New Delhi [India], June 20: In a significant moment for Indian education, social service and youth leadership, the Sairam family of Sairam Institutions was recognised at the 78th Baden Powell Fellowship event held in Sweden, in the presence of His Majesty King Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden, Honorary Chairman of the World Scout Foundation.
The recognition placed Sairam Institutions on an international platform that celebrates service, character, leadership and the spirit of building a better world. Adding further distinction to the occasion, Sairam Institutions was welcomed into The Chairman’s Circle of the World Scout Foundation. This recognition honoured Sairam’s contribution to World Scouting and youth development, and reflected the institution’s growing role in advancing the values of service, leadership and responsible citizenship among young people.
The event in Sweden was attended by prominent leaders of the global scouting movement, including Dr. Sai Prakash Leo Muthu, Chairman and CEO of Sairam Institutions, Mrs. Revathi Sai Prakash, Sai Samanyu Leo Muthu, scout leaders, humanitarian service members, dignitaries and social change makers from different parts of the world.
During the ceremony, Mrs. Revathi Sai Prakash received the prestigious Baden Powell Fellowship distinction in recognition of her humanitarian efforts and her contribution to the World Scout Movement. Sai Samanyu Leo Muthu was honoured with the Young Baden Powell Fellowship recognition, representing the promise of a new generation that values compassion, discipline and purposeful leadership.
The Baden-Powell Fellowship is a global circle of philanthropists, community leaders, families and institutions united by a commitment to Scouting’s mission of creating a better world. The World Scout Foundation, established under Swiss law and based in Geneva, has operated under the patronage of King Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden, who has served as Honorary Chairman since 1977.
For Sairam Institutions, these honours are not merely ceremonial milestones. They reflect a journey that has steadily brought together education, innovation, scouting, sustainability and community service. Over the years, the institution has encouraged thousands of students to see learning not only as a path to personal success, but also as a responsibility towards society.
At Sairam, scouting has found a natural place within campus life. Students have taken part in scouting activities in large numbers, and the response has been encouraging. Programmes that combine leadership training, life skills and social responsibility have helped young people understand that education becomes meaningful when it touches lives beyond the classroom.
One such effort, inspired by the principles of The Seven Habits of Successful People, was received well by students of the digital generation. It showed that young people are ready to embrace timeless values when they are presented through relevant and engaging experiences.
What makes the Sairam approach distinctive is the way scouting has been connected with a larger educational mission. The institution has built an ecosystem where students are encouraged to observe social problems, understand community needs and develop practical solutions. This is where the Sairam Innovation Ecosystem plays an important role.
The Sairam Innovation Ecosystem has been designed to move students from routine academic learning towards real problem solving. Through structured stages such as ideation, solution development, innovation and inspiration, students are encouraged to identify issues around them, work in teams, build prototypes, publish research, explore patents and even consider start up possibilities.
This approach ensures that innovation is not treated as a final year formality, but as a habit that grows throughout the student journey. At a time when higher education in India is being asked to produce graduates who are not only employable but also inventive, this model is deeply relevant.
India has immense talent, but many institutions still face challenges in building a strong culture of research, patents, high quality publications and original projects. Sairam Institutions have sought to address this gap by encouraging students to work on projects that have practical value and social purpose.
This vision connects closely with the Sairam SDG Action Program. The programme aligns student projects and institutional initiatives with the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals. These goals include quality education, clean water, good health, gender equality, climate action, sustainable communities, responsible consumption and partnerships for development. Through this framework, students begin to understand that global issues are not distant concerns. They are visible in villages, towns, schools, homes and neighbourhoods around them.
Sairam Institutions have worked with villages through community outreach initiatives, encouraging students to step out of their campuses and engage with real people and real challenges. The institution has been associated with rural development efforts and has been working closely with 10 villages, where students are encouraged to study local issues and propose meaningful solutions. Such initiatives bring together technology, empathy and social awareness. They also help students realise that innovation is most powerful when it improves lives.
Dr. Sai Prakash Leo Muthu’s vision reflects this integrated approach. He has emphasised that scouting can bring self-realisation to students and inspire them to build a better world. At Sairam, this belief is being translated into a structured ecosystem in which students participate in scouting, learn leadership, engage with villages, work on SDG-linked projects, develop prototypes, publish, patent and collaborate with institutions such as IEEE and the State Institute for Rural Development.
The institution currently has around 12,000+ students and sees among them the potential to create the next generation of technology leaders. But the goal is not limited to producing technically skilled graduates. The larger aim is to nurture young people who are socially aware, ethically grounded and ready to contribute to the nation.
The link between Sairam’s initiatives and the global Scouts for SDGs movement is particularly meaningful. Scouts for SDGs is a worldwide call to young people to contribute towards the Sustainable Development Goals. It encourages scouts and youth communities to take action on issues such as poverty, hunger, climate change, plastic pollution, clean water, sanitation, energy and peace.
In many ways, the movement reminds the world that young people are not just the leaders of tomorrow. They are capable of serving today. Sairam Institutions’ work reflects this same spirit. Through scouting, students learn discipline, teamwork and service. Through the SDG Action Program, they understand the world’s most urgent challenges. Through the Innovation Ecosystem, they learn how to turn problems into solutions. Through village outreach and community projects, they experience the realities of society at close range. Together, these efforts create a powerful model of education that is both modern and humane.
The recognition received in Sweden therefore carries a message beyond institutional pride. It shows that an Indian educational group can connect local action with global ideals. It demonstrates how a campus in Tamil Nadu can speak to the world through service, innovation and sustainability. It also highlights the role that educational institutions can play in shaping citizens who are ready to serve society with both knowledge and compassion.
For the Sairam family, the Baden Powell Fellowship recognition is a moment of honour. For Sairam Institutions, it is also a reminder of responsibility. The institution has long believed that education must raise human beings, not merely professionals. It must teach students to think, to question, to care and to act. It must give them the confidence to dream, and the humility to serve.
In an era when the world is facing climate stress, social inequality, unemployment, technological disruption and declining civic values, the need for such education is urgent. The Sairam model points to a path where scouting values, sustainable development and innovation can work together. Scouting gives students character. The SDGs give them direction. Innovation gives them tools. Community service gives them purpose.
Dr. Sai Prakash Leo Muthu believes that scouting can lead students towards self realisation and inspire them to build a better world. That belief is now being carried forward through classrooms, laboratories, villages, innovation centres and global platforms.
The recognition at the 78th Baden Powell Fellowship event in Sweden is therefore not just a celebration of a family or an institution. It is a celebration of an idea. It is the idea that education becomes truly powerful when it creates compassionate innovators, responsible citizens and young leaders who are ready to serve humanity.
For Sairam Institutions, the journey continues with a clear purpose. To prepare students not only for careers, but for life. Not only for success, but for service. Not only for India’s future, but for the future of the world.
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