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The 'Real Heroes Of India' Who Provide Healthcare To India's Remote Islands

SHIS works in the Sundarbans in West Bengal.
New Delhi: 

In the Sundarbans, the world's largest mangrove forest where access to healthcare is one of the most pressing problems, one group has been operating boat clinics and working relentlessly for over 40 years to ensure that people are not deprived of the medical assistance that they need. It is this dedication that earned Sabitri Pal and Mohammed Abdul Wohab from the Southern Health Improvement Samity (SHIS) foundation the 'Gold Visionary - The Real Hero of India' award at the NDTV Indian Of The Year Awards on Friday. 

Speaking after receiving the honour, Mr Wohab, a law graduate, said he had seen people dying of tuberculosis when he was a child, and many people with medical issues would die even before they could get to a hospital. He said he and Ms Pal decided to work towards saving the people in the Sundarbans in West Bengal since there were few medicines available to cure tuberculosis and even diagnostic facilities were lacking. 

"So we started collecting medicines from doctors. Since people could not go to the city for treatment - and were already contending with tigers, crocodiles, mosquitoes and snakes - we decided to reach out to them. We have cured more than 1 lakh TB patients. We also made toilets available to more than 1 lakh people, including TB patients. We are now covering more than 2,500 square kilometres of area," he said. 

Mr Wohab says they have five motorised boats, which have medical teams - including doctors and nurses - and diagnostic facilities.

"We Indians have our own culture. We are very rich. The whole world can learn from us, particularly love, and that is something we both have tried to share," he emphasised.  

Ms Pal, who is the president of SHIS, said the Sundarbans is a vast area and people are grateful for the medical facilities that their group is able to provide. 

"We have been doing this work since 1980. We have seen people trying to uplift themselves in an area where life is not very easy. I am very happy to have received this award at his beautiful event," Ms Pal said.  

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About The Awards

Since 2003, when NDTV launched the first ever Indian of the Year, the event has become synonymous with recognizing those Indians – individuals, organizations and institutions – who have contributed to the idea and identity of India in one way or the other, whose contributions to the country have strengthened the foundation of our society.

 

The awards have recognized the unsung hero in the same breath as the most celebrated – our focus has always been on the extraordinary work. It is to honor extraordinary work that we gather once again to celebrate the Indian of the Year - 2024.