From my childhood I have always felt a strong urge to help
others, not necessarily the people in need or the people I know. What I believe
is if you know someone can be benefitted with your gesture, you should go ahead
and lend a helping hand to them.
Well, that’s not at all the point of what follows ahead.
Last Sunday, I visited an Orphanage called, ‘The little Angels Orphanage’ at
Madh. One of my friends at Buzzinga Digital was working on a Children’s Day campaign
for Berger Paints. They had invited volunteers to come and paint the walls of
the orphanage.
Waking up early, on a slightly cold Sunday morning sounds so
uncool, but trust me at the end of the day it was all worth, coming back home
tired and sleepy only to hop on the bed for the office the next day. People
have that sympathetic ‘awwwww’ every time they hear about an orphanage, but
those children don’t need the sympathy, they need the love and the respect.
They are more self-respecting, aware, enthusiastic & adorable than many of
those kids living a comfortable life.
I offered a little girl, around 5 years old some chakli, she
was quick to ask, “kisne diyaa?” She wouldn’t accept it, till I made her
believe it wasn’t going to harmful. This is the level of awareness; they won’t
just grab it because it is something they don’t get often.
Looking at them, I did not feel any remorse, I felt ashamed.
Ashamed of complaining almost all my life of how messed-up everything was,
because I cried when someone I love refused to look back, because I cribbed
about how dirty and stinky some places were, because I did not respect the very
fact that I was living, I had a life, I had someone to look after me, pamper
me, shop for me, give me tasty food. These children, in hardly a day, taught me
how to love life, how to be happy, how to laugh for the smallest of good things
that were happening around.
Every time we walked out of the orphanage for a cup of tea,
or a stroll outside, these kids would ask, “aap jaa rahe ho?” and we would
reply no we are coming back in a while. As we came back, they would say with a
twinkle in their eyes, “aap wapas aaye”. They are so used to people coming and
never returning back, that it does not affect them anymore, or it does but they
manage to not let it alter their life and happiness. Those little angels were
successful in making me believe that life itself in a gift and don’t waste it
cribbing and crying.
No I don’t feel bad for those, I feel proud of them. I
wonder how do people manage adopting one kid out of so many adorable kids.
1 comment:
Just saw your blog. Thanks for writing.
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