Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Indian community helps out in rescue ops in storm’s aftermath

- Yashwant Raj yashwant.raj@hindustant­imes.com

WASHINGTON Jiten Agarwal, a Houston IT entreprene­ur of Indian descent, plunged himself headlong into relief and rescue work from the first opportunit­y he got. Starting just hours after Harvey made landfall as a hurricane last Friday, he hasn’t stopped helping out.

An Indian was among the 35 casualties in the storm. The victim, Nikhil Bhatia, was among four Texas A&M University students rescued from rapidly rising waters of a lake close to their campus, where they had gone to swim. Fellow student Shalini Singh remains in a critical condition.

Some of the 200 University of Houston students who were earlier marooned by chest-high water around their residentia­l blocks have also pitched in, joining other volunteers to help whosoever they can.

Indians and Americans of Indian decent forge a strong community in Texas. Some of them, such as the students who were marooned, arrived in the US barely a month ago.

“They are extremely close to each other, they are very active as a community and they compete with each other to give and donate for a cause,” said Anupam Ray, the Indian consul general in Houston who waded through flooded neighbourh­oods to reach stranded Indians and arrange for help for them.

Ray shared a post on Facebook on Wednesday, recounting some of the work done by the community, individual­ly and as a group.

“I am proud of the Indian community in Houston,” he wrote. “One of the incredible things I saw during #HurricaneH­arvey is how Indians stepped up to join relief efforts. This was in the best traditions of America and of India.”

 ?? REUTERS ?? Residents wade through flood waters with their belongings in Houston on Wednesday.
REUTERS Residents wade through flood waters with their belongings in Houston on Wednesday.

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