He is a co-founder and the chairman of Borderless World Foundation, which is an NGO that works for the deprived and victimized people of the border areas of India.
[9][better source needed][10] Later he worked with Balraj Puri[11] and the Institute of J & K Affairs on the project of "Children affected by armed conflict in Jammu & Kashmir" which was sponsored by UNICEF.
][13][14] He founded the Borderless World Foundation (BWF) in 2002 with another activist from Pune, Bharati Mamani and a local resident, Mohiuddin Mir who had been active in the region since 1998.
[8] Kadam is said to lead an ascetic lifestyle having dedicated his life to service and lives as described by an article in India Currents magazine as a "penniless vagabond".
He has worked on various ad hoc programs for local communities with am emphasis on those who had been widowed in the conflict before founding the organisation.
[26][18] The BeT centers also assist mothers who have lost their husbands in the conflict in providing financial and material aid to their children.
[27][28][29] The BeT is supported by a few prominent philanthropists and well-wishers like the Holkar Family, Syed Ata Hasnain, Balraj Puri and Dr.
[37][38][33] Kotak Mahindra Bank[39] under their CSR initiatives donated 5 critical care ambulances to BWF and Indian Army in 2021 in the presence of Shri Rajnath Singh, Defence Minister, Government Of India 2021[40] [41] [42] [43] In the 2016–17 Kashmir unrest, due to use of pellet guns by security forces, many children and youths aged between 10 and 30 got completely or partially blinded, during protests and curfews.
[46][47] Kadam assisted in humanitarian efforts with the help of the BWF by organizing doctors from across India, and asking them to come to Kashmir to perform eye surgeries for free.
The project trains girls in making sanitary napkins,[60] computerized embroidery,[61] stitching, knitting, fabric painting, and tailoring.
[64] The launch of the first floating Mobile Medical Unit in Dal Lake is a commendable effort to provide primary healthcare services to the community in Srinagar.
The floating Mobile Medical Unit is expected to bring healthcare services closer to the people, especially those living in areas that might be challenging to access through traditional means.
The Indo-Pakistan border at LoC is considered perilous where skirmishes occur occasionally and sometimes result in civilian casualties.