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National India Hub leads unified community initiative

The event brought together over 100 groups in what organizers described as a coordinated effort to present shared, fact-based narratives highlighting the contributions of Indian Americans while encouraging responsible civic conduct.

National India Hub in Chicago / Courtesy: @cgichicago via Instagram

National India Hub, a community center in Chicago that serves as an umbrella for more than 165 organizations, convened a broad coalition on Nov. 22 to introduce the “One Voice • One Message” initiative.

The event brought together over 100 groups in what organizers described as a coordinated effort to present shared, fact-based narratives highlighting the contributions of Indian Americans while encouraging responsible civic conduct.

State Representative Michelle Mussman and Cook County Commissioner Kevin Morrison, attending as chief guests, noted the scale of collaboration the hub has built across a wide range of community stakeholders. They lauded its ability to bring together diverse groups “without borders” and its growing influence in local civic engagement.

Also Read: National India Hub rallies community for Pahalgam victims

The new initiative aims to streamline communication among participating organizations and present unified messaging across issues that affect the broader community. Leaders said the effort is designed to counter negative portrayals, respond to concerns over recent threats to Hindu temples, and discourage isolated actions that could distort the public image of a community long associated with professionalism and steady contributions to the region.

To bolster the initiative’s reach, the National India Hub partnered with the Bharat Digital Media Federation. Support from its founder, Viswa CM, who is based in India, will help circulate the campaign’s messaging across global Indian media networks and digital platforms.

The gathering also marked the launch of National India Hub’s free charity clinic, which will offer preventive care every Saturday. Organizers said the clinic will serve uninsured families, seniors, visiting parents, and students, particularly as healthcare expenses continue to climb nationwide. Expansion plans are already under discussion.

Reiterating its purpose, the organization emphasized its guiding principle: “To unite and help each other without borders.”

With the rollout of the unified messaging campaign, expanded media partnerships, and the opening of the free clinic, leaders described the moment as a significant step in strengthening cooperation and community service within the Indian American population across Chicagoland.

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