KHELEGI Launches to Keep Adolescent Girls in Sport | Supported by IOC

KHELEGI Launches to Keep Adolescent Girls in Sport | Supported by IOC

KHELEGI Launches to Keep Adolescent Girls in Sport with Dignity, Safety, and Joy

(Supported by the International Olympic Committee’s Young Leaders Programme)

Mumbai, India – 1st September 2025 – Today marks the official launch of KHELEGI, a sports-for-social-impact initiative dedicated to keeping girls in sport during adolescence, a stage when 49% of girls drop out of sport, a rate six times higher than boys (UNESCO).

Supported by the IOC Young Leaders Programme through Olympism365 of the International Olympic Committee,KHELEGI addresses the barriers that prevent girls from participating in sport, including menstrual stigma and lack of awareness, unsafe play spaces, gendered norms, inadequate facilities, economic pressures, and limited role models.

“KHELEGI is a promise, a vision, and a declaration: every young person has the right to stay in the game, access opportunity, and thrive through sport,” said Laher Gala, Founder of KHELEGI. “Keeping girls in sport empowers them to grow with confidence, resilience, and opportunity, while also nurturing a stronger, more inclusive ecosystem for women in sports. It creates leaders, role models, and a new generation of athletes who can break barriers and redefine possibility”

Laher Gala, Founder of KHELEGI
Laher Gala, Founder of KHELEGI

Launching in Dharavi

KHELEGI aims to begin its pilot programme in Dharavi, Mumbai, working directly with local schools, communities, and sports organisations to create safe, inclusive, and joyful play spaces for girls. The pilot will inform future scale-up strategies, ensuring programs are tailored to community needs and sustainable for the long term.

Tackling the Dropout Crisis

Nearly half of adolescent girls (49%) drop out of sport during puberty, six times higher than boys. Globally, 85% of adolescent girls are insufficiently active, and only 7% of schools provide equal PE time to boys and girls. When girls leave sport, communities lose leadership, confidence, health, economic growth, and innovation. KHELEGI directly responds to this crisis, ensuring that girls can participate through puberty and menstruation, with dignity, safety, and joy.

See also  Top 5 Sportswomen Who Continued Their Careers After Becoming Mothers
A young girl watches her dream with a silent fire in her eyes—waiting for her chance to step into the ring. PC: Laher Gala
A young girl watches her dream with a silent fire in her eyes—waiting for her chance to step into the ring. PC: Laher Gala

A Movement Built for Impact

KHELEGI is research-backed, community-driven, and ecosystem-focused. The initiative leverages a holistic process that includes:

  • Capacity building and ecosystem engagement
  • Iterative feedback and measurement
  • Expert-backed curriculum design
  • Collaborative implementation and advocacy

Through this process, KHELEGI strengthens local leaders, amplifies community voices, and creates programs designed to scale, sustain, and transform sports experiences for girls.

Our Purpose, Vision, and Mission

  • Purpose: To enable girls to play sports through puberty and menstruation with dignity, safety, and joy.
  • Vision: A world transformed by equity in sports.
  • Mission: To create equitable access and opportunities in sport through education, awareness, and advocacy, supported by ecosystem-driven interventions that scale, sustain, and transform communities.

Join the Movement

KHELEGI invites schools, organisations, communities, and allies to join the movement to rewrite the game and ensure that no girl is left out of sport.

For more information, visit the website and follow KHELEGI on Instagram, LinkedIn, and Twitter.

Media Contact:

Laher Gala

IOC Young Leader (2025-2028) and Founder, KHELEGI

Email: hello@khelegi.com

Comments

No comments yet. Why don’t you start the discussion?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *