Across the global Khoja diaspora, generations have carried faith, culture, and identity across continents from Gujarat to East Africa, Europe, North America, and beyond.
But heritage survives only when language survives.
Gujarati is more than communication. It is the language of our elders, our traditions, our storytelling, and our shared memory as a community. Yet for many diaspora families, children today are growing up increasingly disconnected from this linguistic inheritance.
This Eid offers an opportunity to reconnect that bond.
The Gujarati Bolo Starter Kit by KIDS BOLO® helps children learn Gujarati through fun, interactive, screen-free learning using illustrated books and an audio Bolo Pen that brings words and sentences to life instantly.
Children build vocabulary, confidence, and cultural familiarity while learning naturally at home and at their own pace.
This special Eid initiative is supported by the Khoja Heritage Project of the World Federation of KSIMC, in collaboration with MARC – the Mulla Asghar Memorial Library & Islamic Resource Centre, as part of ongoing efforts to preserve language and cultural continuity across the global diaspora.
The 50% discount has been made possible through a subsidy provided by the World Federation, and is available exclusively to members of Jamaats affiliated with the World Federation of KSIMC and its Regional Federations.
***Please note that Kids Bolo is currently able to facilitate direct orders only from the UK, USA, and Canada.
Members wishing to place orders from other regions are kindly requested to email the Secretariat, which will do its best to assist in coordinating orders. Please be advised that
international postage from the UK can be relatively expensive, and arrangements will therefore be handled on a case-by-case basis.
Valid: March 1 – March 28, 2026
Exclusive to members of Jamaats affiliated with the World Federation and its regional federations
One-time use
Access the offer below:

Order today and give grandparents the greatest Eid gift of all hearing their grandchildren speak Gujarati at the Eid dinner table.
Because heritage does not disappear suddenly. It fades quietly unless we choose to pass it on.