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India Today, January 4, 1999
January 4, 1999


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Heroes, Villains and Zeroes '98

NEEMUCH EYE DONORS
A People with Vision

Residents of this obscure town have helped hundreds of blind people see.

FACT FILE

Cornea recipient Geeta Bai

Neemuch has provided 859 pairs of eyes in the past 15 years. In 1997 it donated 78 eyes to win the Lion's Club award for maximum donations. Now estimated to be among the highest per capita eye donors in the country.

An eye donation means that a part of the dead person is going to stay alive
--Bhanu Dave,
Neemuch businessman

Tucked away in a corner of north-western Madhya Pradesh, Neemuch is so obscure that it is difficult to reach it by train. Yet its residents take pride in working miracles: in making the blind see. Cornea donation is a mass movement here. As Bhanu Dave, an old resident puts it, "It has become a status symbol here."

It began as a Lions Club project in 1983. As M.L. Garg, among the pioneers, recalls, "It took courage to approach grieving relatives for eye donations." The response was often physical assault. Nevertheless, by the early '90s the Neemuch elite had been persuaded. Congressman Sitaram Jaju pledged his eyes. So did former BJP chief minister Sunderlal Patwa's father.

A cornea must be transplanted within 90 hours of donation. Initially, corneas had to be transported to the nearest hospital in Indore (250 km away), packed in an icebox. They would often atrophy en route. Local philanthropist G.D. Agarawal stepped in and built Gomabai Eye Hospital in 1992.

Over the past decade and a half, Neemuch has donated 859 pairs of eyes and by 1998 was reported to have the highest per capita donations. Says Shyam Naredi, secretary of the local Lion's Club: "When parents offer the eyes of small children, it is really touching. But it is also the touchstone of our success." Someday all India will see the light.

HEROES
Amartya Sen: The Nobel Indian
Nuclear Tests: What a Blast
Digvijay Singh: Winner Takes it All
Gallantry: Knight Service
N Chandrababu Naidu: Hard Drive
Tata Indica: Swadeshi on Wheels
Development: Independent Action
NRI Bonds: Unlikely Harvest
Avelin Mary: Mission Possible
Asian Games: Runaway Winners

Daler Mehndi: Just Dalerious
Kuchh Kuchh Hota Hai: Picture Perfect
Sachin Tendulkar: Stroke of Genius
VILLAINS
Bal Thackeray: No.1 Yet Again
Jayalalitha: Tantrum Amma
Romesh Sharma: Fixer's Fixer
Yashwant Sinha: Rolling Back
Romesh Bhandari: Teed Off
Onion: Pungent Reminder
Sports: Politics at Play
UTI: Unfaithfully Yours
Dropsy: Death by Default
Salman Khan: Misplaced Machismo
ZEROES
Jain Commission: Who Done It?
L K Advani: Me Two
Kushabhau Thakre: Who?

Sitaram Kesri: Creature the World Forgot
Talbott-Jaswant Talks: It's the Weather, Stupid
P V Narasimha Rao's The Insider: Pen-ful Debut
Indo-Pak Dialogue: Dumb Charade

Amitabh Bachchan's Major Saab: Sunshine Boulevard
Sushma Swaraj: Calamity Behen
Laloo-Mulayam Entente: Thud Front
Sharad Pawar: Zero Power
I K Gujral: Bus to Pakistan
SIGNPOSTS
Ajit (1922-1998)
Protima Bedi (1948-1998)
Om Prakash (1919-1998)   
Pradeep (1915-1998)
P N Haksar (1913-1998)
E M S Namboodiripad (1909-1998)
Lalita Pawar (1916-1998)
Vinod Mishra (1947-1998)
Raman Lamba (1960-1998)
Gulzarilal Nanda (1898-1998)
Persis Khambatta (1948-1998)
Laxmikant Kudalkar (1937-1998)

 

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