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CARE TODAY: REBUILDING GUJARAT
Looking To A New
Tomorrow
CARE TODAY plans to build
low-cost model villages, provide funds for building social infrastructure
as well as extend support to individuals whose lives were shattered by
the January 26 earthquake
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REVIVED HOPE: Ratiben and her children can expect better
days ahead
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Gujarat will forever
remember January 26 as the day the earth heaved and left in its wake
grieving families, fallen buildings-and broken dreams. Over 18,000 lost
their lives and property worth Rs 23,000 crore turned to rubble
in a few cataclysmic minutes. Rebuilding Gujarat seemed almost an insurmountable
task. But people responded generously.
CARE TODAY's appeal for funds generated Rs 2.94 crore up
to March 31.
A CARE TODAY-sponsored medical team from St
John's Hospital, Bangalore, rushed to Gujarat to provide emergency medical
aid. And once the initial paralysing sense of hopelessness passed away,
it was time to plan the rebuilding of broken lives. While the rehabilitation
process continues to remain fluid, CARE TODAY intends to help both the
individual and the community find their feet.
Before the monsoon sets in, CARE TODAY will
build basic 12 ft by 24 ft pucca houses for 200 families. These earthquake-resistant
constructions will cost Rs 42,000-45,000 each. As in the past, the society
will work with a local organisation, in this case the Kutch Navnirman
Abhiyan (KNA), a coalition of Kutch ngos which is coordinating the rehabilitation
effort.
In another project, CARE TODAY will help the
Kutch Mahila Vikas Sangathan (KMVS), a member of the KNA with whom we
worked on the Fight the Drought scheme, in its endeavour to build 3,150
houses in 21 villages in Kutch. CARE TODAY proposes to provide KMVS with
50 per cent of the cost of constructing 750-900 houses. The project is
likely to commence in October this year. CARE TODAY has also allocated
Rs 5 lakh for the building of a room for a school library in Aadariyana
village in Surendranagar district. The school was destroyed by the earthquake
and is being reconstructed by the Eklavya Education Foundation (EEF),
an Ahmedabad-based NGO.
Some people were so badly affected that they
require individualised support even if they receive government and NGO
relief packages. Ratiben Govindbhai Patel of Vondh village near Bhachau
in Kutch district, for instance, faces an uncertain future. Her husband
was killed in the disaster and she is left alone to bring up five small
children. India Today had earlier carried her sad story ("Mother
Courage", February 26). CARE TODAY is in the process of identifying
more such people and will work out specific arrangements that would make
a big difference in their lives. Besides providing about Rs 5,000 for
their immediate needs, we will facilitate a monthly sum of around Rs 500
for food.
CARE TODAY recognises the importance of social
institutions in healing hearts. We plan to build community centres in
16 villages in Surendranagar, Patan and Rajkot districts in collaboration
with two NGOs, the Navsarjan Trust and Jan Vikas. Each centre would cost
Rs 30,000 and will be built before the monsoon.
As in the case of past programmes like "Lest
We Forget" and "Hope for Orissa", India Today will feature
regular updates about individual beneficiaries as well as the overall
rehabilitation effort in its pages.
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Progress Report
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| Some
of the contributions of Rs 5,000 and above received on February 21
and 22, 2001 |
Banwari
Lal Agarwal
|
Rs
11,000 |
Sanjay
and Mona Singla
|
Rs
5,100 |
Froilano
C.R. Machado
|
Rs
10,000 |
Sushil
Kumar Singh
|
Rs
5,100 |
P.K.
Devaiah and family
|
Rs
7,500 |
Principal,
Vinod Model School
|
Rs
5,000 |
You
& Us Interiors
|
Rs
5,000 |
Indra
Sakthivadivel
|
Rs
5,000 |
Ram
Charan Company
|
Rs
10,000 |
SRINIDHI
|
Rs
8,823 |
Tenants
Association,
18 Muktaram Babu Street
|
Rs
10,000 |
Neetu
|
Rs
5,000 |
Humble
contributor, New York
|
Rs
72,607 |
Madhusudan
Kumar Jalan
|
Rs
11,000 |
Rajeev
Kumar Mittal
|
Rs
10,000 |
Neelaksh
Dhir
|
Rs
5,000 |
Sridhar
Reddy Enterprises
|
Rs
5,001 |
Anand
Ganguly
|
Rs
8,000 |
| Workers
from Tamil Nadu in Singapore |
Rs
45,288 |
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