The Foundation of Goodness is a holistic rural development model that seeks to bridge the urban-rural divide in Sri Lanka via 10 empowerment divisions across 850+ villages island-wide, and reached over 135,000+ beneficiaries in 2023 alone by way of 20 Empowerment Centres, free of cost.

Imran

February 20, 2020

Coaches Across Continents Training

    Indian Coach Tejas from CAC ( Coaches Across Continents ) conducted a 4 day training programme for FoG sportsmen and women including the Senior Club Cricket […]
February 12, 2020

A CRICKETING CELEBRATION

One of the main avenues the Foundation of Goodness focuses on is rural sports development. We believe that rural children often do not get the opportunity […]
February 5, 2020

OCEAN CARE BY DIVE FOR GOOD

Sri Lankans have always been people of the Sea. Being an island nation, many of us have reaped our livelihoods from the sea, grown up around […]
January 29, 2020

ESSENTIAL SCHOOL SUPPLIES PROGRAMME

Many of us remember the joy that comes from getting new school supplies. At the beginning of the school year, we would eagerly wait to show […]
January 22, 2020

GRADUATION CEREMONY 2020

Despite Sri Lanka being a higher middle-income country, nearly 80% of all Sri Lankans live in rural communities. These rural communities face a hard climb out […]
January 16, 2020

Commemorating 15 years since the Boxing Day Tsunami

For the Foundation of Goodness, the 26th of December is a day of remembrance, one where we contemplate how drastically life changed for all Sri Lankans, […]
January 9, 2020

2019 Recap

The Foundation of Goodness celebrated 20 years of humanitarian service in 2019 and a special press conference took place on 12th March 2019 at the project […]
December 19, 2019

Mahawilachchiya Village Heartbeat Empowerment Centre (VHE)

  We are excited to welcome our newest Village Heartbeat Empowerment Centre in Mahawilachchiya to the Foundation of Goodness family! Mahawilachchiya is a remote village situated in the Anuradhapura District […]
December 17, 2019

Restoring the Coral Reefs of Seenigama

Coral mining has been a problem plaguing Sri Lankan coastlines for decades. Burning mined coral to produce ‘lime’ used in the construction industry was a profitable […]