Hunger Free India
Daily and weekly, our volunteers prepare and serve thousands of hot meals outside government hospitals, railway stations, and in flood and drought-affected areas. No one who comes to our gates leaves hungry.
A non-political, purely humanitarian organization dedicated to ensure that no one goes hungry, no one feels neglected. Active across India since last 50 years.
Maulana Syed Abul Hasan Ali Nadwi, popularly known as “Ali Miyan,” from the renowned Rae Bareli family. Known for his humility, moderation, and generosity, he stood for mutual respect, peaceful coexistence, and human values. His services earned national and international recognition, including the King Faisal International Award in 1980, the Brunei Award and UAE Award in 1999, and an honorary doctorate from Kashmir University in 1981.
"The way to peaceful coexistence lies in highlighting the message of humanity."
He is remembered for promoting love, amity, and understanding among communities across India. He founded the “Payam-E-Insaniyat” (Message of Humanity) movement and travelled with people from different communities to riot-affected areas to comfort victims and promote peace. In today’s troubled climate, his message of humanity, tolerance, and ethical reform remains deeply relevant.
Daily and weekly, our volunteers prepare and serve thousands of hot meals outside government hospitals, railway stations, and in flood and drought-affected areas. No one who comes to our gates leaves hungry.
Mobilising voluntary donors to fill critical blood shortages at hospitals — conducted dozens of times a year, across multiple cities.
When natural disasters strike, AIPIF volunteers are among the first to mobilise — distributing rations, medicine, and clothing to affected families.
Serving daily fruit and breakfast for patients and their families at government hospitals — a small act that means everything to those far from home.
Rooted in AIPIF's founding mission, community dialogue programs that bring people of all backgrounds together around shared humanity and moral values.
Every morning, before the hospital gates open, the AIPIF volunteers are already there. They have been doing this for years — quietly, without announcement. Just warm food, ready and waiting.
My mother was in the ICU for three weeks. We barely had money for medicines. These people came every morning and made sure we never went hungry.
I've been volunteering every Sunday for four years. It's not charity — it's just one human being showing up for another.
During the floods, they were the first people at our door. With dry clothes, food, and a question: "What else do you need?"
I donated blood for the first time at one of their camps. They made it feel like the most normal, natural thing in the world — which it should be.
Our aim is to build a compassionate human bonding among people that flows from person to person and heart to heart irrespective of caste, creed, colour, language, region or religion.