Purpose-driven travel: how Valmiki Hari Kishan combines tourism, humanitarian work and international networking
At a time when tourism is often reduced to the number of arrivals, spending and destination promotion, the story of Valmiki Hari Kishan from Skål International Hyderabad opens a different perspective: travel as a tool for connecting people, transferring experience and generating tangible social benefit. At the centre of his public work are not only business contacts and an international presence, but also the idea that tourism can have a broader meaning than simply moving between airports, hotels and conference halls. That is precisely why, in recent years, his name has increasingly moved beyond the framework of the traditional tourism industry and entered the sphere of humanitarian engagement, social responsibility and projects that seek to leave a measurable mark on the community.
According to a recently published profile in international tourism media, Hari Kishan has so far visited 99 countries, and he does not present travel as a personal trophy, but as a platform for action, learning and cooperation. Such an approach fits well into the philosophy of Skål International, an organisation that has for decades positioned itself as a global network of professionals from the travel and tourism sector. In that network, membership is not conceived merely as a status label, but as a space in which business relationships are developed, as well as initiatives that cross the borders of an individual country, club or market.
What Skål International represents and why that framework matters
Skål International, according to the organisation’s official data, was founded in 1934 and brings together approximately 12,500 members in hundreds of clubs around the world. The organisation presents itself as the only global professional association that connects all branches of the tourism industry, from hospitality and agency business to air transport, the event industry and destination management. Such a framework is important for understanding the role of people like Hari Kishan, because their work is not limited to a narrow local circle, but takes place within a network that by its very nature requires international cooperation, exchange of experience and the ability to turn ideas into broader projects.
In recent years, Skål International has strongly emphasised sustainability, responsible management and networking as key values of modern tourism. In that logic, a person who uses travel also to build socially beneficial initiatives can easily be profiled as an example of the direction in which part of the tourism industry wants to go. Hari Kishan is not presented merely as an active member of the local club in Hyderabad. The official Skål International pages and related publications show that he is also involved in the organisation’s broader international structures, including the position of Deputy Internal Auditor for the 2025 term and membership in committees for 2026. This points to the fact that his work is not symbolic, but that he has also been entrusted with an institutional share of responsibility within the organisation.
From business traveller to advocate of purposeful travel
When speaking about people from the tourism sector who have travelled extensively, the public often perceives them through a simple image: someone who, because of business, conferences and international contacts, has seen a large part of the world. However, in the case of Hari Kishan, the emphasis is on a different kind of narrative. In his public presentation, travel is described as a way of understanding the real needs of communities, strengthening partnerships and opening space for projects that can have a concrete impact on children, the poor and institutions that work with vulnerable groups.
This idea is particularly visible in the way tourism and humanitarian work are connected. Instead of viewing travel solely as an act of consuming an experience, it is a concept according to which mobility, international contacts and visibility in the tourism industry can become a lever for expanding socially beneficial programmes. This is also important because in global tourism there is increasing discussion of so-called purpose-driven travel, that is, experiences that leave behind more than photographs and spending. Hari Kishan, at least according to publicly available descriptions of his work, is trying to translate that concept into operational practice.
The Egg Bank project: a simple idea with a very concrete goal
The most frequently mentioned example of such an approach is the Egg Bank project, which is linked to the Valmiki Foundation and work with children facing food insecurity. According to the foundation’s own description, the programme arose from the need to ensure more regular access to nutritionally valuable food for destitute and socially vulnerable children, with the egg chosen as a simple, relatively affordable and nutritionally powerful dietary supplement. The explanation of the project states that the initial idea was to help children connected with Valmiki Gurukul, but also to extend support to other non-governmental organisations and homes.
The strength of such an initiative lies not only in the humanitarian impulse, but in its practicality. Unlike large campaigns that often remain at the level of slogans, Egg Bank is based on a model that the public can easily understand: small, repeatable contributions directed towards a very concrete need. That is precisely why the project has communication power even beyond the local community. In countries such as India, where food inequality and child malnutrition still appear as serious social challenges, initiatives that combine philanthropy, local logistics and a recognisable public narrative can have a significantly greater impact than one-off actions.
An additional element that gave Egg Bank greater visibility was the expansion of the idea beyond India. Media reports from the region state that the model was also presented in Sri Lanka through a partnership with local organisations, with the project described as an attempt to respond to the nutritional needs of vulnerable children. This shows how the initiative, although simple in execution, has the potential for international adaptation. This is also where the importance of tourism networking becomes visible: contacts created through professional networks and travel can help move a social model from one environment to another without the need for large institutional apparatuses.
Humanitarian work as a continuation of the tourism network, not a separate story
In practice, it often happens that business life and humanitarian engagement are presented as two parallel worlds. In this case, the public image is built in precisely the opposite way: as a combination of tourism networking, public visibility and aid projects. Hari Kishan thus appears not only as a traveller and a member of an international tourism organisation, but also as a person trying to use his position, acquaintances and reputation to gather support. This is an important difference, because it shows that socially responsible tourism is not necessarily separate from the commercial sector, but can emerge precisely from within it.
