नियमित अपडेट के लिए सब्सक्राईब करें।
Manjula Upadhyay | Gujarat
Life is transient, fleeting and comes
with an expiry date. One realises this eternal truth of life on witnessing a
cremation. To protect the delicately tender sentimentality of women, many of
Hindu families do not encourage women to go to a cremation, as they may find it
difficult to reconcile and consign to flames a person who walked the earth with
them. However, from the trying times of Corona19 pandemic, was born the
possibility of something new, brave and courageous. Few extraordinary women
took a stride towards an untrodden path. The society witnessed a surge of
collective bravery of a few exceptional women. They came forward and shouldered
the responsibility of cremating unclaimed dead bodies. This is the rare tale of
extraordinary volunteer sisters of Rashtra Sevika Samiti.
During the Second Covid wave in April 2021, the turmoil and outcry due to fear of infection confined people to their homes. Many families refused to perform the last rites of their Corona positive deceased. It was in these trying circumstances of grief and anguish that 10 sisters of Rashtra Sevika Samiti along with Ms. Hina Velani, Ms. Rinku Vekariya, Ms. Sumita Bhudia, Ms. Tulsi Velani of Sukhpar village of Kutch, Gujarat, rose to the occasion. They displayed incredible courage by adorning PPE kits and giving a final and honourable farewell to the departed.
It all started on the evening of
April 15, 2021, when the Development Officer of Bhuj tehsil contacted RSS
volunteer Ramji Velani seeking help for last rites of Covid dead accumulating
at the Government Hospital, Bhuj. Families of deceased had turned their backs
for the funerals and the government employees were insufficient. The Sangh
workers responded to the dire situation with a team of male volunteers for the
task at hand. Ramji’s daughter Hina expressed her desire to join in and assist.
At first father's heart and mind were apprehensive, but his anxiety turned out
to be unfounded as nine other sisters of the Rashtra Sevika Samiti joined the
endeavour. These resilient women were ready for a rendezvous with need of the
hour.
Sharing her experience, Hina Didi the State Publicity Head of Rashtra Sevika Samiti of Saurashtra province explained, "We were working in teams of three. We did not feel the slightest difficulty in performing the last rites wearing PPE kits in the scorching heat, handling all aspects starting from cleaning the regular cremation ground, onwards. During the lockdown, the dead bodies from the hospital in Bhuj and surrounding villages were cremated at the ghat of our village Sukhpar. The villagers cooperated wholeheartedly, contributing firewood, ghee and camphor from their homes.
This was a long campaign which lasted
about 45 days and more than 450 dead were given a respectful farewell by a team
of relentless volunteers and sisters of the Samiti. As the work progressed,
many young people got involved and took to managing the funeral pyres, whereon
these sisters handled the responsibility of providing food to the needy in
quarantine, personifying Maa Annapoorna. They also undertook door to door
distribution of handmade cloth masks and sanitizers, as also reached out to
helpless, needy and elderly delivering fruits, medicines etc. In addition,
supporting people staying alone, they even assisted the Police as well as the
administration. In brief, their generosity knew no bounds and there was no
service that the volunteer sisters did not undertake during the pandemic.
Responding to a query about this
unconventional task Hina Didi responded, “everything was possible because of
the values and training of the Sangh family”! That is why they say "Sanghe
Shakti Yuge Yuge".
नियमित अपडेट के लिए सब्सक्राईब करें।