Chattanooga Times Free Press

What is your eyesight worth?

- Contact Mark Kennedy at mkennedy@timesfreep­ress.com or 423-645-8937.

What if you could give a vision-impaired person the gift of sight for $75?

Would you immediatel­y pull out your wallet? Would you write a check? Would you fire up your PayPal account?

Well, that’s the animating idea behind a new service project creating a buzz these days at Southern Adventist University in Collegedal­e.

The campus Enactus Club uses entreprene­urship to help solve world problems. Club members at Southern have built a website and launched a marketing campaign to support a medical mission in the world’s second most populous nation.

The problem: There are 15 million people in India in need of cataract surgery. The cost of helping any one of these folks — including travel,

medicine and the assemblyli­ne surgery — is less than 100 bucks.

“Our vision is to eliminate blindness, but we can never do that, of course,” says Darryl Magno, a junior accounting major at Southern from

Highland, Calif., who is project manager of the Enactus Club’s drive. “But we’d like to create permanent [eye surgery] clinics to streamline the procedure.”

Southern Adventist students have labeled their fund-raising drive “Now I See,” a line from the durable Christian hymn “Amazing Grace.” The drive has an informal goal of raising $5,000, and the campus Student Senate has pledged to match up to the first $3,000 raised by Enactus Club.

Let’s see. Sharpen a pencil. That $8,000 would pay for more than 100 rural Indians to get the sight-saving cataract surgery. That’s 100 people who could regain the ability to behold a field of wild-flowers or to gaze into the eyes of a grandchild.

The Enactus Club, we’ve learned, is juggling a number of worthy projects, including a computer coding camp for girls, a soccer school for immigrant children and business start-up assistance for an Iraqi man trying to put down roots here.

Meanwhile, university officials have been in close contact with Dr. Jacob Prabhakar, an opthalmolo­gist and the medical director of the Ruby Nelson Memorial (Adventist) Hospital in Jalandhar, India.

Prabhakar has streamline­d the cataract surgery to the point it can be successful­ly performed in three minutes. His team recently did 465 eye surgeries in one day. His work has drawn worldwide attention and operates under the banner “Eyes for India.”

Students at Southern have developed a website (nowisee. org) to raise awareness about “Eyes For India,” launched a social media campaign to draw attention to the philanthro­py and ordered “Now I See” T-shirts, designed by some of the school’s talented graphic arts students, which will sell for $20 on the website.

“We are using our resources,” said Jeanelle Arguelles, a 20-yearold Southern Adventist University public relations and business administra­tion major from McAllen, Texas. “We are taking advantage of what we have.”

Beyond the eye surgery itself, the Southern students are looking for ways to help the patients develop sustainabl­e lifestyles. For example, some have suggested micro-loans to encourage them to become small-scale entreprene­urs.

“I like that we are able to do something for other people,” said Arguelles. “You feel like you are saving lives.”

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO ?? A man reacts to eye surgery outside Punjab, India, in 2016.
CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO A man reacts to eye surgery outside Punjab, India, in 2016.
 ??  ?? Mark Kennedy
Mark Kennedy

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