Background: Nepal constitutes more than eighty percent rural areas. In rural areas, illiteracy, poverty, and gender based crimes are widespread. Migration of young people to India and Gulf Countries is high. Awareness level among community people regarding HIV transmission, alcohol related harms and health and hygiene is limited. Nepal Red Cross is working since decade to reduce harm related to migration, HIV, gender and caste. Currently, Nepal Cross covers 54 districts out of 75 districts of the kingdom. Objectives: The communities are empowered and they can prevent themselves from HIV, gender and caste related harm through trainings, orientations, advocacy sessions, income generation activities and dissemination through traditional singers. Methods: Nepal is rich in traditional culture and entertainment approaches. Traditional entertainment approaches are very popular and well accepted in the communities. Project has adapted a traditional entertainment approach called Gandhaba traditional roving singers Song to disseminate the information in the communities. For this purpose, the traditional singers are trained on the topics like HIV/AIDS, migration, demerits of alcohol, caste discrimination. The singers and project people jointly compose songs on topics mentioned above. Then the trained singers with composed songs are mobilized in communities to disseminate information. Results: The Gandhaba having community acceptance visit community people spontaneously and participate in the singing songs. The mobilization of traditional singers has supported to reduce stigma and discrimination attached to PLHIV. Information given through traditional singers regarding HIV/AIDS and sexual issues are more acceptable in the communities then through modern media. Further, dissemination through Gandhaba song has supported to create a supportive environment in communities to work for prevention of HIV/AIDS transmission. Conclusions: This approach has been found sustainable because the singer who is trained is from local community and once trained may continue for longer times. Those singers use local language thus they are highly accessible and easily understood by the community people.