Rescue. Heal. Rehome.

A warmer digital home for an NGO that shows up for animals every single day.

Mahakal Animal Trust responds to emergency calls, funds treatment, supports adoption, and builds safer futures for animals who have nobody else. This redesigned experience puts trust, urgency, and compassion front and center.

24/7 emergency response Transparent monthly updates Mobile-friendly donations
Rescued dog resting safely
This month

27 animals rescued from accidents, abandonment, and flood-risk zones.

Every rescue includes field stabilization, transport, medical review, and a care plan shared with supporters.

4,820 animals rescued since 2016
92% reunited or adopted
18 ICU kennels active daily
What We Do

Fast action in the field, patient care in recovery, thoughtful matches at adoption.

The work goes far beyond rescue pickup. We coordinate transport, treatment, foster placement, behavioral support, and safe release when wildlife needs specialist care.

ER

Emergency rescue

Teams respond to road injuries, cruelty alerts, abandonment, and weather emergencies with rescue vans and first-aid kits.

Average dispatch time: 22 minutes
MD

Medical and rehab

Animals receive ICU support, surgery, medicine, wound management, physiotherapy, and daily monitoring until stable.

1,340 surgeries funded
AD

Adoption and foster care

Home checks, counseling, follow-ups, and behavior support help each animal land in a safe and lasting environment.

42 foster homes currently active
Impact In Motion

Compassion becomes measurable when every case is followed through.

Donors and volunteers stay because the team shares proof of care, not just promises. Bills, updates, discharge notes, and success stories are all part of the model.

380 trained volunteers on active roster
48 wildlife releases coordinated in 2025
15 schools reached through humane education
Volunteer comforting a rescued puppy
Featured Rescue Story

Hope arrived on a highway shoulder and left with a family waiting at home.

After a fracture repair and six weeks of monitored rehab, Hope regained mobility, confidence, and eventually a permanent home. Stories like this are why steady support matters so much.

  • Emergency first aid delivered on-site before transport.
  • Orthopedic treatment and recovery supervised by the medical team.
  • Behavioral support helped the adoption transition succeed.
How Rescue Works

One distress call sets off a full chain of care.

1. Alert received

Helpline, WhatsApp, or local partners share location details, photos, and urgency.

2. Field team dispatched

Nearest trained rescuer and transport vehicle are assigned with vet guidance on standby.

3. Stabilize and transport

Immediate first aid begins on site, followed by transfer to recovery or partner clinics.

4. Treatment plan

Medical care, nutrition, medication, diagnostics, and enrichment are tailored case by case.

5. Foster, adoption, or release

Each animal leaves only when it has the right path forward and enough follow-through support.

6. Transparent reporting

Updates, bills, and outcomes are shared so supporters know where every rupee or dollar went.

Ways To Help

Different kinds of support keep the rescue system running.

Whether you donate once, volunteer on weekends, or sponsor a treatment case, the support turns into food, fuel, medicine, and second chances.

Donate monthly

Recurring support keeps medicine cabinets stocked and allows the team to plan for emergency runs.

Set up monthly giving

Volunteer weekends

Join transport runs, adoption drives, rescue coordination, or recovery-center shifts after onboarding.

About Volunteer

Sponsor treatment

Fund a surgery, ICU stay, medication round, or rehabilitation cycle for an active rescue case.

Talk to the team
Voices Of Trust

People stay involved because they can see the difference clearly.

"I donate monthly because the updates are honest, detailed, and deeply humane."

Maya, recurring donor

"The volunteer training made me feel capable, safe, and genuinely useful from day one."

Arjun, weekend rescuer

"Their flood response saved animals our neighborhood could not have reached alone."

Community council partner
Immediate Need

Emergency medical funds are running low for oxygen, antibiotics, and rescue fuel.

The next call can come in any minute. Help the team stay ready before it does.