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When roots are deep, branches will grow

Global Fund for Children (GFC) emphasizes funding cohorts, groups of organizations with shared interests, to harness social capital and foster transformative change. Within the Addressing Root Causes (ARC) initiative, I co-facilitated the Mangrove Hills Cohort, comprising 5 West Bengal, India organizations. The convening in Sep 2025 marked the fourth cohort under this initiative. We used the SALT & Community Life Competence Process (CLCP) to cultivate ownership in the cohort.

Understanding of a cohort Participants demonstrated a deep understanding of networks and collectives. Drawing from their experience, they emphasized that bonding is essential for bringing people closer. Cohort can be a space through which resources like knowledge, information, contacts, and emotional support can flow between individuals and organizations. 

Non-hierarchical leadership The cohort placed value on rotational leadership, ensuring that younger staff also have opportunities to leadThe Global Fund for Children (GFC) emphasizes funding cohorts, groups of organizations with shared interests, to harness social capital and foster change. 


Reimagining NGO-community relationships Cohort members reflected on their existing mode of engagement with communities, acknowledging that they often “deliver to communities” rather than enabling communities to lead.  ARC initiative, they observed, provides an opportunity to shift ownership to communities as actors of change rather than passive beneficiaries.

Learning and unlearning  Mangrove Hills cohort expressed a desire to learn from earlier cohorts, acknowledging that “we don’t have to repeat the same mistakes.” They underscored periodic reflection for self-correction and collective development.

Connecting communities across cohorts Participants recognized the need to foster inter-community connections across the four ARC cohorts in South Asia. As one participant noted, “we often limit ourselves to connecting with other NGOs, but we need to go beyond this and connect communities to each other.” Communities can also learn from and inspire each other.

Power of appreciation  Participants resonated with the appreciation aspect of the SALT approach, realizing that appreciation must be practiced consciously to shift power both within organizations and toward communities.

“It is unlike any workshop in my 32 years of experience as a social worker, there is always a huge distance between the funder and the NGO, here we did not feel that. We felt as companions. SALT can bring us closer- Hriday da DSWS

Promita, Tomorrow’s Foundation raised a question what can trigger and sustain change I reflected on what I learned from three other ARC cohorts. Cohorts, organizations & communities are like living systems.  Relationships, connection and trust are what build and sustain them. Trust takes time especially when people from multiple organizations come together, they bring different histories and leadership styles. That is why start with relationship building and avoid over-structuring too soon.

Continuous SALT conversations are like oxygen that keeps the cohort alive Sometimes what feels like slowness is the rhythm of people learning to see each other as human beings. When the cohort seems to go off track, we re-center on the cohort's dream and to conduct  the next self-assessment.  In short, the depth & degree of connection are the strong indicators of a thriving cohort

(Facilitation by Indrani, Momota, Sayan, Rana, Ayan & Rituu. First drawing  by Pamela, PSJKS. Drawings of cohort dream are by participants)

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Comment by Nishat Tasnim Liza on October 21, 2025 at 6:26am

The write-up is excellent , you’ve beautifully captured the depth of the cohort, the power of relationships, and the process of collective learning

Comment by Brinty Saha on October 19, 2025 at 3:17pm

Continuous SALT conversations are like oxygen that keeps the cohort alive Sometimes what feels like slowness is the rhythm of people learning to see each other as human beings - I loved the line!

Comment by Ashish on October 17, 2025 at 1:32pm

when roots are deep, branches will grow well. Impressive reflection ,best wishes for mangrove hills cohort.

Comment by shristi joshi on October 17, 2025 at 7:30am

Such a beautiful reflection, Rituu, of how cohorts become living systems built on trust, connection, and shared purpose. A powerful reminder that real change isn’t delivered but it’s cultivated through relationships and reflection.

The Mangrove Hills Cohort’s focus on non-hierarchical leadership, appreciation, and community-to-community connection shows how SALT and CLCP go beyond tools and shape how we relate and grow together.

Comment by Sharmin Eva on October 16, 2025 at 4:16pm

Such depth in their journey — you can almost feel the roots growing beneath their words. True transformation starts exactly like this.

Comment by Rowshon Benthi Hossain on October 16, 2025 at 9:55am

Strong reflection of them

Comment by Sadia Jafrin on October 16, 2025 at 8:56am

Their reflections are so powerful. They are already there. 

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