About This Book
The author surveys desperate poverty and argues that spiritual regeneration must be joined to organised social remedies. Combining vivid observation with moral argument, the work proposes concrete measures such as shelters, rehabilitation programs, training and steady employment, and community-based settlements to restore livelihoods. It sets out administrative and preventive practices aimed at protecting families, reducing chronic destitution, and breaking cycles of vice and dependence. The tone mixes urgent appeal with pragmatic detail, presenting a program intended to make religious conviction actionable through scalable social organization and long-term care.
About the Author
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