Times Review profiles extraordinary people who refused to let life-altering mishaps get them down
MUMBAI
Earlier
this month, a 20-yearold girl showed Mumbai an act of incredible
courage. Sneha Kale, on her way home after giving an exam, fell off an
overcrowded local train; her right leg, which was crushed under the
wheels, had to be amputated immediately. The very next day, the spunky
girl went to write her next paper. “And why not?’’ she asks, “I had
prepared, and I was confident of doing well.’’
Sneha
is casual about her decision to not wallow in self-pity. “My parents
are the emotional kind,’’ she says. “If I am not brave, they’ll break
down. In any case, I need to live and to work. And in order to work, I
need to get on with life. It as simple as that.’’
—Ketan Tanna
—Ketan Tanna
Joginder Singh Saluja, aka
Bittoo, has won the Mr India national title in body-building and
power-lifting pageants for three consecutive years. The fact that his
powerful biceps completely obscure his lifeless lower limbs comes as a
reassurance to many that nothing is impossible.
When he was barely ten months old, Bittoo contracted polio which left both his legs damaged. “I underwent 10 operations till
the age of 14, after which I hit the gym,’’ he says. “People made fun
of me when I held the dumbbells for the first time. The more they
laughed, the more motivated I felt. I can now lift about 150 kg
bench-press. Assi ta cheetein haan, kise toh nahi darde (I am as tough
as a cheetah. I fear nothing). Just try really hard, and you can get
what you want in life,’’ says Bittoo who now wants to set up a gym for
the physically handicapped.
—Neha Pushkarna
—Neha Pushkarna
BANGALORE
Rathi’s
spinal cord was ruptured when the wheels of the train ran over her
right arm, severing it from her shoulder. And as she lay there unable to
move, she saw another train approaching on the same track. “Unable to
move, I couldn’t do a thing even as I saw it running over my leg,’’ she
says. After the train passed, another train driver shunting an engine spotted her and shifted her to hospital.
“I
had just finished writing my income-tax exams then. The doctors had
given up hope, and said I would remain bedridden all my life. I don’t
know if you can call it a miracle, but a few months after the surgery I
actually recovered and began to live like everybody else.’’
Menon acquired an artificial
leg, and switched to using her left hand. Initially it was difficult,
but she overcame every difficulty with her sheer grit—she wrote three
exams after the accident, topped in all and went on to become inspector
of income-tax.
—Prashant G N
—Prashant G N
BANGALORE
The
day is still etched vividly in the 22-year-old’s memory. “It happened
on August 12, 2002,’’ she says. “Rajesh was my neighbour and I had
rejected his advances. I was on my way to school when he threw acid on
me. It burnt my face, head and chest. I lost my eye and ear in the
attack.’’ The expense of Shruti’s surgeries almost crippled her father, a
tailor, but they got by with funds from NGOs. She then worked with a
bank as a telemarketer for a while but is now looking for a job.
Shruthi
discontinued her studies because of her medical problems but managed to
pass her tenth-standard exam with the help of her parents. “Initially I
found it tough and used to be very upset but thanks to my family I have
managed to deal with whatever came my way. Now I feel I am normal. All I
can say is one should live in the present,’’ she says.
—Ketan Tanna
—Ketan Tanna
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