Saathi founder’s generous giving – Rosemarie Dipnarine’s lifelong service

For decades, 76-year-old Rosemarie Dipnarine has dedicated her existence to alleviating suffering and creating opportunities for Trinidad and Tobago’s most vulnerable populations. As the visionary founder and president of the Saathi Foundation, her humanitarian work transcends religious, cultural, and generational boundaries, establishing a legacy of compassion that began in her childhood home in Longdenville.

Born into a modest Hindu household where happiness outweighed material wealth, Dipnarine learned the principles of service from her parents—a factory worker and homemaker who frequently labored in canefields to secure secondary education for their eight children. Her earliest philanthropic memory dates to age eight, when her mother instructed her to sell breadfruit from their tree to assist a struggling village family. “I remember asking people to buy a breadfruit, please, only eight cents for one,” Dipnarine recalled. “That is where my social work started.”

Following a 40-year career in public service—including statistical roles at the Ministry of Planning and Development and Ministry of Health—and contributions to major cultural events like Carifesta VII and VIII, Dipnarine formalized her charitable efforts. In June 2010, she established Saathi Foundation (Serving and Aspiring Towards Helping Individuals) to address poverty systematically rather than through informal begging. The organization’s logo—designed by her son-in-law—features hands transferring food grains, symbolizing the act of giving oneself to prevent hunger.

Saathi’s multifaceted approach encompasses food security, housing assistance, medical support, and educational sponsorship. The foundation operates on the fundamental belief that “without proper education, you are nothing,” committing to support promising students from primary school through university when necessary. Their success stories include a chemical engineering graduate who lost both parents, whose entire education and living expenses were covered by the foundation.

Beyond education, Saathi has rebuilt homes after fires, relocated families from makeshift shelters, and constructed dignified housing for terminally ill individuals. Dipnarine emphasizes that all assistance must be provided unconditionally and respectfully: “When we give, we do not advertise or show the faces of children in need. They also have their pride.”

The foundation sustains its operations primarily through annual fundraising events, including an upcoming lunch at Passage to Asia restaurant in Chaguanas on April 26. Dipnarine, awarded the Hummingbird Medal (Silver) in 2000 for cultural and community service, defines success as “bringing someone out of the dark part of their life and showing them the light.” Despite her advanced age, she continues leading with an instinct-driven, urgency-based approach, relying on what she describes as “angels on earth” who enable Saathi’s transformative work.