Amala Foundation

Amala Foundation The Amala Foundation unites people from all walks of life and inspires them to grow as individuals and as leaders in service to humanity.

Donate here: https://secure.lglforms.com/form_engine/s/ZQsL1oM3u7QfBZ-5f3n9Cw/ The majority of our programs are focused on young people, including refugee and immigrant youth. Many of these individuals have experienced war, abuse, neglect, extreme poverty, child labor, and gang violence. We provide a safe space for these youth to heal, express themselves, share their stories and connect with a lov

ing and supportive community. We empower all of our youth to rise up as leaders in their communities and schools. The youth who participate in our programs represent many countries, ethnicities, religions, races, cultures and socioeconomic backgrounds. Some have grown up in refugee camps, while others have been raised in middle and upper class families. Many come from countries that have been at war with each other for years. We inspire youth to recognize that regardless of where they come from or what adversities they have faced, we are all human beings that ultimately want the same things: love, acceptance, human connection and peace. Founded in 2001, the Amala Foundation has served over 2300 youth with programs in 5 countries and 4 states. Over the last 13 years, the Amala Foundation has created volunteer opportunities for 2500+ volunteers. The Amala Foundation is headquartered in Austin, Texas. The Amala Foundation is involved in a number of local, national, and international humanitarian service projects. Camp Indigo was started in 2001 and is now in its 14th year of offering a week-long day camp experience to Austin area children ages 4-12. Camp Mana, now in its ninth year, offers a similar experience over two days in Hawaii. Our One Village Project, including the Global Youth Peace Summit, is in its 8th year and serves more than 150 local, immigrant, international and refugee youth each year. Our Young Artists in Service program provides free art instruction to at-risk children in addition to creating inspiring murals at places like the Austin Children’s Shelter. The Gui Village Living Water Program was a humanitarian service project we successfully completed in 2005, installing two water wells in a Nigerian village, saving 3,500 people (including 2,000 children) from disease. Since 2007, our partnership with the Bhatti Mines School in Delhi, India has helped to ensure 200 Indian children a day are receiving an education instead of being forced into child labor.

What if one person learning better communication skills could strengthen an entire community?That’s the idea behind Amal...
03/15/2026

What if one person learning better communication skills could strengthen an entire community?

That’s the idea behind Amala’s Community Specialist Training.

Participants learn practical tools like listening, guiding conversations, and helping groups communicate with respect and clarity. Then they bring those skills back to their schools, workplaces, and neighborhoods.

One person learns the tools.
Then those tools spread through their community.

That’s how stronger, healthier communities grow.

Connection is preventive care.When people feel valued and understood, classrooms run more smoothly, teams collaborate be...
03/14/2026

Connection is preventive care.

When people feel valued and understood, classrooms run more smoothly, teams collaborate better, and communities grow stronger.

At Amala, we teach the simple skills that make connection possible. Listening. Clear communication. Managing stress in healthy ways.

These are everyday tools people can use at school, at work, and at home.

Because when people connect better, everything works better.

Learn more about how Amala brings these skills into schools, workplaces, and community spaces.

Every workplace runs on relationships.When communication breaks down, stress rises and collaboration becomes harder. But...
03/12/2026

Every workplace runs on relationships.

When communication breaks down, stress rises and collaboration becomes harder. But when people feel respected and understood, teams perform better and people want to stay.

Amala’s professional development sessions focus on the human side of performance. We teach practical skills like listening, managing stress, and communicating clearly.

These are the skills that turn good teams into strong ones.

Because healthier workplace cultures start with better connection.

When students feel comfortable and included, they learn better.Circle Up brings students and educators together in a sim...
03/10/2026

When students feel comfortable and included, they learn better.

Circle Up brings students and educators together in a simple format: sitting in an actual circle where everyone can see and hear each other.

This small shift makes honest conversation possible. It builds trust, strengthens communication, and helps classrooms become places where students feel ready to learn and teachers feel supported.

It’s simple, but it works.

That is how stronger school cultures begin. One conversation at a time.

02/23/2026

Joy can be healing.

When people feel valued and understood, something shifts. Stress softens. Walls come down. Conversations open up.

At Amala, we believe connection is preventive care. Simple moments of laughter, honesty, and shared experience help people manage stress and show up better for themselves and each other.
Joy isn’t extra. It’s part of how we build healthier schools, workplaces, and communities.

BLACK HISTORY MONTHDr. Solomon Carter Fuller was one of the first Black psychiatrists in the United States and a quiet p...
02/21/2026

BLACK HISTORY MONTH

Dr. Solomon Carter Fuller was one of the first Black psychiatrists in the United States and a quiet pioneer in Alzheimer’s research. At a time when opportunities were limited, he focused on careful study and patient care, helping expand understanding of mental health and neurodegenerative disease. His work reminds us that progress in mental health begins with curiosity, commitment, and a belief that every person deserves thoughtful care.

When we share our experiences, something shifts.Stories open the door to understanding. Listening creates space for conn...
02/20/2026

When we share our experiences, something shifts.

Stories open the door to understanding. Listening creates space for connection. And in that space, we remember we’re not doing this alone.

Coming together isn’t complicated. It starts with honest conversation, real presence, and a willingness to hear one another.

Connection is preventive care. And it begins when we choose to sit down and share.

Sitting in a circle changes the room.When everyone can see each other, hierarchy softens and every voice has space. Circ...
02/18/2026

Sitting in a circle changes the room.

When everyone can see each other, hierarchy softens and every voice has space. Circles create room for honest conversation and help people feel comfortable, valued, and understood.

It’s simple, but it works.

Connection is preventive care, and when we practice it together, groups become stronger, more focused, and more supportive of one another.

Community Specialist Training kicked off a few weeks ago, and the room is already full of honest conversation, growth, a...
02/17/2026

Community Specialist Training kicked off a few weeks ago, and the room is already full of honest conversation, growth, and real leadership in action.

This is where people learn the skills that make connection possible: listening well, guiding conversations, managing stress, and building trust in the spaces they’re already part of.

We don’t just talk about connection. We practice it. And when people feel valued and understood, everything works better.

If you’ve been thinking about deepening your leadership or bringing these tools into your community, consider this your sign.

Connection is preventive care. And the ripple effect is real.

BLACK HISTORY MONTH 🖤Pilates as we know it would not exist without Kathy Stanford Grant.Kathy Stanford Grant was one of ...
02/14/2026

BLACK HISTORY MONTH 🖤

Pilates as we know it would not exist without Kathy Stanford Grant.

Kathy Stanford Grant was one of the only people trained directly by Joseph Pilates and the only Black woman among the original first-generation Pilates teachers. She helped carry the practice into dance, rehabilitation, and mainstream movement spaces across the U.S.

Yet today, Pilates is often perceived as inaccessible and disconnected from the communities that helped shape its early legacy.

This Black History Month, we honor Kathy Stanford Grant not just for her role in Pilates history, but for the reminder that movement belongs to everyone.

Students showed up, spoke up, and stayed engaged.Through Circle Up, young people shared their ideas and felt heard, with...
02/04/2026

Students showed up, spoke up, and stayed engaged.

Through Circle Up, young people shared their ideas and felt heard, with more than 72% saying their voices mattered. We also launched a new assembly model that reached nearly 200 students, expanding access to connection for those who might not have had it otherwise.

This is what belonging in action looks like and why connection works.

Address

1006 S 8th Street
Austin, TX
78704

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