Dayavu Dhanapal grew up in the Palani Hills of South India in a household which, through the influence of the Scudder family, became fervent in the Christian faith. Dayavu learned impeccable English and actually knew Handel’s Messiah better than most Americans. She and ten brothers and sisters were all teachers of Tamil to missionaries in South India for many decades. Her home town of Kodaikanal, Tamil Nadu, is a hill station about 6,000 feet above the plains, where a school for the children of Christian missionaries was founded in 1901. It was first called High Clerc, and until 1972 the school was commonly known simply as Kodai School.

The founder of The Bethania Foundation India TM was Dayavu Dhanapal, the child of Christian parents who were led into the faith by the family of Dr. Ida Scudder. The missionary movement which brought the gospel to India began with Bartholomäus Ziegenbalg, a German Lutheran, who arrived at the Danish trade establishment of Tranquebar, South India, on July 9, 1706. The missionary movement grew in India throughout the 18th and 19th centuries, through the work of missionaries from many northern European countries. Born in India, Ida Scudder was a granddaughter of the first American medical missionary, Dr. John Scudder, who worked in India in the late 19th century, with his seven sons. In 1918, Dr. Ida Scudder founded the Christian Medical College (CMC) in Vellore, which by the mid 20th century had become one of the most successful medical educational institutions and hospitals in all of Asia