Dubai Telegraph - Teaching helped me survive, says Indian quadruple amputee

EUR -
AED 4.294468
AFN 75.419858
ALL 95.448692
AMD 439.113824
ANG 2.093525
AOA 1072.301838
ARS 1602.905228
AUD 1.66008
AWG 2.104846
AZN 1.997743
BAM 1.949645
BBD 2.351676
BDT 143.447172
BGN 1.95679
BHD 0.441005
BIF 3470.644018
BMD 1.169359
BND 1.487803
BOB 8.06853
BRL 5.85182
BSD 1.167614
BTN 108.317069
BWP 15.675516
BYN 3.351221
BYR 22919.428919
BZD 2.348287
CAD 1.620532
CDF 2689.524338
CHF 0.925775
CLF 0.02659
CLP 1046.505611
CNY 7.984435
CNH 7.986965
COP 4263.224263
CRC 540.394107
CUC 1.169359
CUP 30.988003
CVE 109.918015
CZK 24.368285
DJF 207.923635
DKK 7.47271
DOP 70.308055
DZD 154.510526
EGP 62.137192
ERN 17.540379
ETB 183.214935
FJD 2.590014
FKP 0.868756
GBP 0.87188
GEL 3.145736
GGP 0.868756
GHS 12.849437
GIP 0.868756
GMD 85.889311
GNF 10244.660092
GTQ 8.931804
GYD 244.278871
HKD 9.158837
HNL 31.010109
HRK 7.538268
HTG 153.096711
HUF 367.189122
IDR 20020.881244
ILS 3.577284
IMP 0.868756
INR 109.185935
IQD 1529.571514
IRR 1539022.111217
ISK 143.211203
JEP 0.868756
JMD 184.60724
JOD 0.829109
JPY 186.631961
KES 151.139344
KGS 102.260563
KHR 4674.244543
KMF 491.130996
KPW 1052.420626
KRW 1739.672358
KWD 0.361285
KYD 0.973028
KZT 551.768202
LAK 25748.71754
LBP 104563.717691
LKR 368.486777
LRD 214.841797
LSL 19.156827
LTL 3.452812
LVL 0.707333
LYD 7.422569
MAD 10.852641
MDL 20.117494
MGA 4845.703289
MKD 61.673671
MMK 2456.545701
MNT 4179.294895
MOP 9.419266
MRU 46.669675
MUR 54.399067
MVR 18.077958
MWK 2024.608801
MXN 20.33041
MYR 4.647617
MZN 74.791823
NAD 19.156827
NGN 1588.971104
NIO 42.964372
NOK 11.133639
NPR 173.306912
NZD 2.006772
OMR 0.449619
PAB 1.167614
PEN 3.94066
PGK 5.054046
PHP 70.570424
PKR 325.673328
PLN 4.25212
PYG 7551.162809
QAR 4.256762
RON 5.091271
RSD 117.383721
RUB 90.122146
RWF 1705.117358
SAR 4.383064
SBD 9.422865
SCR 17.423728
SDG 702.7848
SEK 10.90269
SGD 1.492131
SHP 0.873044
SLE 28.795442
SLL 24520.889282
SOS 667.293516
SRD 43.791284
STD 24203.362473
STN 24.422903
SVC 10.216748
SYP 129.24983
SZL 19.161512
THB 37.712938
TJS 11.098066
TMT 4.098602
TND 3.41183
TOP 2.815534
TRY 52.29201
TTD 7.923986
TWD 37.182081
TZS 3035.133447
UAH 50.72936
UGX 4320.361666
USD 1.169359
UYU 47.111281
UZS 14198.179788
VES 556.425033
VND 30802.075365
VUV 137.892523
WST 3.197599
XAF 653.892819
XAG 0.015699
XAU 0.000247
XCD 3.16025
XCG 2.104357
XDR 0.813233
XOF 653.892819
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.313525
ZAR 19.33704
ZMK 10525.633422
ZMW 22.213876
ZWL 376.532998
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • CMSC

    0.0400

    22.43

    +0.18%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2700

    16.96

    -1.59%

  • GSK

    -0.1500

    58.21

    -0.26%

  • RELX

    -0.0400

    33.3

    -0.12%

  • BTI

    -0.0400

    58.81

    -0.07%

  • NGG

    -0.0300

    90.29

    -0.03%

  • BP

    0.5400

    46.44

    +1.16%

  • AZN

    -0.9600

    204.03

    -0.47%

  • RIO

    1.1300

    98.26

    +1.15%

  • VOD

    -0.1600

    15.69

    -1.02%

  • CMSD

    0.0400

    22.63

    +0.18%

  • JRI

    0.0400

    13.02

    +0.31%

  • BCC

    -0.4100

    80.17

    -0.51%

  • BCE

    -0.5400

    23.35

    -2.31%

Teaching helped me survive, says Indian quadruple amputee
Teaching helped me survive, says Indian quadruple amputee / Photo: Indranil MUKHERJEE - AFP

Teaching helped me survive, says Indian quadruple amputee

When gangrene robbed Indian teacher Pratibha Hilim of her hands and feet three years ago, her dreams of returning to class gave her the strength to endure.

Text size:

The 51-year-old now gives her lessons from home, wielding a pen or a stick of chalk strapped to her arm, for youngsters in a remote community where opportunities for education are scarce.

"I am a teacher, which means someone who cannot sit still but has to do something with children -- teach them or be with them," she told AFP in sun-baked Karhe village, a few hours' drive east of Mumbai.

"I've loved children since my childhood and if I sit around doing nothing, I would be in a different world, thinking of what happened to me."

Hilim came down with a fever in 2019 that was so severe she lost consciousness.

Doctors diagnosed her with a severe case of dengue fever and told her the onset of gangrene required the amputation of her right hand.

Within weeks, the infection forced surgeons to remove her other hand and both her legs below the knee.

"When they amputated my first hand, I felt bad that I won't be able to do anything further. I went into depression and did not speak to anyone for eight days," she said.

With encouragement from her family during months of recuperation, Hilim found purpose in a return to teaching.

She had worked for nearly three decades in a local primary school but in 2020, with schools shut during the coronavirus pandemic, she began giving lessons at home to children whose families did not have the money to pay for online learning.

Schools reopened earlier this year, but 40 children from the village still come to Hilim's home for regular classes.

"My children love to study," said Eknath Laxman Harvate, a farmer and labourer, whose daughter is a regular student of Hilim's.

Like many in Karhe, Harvate had to drop out of school and work as a teenager as his family did not have the money to support his education.

He told AFP he wanted a better future for his own children.

"We will educate her until she wants to," Harvate said.

"I wish I had kept studying... I feel sad that due to problems at home I couldn't continue and had to start farming."

- 'I made my mind firm' -

Hilim, like many of her students, is an Adivasi -- an umbrella term for members of India's indigenous tribal communities.

Adivasis around the country are subject to entrenched discrimination and their geographic isolation has left them without a share of the spoils of India's booming economy.

Many families in Karhe are compelled to pull their children out of the classroom so they can work to boost meagre household incomes.

"Once they can read and write, that is enough, meaning the children are ready to work in the fields," Hilim said.

But Hilim, who is now waiting for prosthetic limbs to be fitted, wants to push children to keep learning and choose their own destinies.

She says her own struggle to return to class is a testament to the power of resolve.

"I thought that with no limbs I was nothing, but then I made my mind firm," she said.

"I decided that I can do everything and will do everything."

F.A.Dsouza--DT