She added that community organisations had also expressed interest to do work with the school.
A spokesperson for Aldi UK told the BBC, that they are "under the same ownership but operate as completely separate businesses".Mondelēz, which submitted the lawsuit in May, said it had reached out to Aldi several times about the "confusingly similar packaging".
Although Aldi did discontinue or alter the packaging of some products, the supermarket has continued making "unacceptable copies", the lawsuit stated.The company claimed that if Aldi is allowed to continued with its product lines, it will "irreparably harm" the Mondelēz brand.The lawsuit included side-by-side pictures comparing the appearances of Mondelēz' product with Aldi's.
In the lawsuit, Aldi is accused of trademark infringement, unfair competition and unjust enrichment. Mondelēz said it is seeking damages.Mondelēz described Aldi's business model as hinging on "low-priced private label products that resemble the look and feel of well-known brands".
Aldi, which has its headquarters in Germany, is known as a discount supermarket offering affordable alternatives to well-known brands.
There are over 2,500 Aldi shops in the US.Survivors like Shamili are now grappling with trauma, pain and a sense of disbelief after the celebration spiralled into catastrophe.
"I kept saying, 'let's go, let's go' - the crowd was getting out of control," Shamili recalled, sitting on a bed at the government-run Bowring and Lady Curzon Hospital. "The next thing I knew, I was on the ground. People were walking over me. I thought I was going to die."She is not alone. Many who had come just to soak in the atmosphere - fans, families, curious onlookers - found themselves caught in a tide of bodies as crowds swelled beyond control.
Police had expected no more than 100,000 people. In reality, Karnataka's chief minister Siddaramaiah said, the crowd surged to 200,000-300,000. The stadium, with a capacity of 32,000, was overwhelmed long before the team arrived.Videos from before the crush showed people climbing trees and trying to scale the stadium walls.