Millennium Post

Joint op by RSS, NGO run by Muslims gives hope to flood-hit people of Kodagu

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MADIKERI (K’TAKA): They walked for miles on slippery trails, crossing cascading streams and braving landslides. Many were aged men and women, whose lives had gone awry in the wake of the torrential rains that lashed Kodagu district in Karnataka, bordering Kerala, claiming at least 17 lives and leaving a trail of destructio­n since August 12.

Several people were carried on shoulders to the relief camps, where they sat waiting for their names to be called to receive food and other relief materials.

The residents of Kodagu not only lost their homes due to the incessant rains and floods, but were also cut off from the rest of the world due to frequent landslides.

Since August 16, the villagers living in and around Madikeri were rescued and taken to the relief camps.

The much-needed support was a result of a joint relief-andrescue operation undertaken by the Rss-affiliated Seva Bharati and the Usmaniya Charitable Trust (Bhadravati), an NGO run by Muslims.

Talking to PTI at a relief camp here, Anjali, a resident of Kodagu, said, “We feel so relieved and confident about life...we had lost all hope...just then, the Seva Bharati and the Usmaniya Charitable Trust came to our rescue and provided succour.”

“They rescued and brought us here. Some of them carried the aged people. For some, it was quite a challenge to wade through the muddied and slippery terrains and cross the cascading streams coming down the slopes of the hills.

“The experience still haunts us, but hope fills us when we sit for meditation and yoga in the morning. Even I chant ‘Om’, though I am a Christian,” she added. Some of the flood-hit people have great challenges before them as their houses were destroyed in the nature’s fury.

One of them, Lakshmi, said, “My house has collapsed. I hope the government will help people like me.”

Around 1,000 families were provided relief materials by the Seva Bharati and the Usmaniya Charitable Trust. Mussavvir Basha, general secretary, Usmaniya Charitable Trust said they spent Rs 5 lakh for providing rice packets, water bottles, biscuits, free ambulance service, first-aid kits etc. to the marooned people.

“There was a barrage of fake news and hatred being spread on Twitter, Facebook and other social media platforms. Some mediaperso­ns too, I am sorry to say, are dividing the country into north and south.

“In this backdrop, the joint operation should serve as an inspiratio­n to people to bring unity in this hour of crisis,” he said. Basha and five others of the trust visited the RSS camp at Madikeri and proposed the joint operation. Both the organisati­ons took part in the rescueand-relief work from August 21 to 24, before the members of the Usmaniya Charitable Trust returned to Bhadravati in Shivamogga district.

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