How Did Educate Girls Become a 2025 Ramon Magsaysay Awardee?

Synopsis
Key Takeaways
- Educate Girls is the first Indian NGO to receive the Ramon Magsaysay Award.
- Founded in 2007, the organization has transformed girls' education in Rajasthan.
- They launched the world's first Development Impact Bond in education in 2015.
- Over two million girls have been impacted with a retention rate of 90%.
- The award presentation will occur on November 7 in Manila.
New Delhi, Aug 31 (NationPress) An Indian non-profit organisation committed to mobilising community and government resources for girls’ education in rural and underprivileged areas of India has been recognised as a 2025 Ramon Magsaysay Awardee, as announced by the foundation on Sunday.
The Foundation to Educate Girls Globally, commonly referred to as Educate Girls, is the first Indian organisation to be honoured with this esteemed award, which is often regarded as Asia's equivalent of the Nobel Prize.
Founded in 2007 by Safeena Husain, Educate Girls began its journey in Rajasthan.
“Initiating our work in Rajasthan, Educate Girls pinpointed the most needy communities regarding girls’ education, successfully bringing unschooled or out-of-school girls into classrooms, and ensuring they remained there until they secured credentials for higher education and fruitful employment,” stated the official press release from Ramon Magsaysay.
“Education for girls is the closest solution we possess to tackle some of the world's most challenging issues,” remarked Husain, adding that “It represents one of the most effective investments a nation can make, influencing nine of the seventeen Sustainable Development Goals, including health, nutrition, and employment.”
“Educate Girls is dedicated to dismantling the cycle of illiteracy and poverty for girls. By expanding our initiatives, reinforcing government collaborations, and integrating community-led strategies, we aspire to create a more promising and equitable future—one girl at a time,” she further mentioned.
Importantly, in 2015, Educate Girls introduced the world’s first Development Impact Bond (DIB) in the education sector, designed to link financial support to achieved results.
“The outcomes were remarkable. What started with fifty pilot village schools expanded to over 30,000 villages across India's most underserved areas, engaging over two million girls, with a retention rate exceeding 90%,” the statement highlighted.
“Organised into Team Balika (Team for the Girl Child), local volunteers went door-to-door to locate out-of-school girls, address parental concerns, and assist with documentation. By the conclusion of the DIB initiative in 2018, Educate Girls had exceeded its overall learning targets by 160% and its total enrollment target by 116%,” it added.
Other recipients of the 2025 award include Shaahina Ali from the Maldives for her environmental contributions and Flaviano Antonio L. Villanueva from the Philippines.
Each laureate will be awarded a medallion, a certificate, and a monetary prize. The 67th Ramon Magsaysay Award presentation is set for November 7 at the Metropolitan Theatre in Manila.