Teaching inclusivity to the communities of tomorrow, today.

“No one is born hating another person for the colour of his skin or his background or his religion”

-Nelson Mandela

Empowering Educators and Children to Drive Social Change

“Raabta, राब्ता, رابطہ, رَابِطَة; from the root ر ب ط‎ (r-b-t, “ bond, connection, relation”)”

Raabta is a resource hub for raising children who understand, respect, and include others.

We share thoughtful resources, stories, and conversations that help parents, educators, and communities make inclusivity part of everyday learning. We believe empathy and cultural competence can help shape a more peaceful and connected future.

What we do at Raabta

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Educator Workshops

We create gentle, practical learning spaces for educators who want to bring more inclusion into their classrooms. Our workshops, conversation guides, and ready-to-use activities help teachers notice bias, build cultural competence, and hold space for every student’s story.

Education Technology

Through Raabta Circles and other digital resources, we offer poems, stories, and interactive activities that make empathy and fairness part of everyday learning. These tools are simple to use, classroom- and home-friendly, and focused on real situations children encounter.

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Community Resources

We gather and share ideas for building spaces where every child feels seen — from accessible, welcoming classrooms to technology access in under-resourced communities. Our role is to turn what we’ve learned into resources that families, educators, and communities can adapt to their own contexts.

“Tolerance is respect, acceptance and appreciation of the rich diversity of our world's cultures, our forms of expression and ways of being human. It is fostered by knowledge, openness, communication, and freedom of thought, conscience and belief. Tolerance is harmony in difference. It is not only a moral duty, it is also a political and legal requirement. Tolerance, the virtue that makes peace possible, contributes to the replacement of the culture of war by a culture of peace” UNESCO