In the fight against poverty and exclusion, we often turn to education, healthcare, or infrastructure. But what if music, something often labelled a luxury, was actually a quiet but powerful force for equity?

Music as Access: When we bring music into a child’s life, especially one from a marginalised background, we’re not just offering a hobby or entertainment.

We’re offering:

*Access to spaces of belonging and creativity that are too often reserved for the privileged

*Access to identity

*Access to cultural pride

The APT Project has three phases

Immersive, intimate and inspiring concerts

Fun-filled, highly participative workshops

Once a week, training in a chosen art form

The experience of music encourages patience, curiosity, and inner stillness. Moreover, traditional music & dance can be a powerful tool for social healing.

Currently, the APT Project is being run at 137 schools/spaces and is positively impacting 8000+ children.

In many parts of India, the arts are still gate-kept by economic status, caste, class, language, and urban bias.

For a child who has never seen a concert hall, listening to a raag phrase or a taal structure is an act of radical inclusion.

It says, You deserve beauty!

The magic of this work is visible in the twinkling eyes of children and the tapping of their feet! Watch Badlav Ki Dhun to witness this magic.

The children and the artists enjoy the most! Most artists share stories of deep learning and awareness, whereas children speak of pure joy, excitement and fun!

Strengthening the traditional music ecosystem in India.

Through APT Project, Baithak Foundation provides sustainable livelihood and up-skilling opportunities to more than 200+ young musicians.

In a world racing toward automation, globalisation, and digital saturation, there is an urgent need to slow down and listen to the roots we come from, the stories we hold, and the melodies that have guided us for centuries.

Indian traditional music is not just a cultural artefact. It is a living, breathing expression of identity, memory, and resilience.

If you wish to engage in the APT Project in a meaningful way, please write to us at hello[at]baithak[dot]org