VBA was established as part of Sydney Rotary’s international service in 2010 by Rotary Sydney member Indy Singh, OAM, to provide free eye surgery to the world’s most disadvantaged people. Now an independent charity VBA, still led by Indy Singh with a majority of the its Board Rotarians, has supported over 55,000 surgeries, and Indy is determined to reach 100,000. 

Click to read the Report from Cambodia and you will know why we do all this. 

READ MORE to find out about two elegant October events. 

SAVE THE DATES

Further bookings detail will be available soon 
 The Indian Dinner

 Dhakshin Restaurant
 Date:Friday 25 October 2024
 Time: 6.00pm
 Location: 320 Pacific Highway, Crows Nest 
 

 

 

 

MARCH 2025

  Fiducian & Vision Beyond AUS Charity Golf Day and Dinner
 
  Date:   Friday 21 March 2025. 
  Time:  12.00 Noon for golf or
              6.00pm for dinner.
  Location: Oatlands Golf Club, 94 Bettington Road, Oatlands. 

 

 
 
Working with Australian medical practitioners who generously volunteer their time and skills, in-country specialist surgeons and staff, VBA funds and supports free eye surgery at established local hospitals and independent rural clinics committed to providing free care for those living below the poverty line. VBA provides surgical and post-operative consumables and necessary equipment to these centres, with facility refurbishment, to enhance capacity.

There are 285 million people worldwide who are visually impaired – of which about 40% are totally blind. About 90% of these people live in developing countries.

Some of the causes of vision impairment are cataracts, uncorrected refractive errors (short- and long-sightedness, and astigmatism), glaucoma, and poor hygiene.

Vision Beyond AUS works in India, Myanmar, Cambodia and Nepal to provide operations and train local people.

Each operation costs just $35.00, with every dollar going to operations and training – no money is deducted for administration. All administration is done by Fiducian Group Ltd free of charge.

Eye surgeons from Australia regularly travel to the four countries and pay all their own accommodation and travel expenses – again, so that all funds pay for operations and training.

Correcting vision impairment and blindness is crucial to people living in India, Myanmar, Cambodia and Nepal.

Many visually impaired people in these countries live in squalid slums. These people are considered a burden on the families because they need extra care and they cannot contribute to the families’ incomes.

More than 90% of them cannot work and either totally rely on their families to support them or are discarded, to live and beg on the streets. Their life expectancy drops to one-third of the average for their age group.