in need of tending.
Kuflon Charitable Trust was born not to fix from the outside—but to walk beside.
To protect what matters. To nurture change that begins within.
We don’t have all the answers. But we show up.
We listen. And we work—with our hands in the soil and our hearts in the right place.
Our Guiding Principles

Hyperlocal Focus
Tailoring grassroots interventions to specific community needs

Community Ownership
Encouraging active participation and fostering a sense of ownership in all initiatives

Collaboration
Partnering with government and other stakeholders to amplify our impact
Why We Exist
“We live close to the gods, but far from hospitals.”A simple truth spoken by a village elder—and a reflection of what we’ve witnessed:
Strength and resilience in mountain communities.
- Gaps in healthcare, livelihoods, and environmental protection.
- Needs that persist quietly, until they become urgent.
- We exist because these voices deserve to be heard.
Because healthcare, dignity, and opportunity shouldn’t depend on geography. Because every mountainside village matters as much as any city street.
We walk with these communities—not to change who they are, but to protect what they’ve always had: wisdom, will, and a way of life.