Official Skål International publications have on several occasions also presented other activities connected with his work, including the Unity-X initiative. In that project, the emphasis was on enabling travel and exchange for children from less privileged backgrounds, with an educational and experiential component. The message of such programmes is relatively clear: if travel is already said to be one of the best teachers, then that experience should not be reserved only for those who can easily afford it. Such an idea, although ambitious, directly addresses one of the key tensions of contemporary tourism — between privilege and accessibility.
Why the recognition from Skål Asia 2025 is more than a protocol award
That Hari Kishan does not occupy merely a peripheral position within the Skål International network is also shown by the “Personality of the Year 2025” recognition for the Asian region, awarded during the Skål Asia Congress 2025. Media reports from the Indian tourism industry state that this recognition was awarded to him for the second time, after an earlier success in 2019. In a sector where recognitions are often distributed for protocol reasons as well, a repeated award nevertheless carries additional weight: it suggests continuity of presence, a recognisable personal profile and the ability to remain relevant over time.
The importance of such recognitions lies not only in personal status. At the same time, they also act as validation for the club from which the person comes, in this case Skål International Hyderabad, but also as a signal to the wider tourism market about the type of engagement the organisation wishes to highlight. If someone who simultaneously develops an international network and humanitarian projects is being rewarded, then that says something about the value direction of the organisation itself. In that sense, Hari Kishan is not only an individual with a personal story, but also a kind of symbol of what part of the tourism community wants to promote as a desirable model of professional action.
Can tourism really create social change
There is always a legitimate question surrounding such stories: how much do they truly change reality, and how much do they serve as inspirational marketing. This is an important question and should not be avoided. Tourism as an industry simultaneously generates enormous income, but also pressure on space, infrastructure, housing prices and the environment. Therefore, every claim about “travel that changes the world” must pass the test of concreteness. In the case of Hari Kishan, the strongest argument is not general messages, but projects with a clear operational goal — food support, children’s exchanges, direct assistance to institutions and the use of an international network to solve real problems.
At the same time, such initiatives by themselves cannot solve the structural causes of poverty, malnutrition or social inequality. Rather, they show how individuals and organisations within the tourism sector can assume part of the responsibility and act where the state or the market do not reach quickly enough. That is not a small thing. In a public space where there is often a choice between cynical rejection and excessive glorification, it is more useful to view such projects soberly: as limited, but potentially important models of local intervention that can encourage a wider circle of donors, partners and institutions.
Hyderabad as the starting point, the world as the field of work
It is particularly interesting that the whole story is not being built from some traditional Western centre of global tourism, but from Hyderabad, a city that in recent years has strengthened its international business and congress visibility, while also remaining deeply immersed in the regional social context. It is precisely this combination of global connectedness and local rootedness that allows initiatives such as Egg Bank not to remain at the level of abstract humanitarian rhetoric. They arise from a concrete environment, with concrete problems and concrete support networks.
Publicly available texts about Hari Kishan show that he uses the symbolism of travel very consciously. Visiting 99 countries could in any other context sound like a figure for a personal biography or social media. Here, that fact is being turned into an argument for credibility: someone who has seen different cultures, social systems and models of action supposedly more easily understands how to connect people, institutions and ideas. However ambitious such a claim may sound, its strength nevertheless lies in the fact that it is complemented by activities that go beyond mere travel experience.
A broader message for the tourism industry
The story of Valmiki Hari Kishan is therefore interesting beyond a personal portrait. It opens the question of what kind of leadership the tourism industry needs today. Is it enough to be a successful networker and destination promoter, or are people in the sector increasingly expected to show social responsibility, public engagement and a willingness to direct their influence towards tangible projects? At a time when tourism is trying to present itself as more sustainable, more inclusive and more meaningful, it is precisely such examples that become a useful test of the credibility of the entire sector.
Hari Kishan’s public image may be idealised, which is often the case in promotional and media portrayals, but the fundamental message remains relevant. Tourism is not only an industry of movement, but also an industry of encounters. And when encounters turn into networks of help, exchange and support, travel ceases to be only a private experience and becomes social action. That is the reason why his name is mentioned today not only in tourism circles, but also in the broader conversation about whether global connectedness can have a human, and not merely a market, meaning.
Sources:- Skål International – official overview of the organisation, history, number of members and international structure- Skål International – official page on the role of international auditors and the composition of the auditing body- Skål International – publication on Skål International auditors for 2025- Skål International – publication on Skål International committees for 2026- Skål International – text about Valmiki Hari Kishan and his work within the Skål International network- Valmiki Foundation – description of the Egg Bank project and the goals of the food support programme- Skål International – report on the Unity-X project and the inclusion of children from less privileged backgrounds- Travel Trade Journal – report on the Skål Asia Congress 2025 and the “Personality of the Year 2025” recognition- TravelBiz Monitor – additional report on the recognition awarded to Valmiki Hari Kishan- eTurboNews – profile on purpose-driven travel and the figure of 99 countries visited- The Morning Telegraph – report on the expansion of the Egg Bank concept in Sri Lanka
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