The form does not have Goals enabled.
Gau Seva, for us, is not limited to rituals or symbolic gestures. It is the responsibility to step in when a cow’s life is at its most vulnerable stage. We rescue cows who are critically injured, paralysed, abandoned, or left to die on the streets due to accidents, illness, or extreme neglect. Once rescued, they are provided immediate medical care, pain management, assisted feeding, and a clean, protected space to rest.
For cows who can recover, we support them through treatment, nourishment, and rehabilitation until they regain strength. For those whose condition is irreversible, we do not abandon them. We ensure they live their remaining days in peace, free from hunger, fear, and pain. Every cow receives dignity, hygiene, and compassionate handling.
Our Gau Seva is real, continuous, and responsibility driven. It is the promise that no suffering cow will be ignored, and no life will be left to end in cruelty or neglect.
Temporary feeding or roadside treatment cannot save cows who are paralysed, severely injured, or in their final stage of life. Without shelter, medical supervision, and hygiene, their condition rapidly worsens. Once they collapse on the streets, exposure to traffic, weather, and neglect turns suffering into a slow and painful death. Temporary solutions fail where long-term care is essential.
Critically ill cows cannot protect themselves, find food, or escape danger. Open wounds, infections, paralysis, and extreme weakness make street survival impossible. Harsh weather, dehydration, and constant stress increase pain and accelerate decline. Without immediate rescue and protected care, these cows are left to endure their final days in fear, discomfort, and complete vulnerability.
A permanent shelter provides injured and paralysed cows a safe environment away from danger. Clean resting areas, medical monitoring, assisted feeding, and calm surroundings reduce suffering and prevent further harm. For cows who cannot recover, the shelter becomes a place of dignity, ensuring they are cared for respectfully and compassionately until the end of their lives.
“A cow at the edge of life does not need sympathy it needs protection, care, and dignity until its final breath.”
January 25, 2026
January 22, 2026
January 22, 2026
January 21, 2026
January 18, 2026
January 14, 2026
February 17, 2025
February 17, 2025
We will share recent updates and progress of this campaign here. Stay tuned for the latest developments and success stories.