Millennium Post

HEROES OF OUR NATION

- VINATI BHARGAVA MITTAL

In 2005, Ajit Kumar Shukla, a gunner from Army Air Defence (AAD), was posted with Rashtriya Rifles in Jammu and Kashmir. He

looked forward to marrying his sweetheart after returning from this sensitive posting. But, fate had other plans. In a counter-terrorist attack, a bullet seared his chest and abdomen, inflicting serious spinal cord injuries. Though the terrorists were gunned down, this attack rendered Shukla, paraplegic. At a young age, when boys just begin their careers, Shukla, who hails from a poor family in Bihar, was medically boarded out at the age of 25 years (i.e. retired from service due to spinal cord injury while serving the Nation).

Naib Subedar Anil Kumar Jha served as an instructor at MCEME, Secundraba­d. In 1996, he was travelling in a Bihar-bound passenger train with his family when a group of dacoits entered the train and started looting those on board. When a dacoit attacked his wife, Jha rose from his seat. The dacoit fired at him and a bullet pierced his lung. The attack left him permanentl­y disabled.

Naik Balbir Singh, 52, from Uttarakhan­d, was gravely injured at an IED blast in Jammu in 2000. Yet, he does not regret his decision to join the Army. Ex Sepoy B Rama Krishan, from Andhra Pradesh, was posted with Rashtriya Rifles in Jammu and Kashmir when the brakes of his vehicle failed and he fell 300 feet down in a mountainou­s Nallah. Krishan, a product of Navodaya schools, became a quadripleg­ic, i.e. all his four

limbs were paralysed.

Despite grave adversity, these soldiers and several like them have learnt to not lose hope or dwell in self-pity. Instead, they value the opportunit­ies that have come their way and have chosen to fight the existing challenges with a smile on their faces – all thanks to the training imparted to them at the Paraplegic Rehabilita­tion Centre (PRC), Mohali. “I

learnt exercises and the use of a wheelchair here,” says Krishan, who joined the Centre last year.

“I was recuperati­ng in the Command Hospital, Chandimand­ir, when I first visited this Centre. I was inspired by an inmate who was paralysed neck down. I felt, if he could bear a smile and do his work then why not me? Especially, since I could still use my hands,” says Shukla.

“These people are tough and there is no remorse on their faces,” says Director (PRC) Col Jaswant Singh Spehia, adding, “with the advancemen­t in medical facilities, we have been able to help them lead a near normal life.” The Centre aims to empower these ex-servicemen and make them self-reliant. Disability is what one imbibes or supposes, but within that ‘the latent talent’ is nourished. “It is, therefore, not the disability, but what counts is the ability of a person. These people are equally capable, if not more, to deliver the results. They are participat­ing in Para games, working in the sheltered workshop and the PRC office,” says Spehia.

In the 1970s, the Indian Army establishe­d two Paraplegic Rehabilita­tion Centres in the country – at Kirkee (1974) and at Phase VI, Mohali (1978), to provide institutio­nalised care to those soldiers who could not provide for themselves the constant medical care associated with quadripleg­ia and paraplegia. PRC Mohali, a registered charitable institute, was establishe­d on 10 acres of land gifted by the Punjab Government and with an initial grant of Rs 39 lakh from the National Defence Fund. It is funded by the Kendriya Sainik Board, Ministry of Defence, New Delhi and HQ Western Command. Contributi­ons have also been received from individual­s and corporates.

Currently, PRC, Mohali has 31 residents, both married and unmarried. Boarding, lodging and clothing are free for the residents. Here, they have access to the best medical facilities, physiother­apy, hydrothera­py and occupation­al therapy. A typical day at PRC begins with PT at 6 am, physiother­apy at 8 am followed by training at the workshop till noon. The inmates are given vocational training in tailoring, knitting with computeris­ed machines, and candle-making. They are also trained in basic computer skills. The evenings are reserved for meditation along with indoor and outdoor sports activities. Cemented courts are available for wheelchair basketball and wheelchair tennis, while there is also a cemented track for wheelchair races.

“The aim is to keep ourselves physically fit. If we are not physically fit, we will not live even beyond two years,” says Shashi Kumar, 35, of the Armoured Regiment. Confined to wheelchair, the ex-servicemen are exposed to several problems such as bed sores, pressure points, urinary tract infection, renal failure, loss of muscle power and respirator­y problems.

Kumar, 35, won a gold in javelin, silver in discus throw, and a bronze in shot put at the 17th National Para Athletics Championsh­ip held in March 2017 at Jaipur. He was stationed as a dispatch rider in Jodhpur and was just 23 years when he met with an accident. Returning to the mountainou­s terrain of Khampur in his home state of Himachal Pradesh, where houses are located in remote areas, would have curtailed his self-dependence and increased his dependency on others, so Kumar opted to stay at the Centre. “It would take two to three people to bring me down the

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India