People

Harakhchand Sawla: A Good Samaritan devotes life to cancer patients

A young man in his thirties used to stand on the footpath opposite the famous Tata Cancer Hospital at Mumbai and stare at the crowd in front- fear plainly written upon the faces of the patients standing at death’s door; their relatives with equally grim faces running around.. These sights disturbed him greatly.

Most of the patients were poor people from distant towns. They had no idea whom to meet, or what to do. They had no money for medicines, not even food.

The young man, heavily depressed, would return home. ‘Something should be done for these people’, he would. think. He was haunted by the thought day and night.

At last he found a way-
He rented out his own hotel that was doing good business and raised some money. From these funds he started a charitable activity right opposite Tata Cancer Hospital, on the pavement next to Kondaji Building.

He himself had no idea that the activity would continue to flourish even after the passage of 27 years.

The activity consisted of providing free meals for cancer patients and their relatives. Many people in the vicinity approved of this activity.

Beginning with fifty, the number of beneficiaries soon rose to hundred, two hundred, three hundred. As the numbers of patients increased, so did the number of helping hands.

As years rolled by, the activity continued; undeterred by the change of seasons, come winter, summer or even the dreaded monsoon of Mumbai.

The number of beneficiaries soon reached 700. Mr Harakhchand Sawla, for that was the name of the pioneer, did not stop here. He started supplying free medicines for the needy. In fact, he started a medicine bank, enlisting voluntary services of three doctors and three pharmacists. A toy banks was opened for kids suffering from cancer. The ‘Jeevan Jyot’ trust founded by Mr Sawla now runs more than 60 humanitarian projects.

Sawla, now 57 years old, works with the same vigour. A thousand salutes to his boundless energy and his monumental contribution!

There are people in this country who look upon Sachin Tendulkar as ‘God’- for playing 200 test matches in 20 years, few hundred one day matches, and scoring 100 centuries and 30,000 runs.

But hardly anyone knows Harakhchand Sawla, leave alone call him ‘God’ for feeding free lunches to 10 to 12 lac cancer patients and their relatives. We owe this discrepancy to our mass media!

For last 27 years, millions of cancer patients and their relatives have found ‘God’, in the form of Harakhchand Sawla.

As you forward interesting jokes and poems instantly, do forward this message.

Mr Sawla deserves his fair share of recognition, more importantly, let his story inspire as many as possible.

Alex

Recent Posts

Zhengzhou: Interactive Exhibitions on the International Museum Day

ZHENGZHOU, China--(BUSINESS WIRE)--In central China’s Zhengzhou city, visiting museums has become a new trend of…

8 hours ago

Reality TV Star, Mollie Pearce, Backs Campaign to Tackle Inequalities in Condition That Impacts Millions of People Globally

Mollie Pearce, star of the UK reality TV show ‘The Traitors’ who was diagnosed with…

18 hours ago

Quality Building Award 2024 Unveils Finalist List

QBA 2024 Announces 35 Finalists Competing for Hong Kong's Highest Honour in the Building Industry…

2 days ago

UXLINK Tops RootData’s Latest X Hot Items List and DappRadar Social Apps List

SINGAPORE - Media OutReach Newswire - 17 May 2024 - UXLINK, the Web3 social platform…

2 days ago

Australia Construction Industry Report 2024: Growth to Slow to 2% in Real-terms this Year Following 9% Growth in 2023 – Forecasts to 2028 – ResearchAndMarkets.com

DUBLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The "Australia Construction Market Size, Trend Analysis by Sector, Competitive Landscape and Forecast to…

2 days ago

Connecting the Dots of ANKTIVA’s Triangle Offense: A Deep Dive with Dr. Patrick Soon-Shiong and Dr. Ashish Kamat in a Three-Part UroToday Podcast

Three-part podcast interview features The mechanism of action of ANKTIVA® activating NK cells, Killer T…

2 days ago