Any
visitor to the city of Amritsar who keeps his eyes open, cannot
fail to notice black wooden boxes, bearing crude writings in white
in Hindi, Punjabi, Urdu and English, placed in crossings and public
thoroughfares, reminding him of the duty he owes to his brethren,
the sick and suffering, the aged and the infirm. At some places
he may come across large wooden black-boards bearing extensive writings
of a similar type seeking to strike a sympathetic chord in him or
containing a homily on civics and morality, religion and philosophy.
If he were to pause and read, he would surely find that these are
the insignia of Pingalwara (literally a home of the cripple)-a unique
institution founded by an equally unique person.
He is a tall, shabbily dressed man, who may be found tramping with
his wooden sandals or riding a rickshaw, along with an invalid.
He always carries a brass bell hanging by his side and announcing
his rrival. This man, you may call him a superman, even an angel,
goes by the name of Bhagat Puran Singh. He was born and brought
up in a Hindu family of village Rajewal (Rahnon) in Ludhiana district
but he found greater solace and inspiration in the teachings of
the Sikh Gurus, when, in spite of his intense passion for learning,
poverty forced him to discontinue his studies in the tenth class
of a high school. So he adapted his erstwhile worldly dreams, for
their fulfillment, to a nobler atmosphere of spirit that the Gurdwara
Dehra Sahib of Guru Arjan Dev and Shahid Ganj of Bhai Mani Singh,
the princes among the martyrs, provided him at Lahore. He, therefore,
lost no time in taking a vow of celibacy dedicating his life to
the service of suffering humanity. He started at Lahore his career
of social and humanitarian activities.
This was in the year 1924 when Puran Singh was hardly a youth of
19. Since then he has been indefatigably carrying on his altruistic
activities, day and night in scorching heat and biting cold, in
rains and under dust storms, undeterred by adversities, undaunted
by criticism, and unruffled by the obstacles that crop up on the
path of social service. His enthusiasm knows no bounds and his determination
remains unshaken. Friend of the forlorn, helper of the helpless,
a ready nurse for a patient of any disease however loathsome, infectious,
unmindful of his personal health; safety or convenience, making
not the slightest distinction on the basis of caste, creed or community
regarding the person in need of his service; this single man has,
by his example and precept, inspired many and with their co-operation
has, in a short space of nine years, built from a scratch what may
justly claim to be an institution.
You
may not know Bhagat Ji, but if he were to come to sense you as a
man who can assist him in furtherance of his noble cause, even to
a small extent, he is sure to find you out, and may even urge you
to help and contribute to his cause. To the writer he became known
in about the year 1940 when he walked barefooted and half naked
on the roads of Lahore, usually with a cripple boy as his sacred
load on his back and picking up all things like the stone, metal
pieces, banana peels, nails, horse-shoes and brick bats that my
interfere with the convenience and safety of vehicles and public.
His humanitarian activities justified the renewal of his acquaintance
and casual visits of the writer to the place of his activities.
Though unable to have academic education within the four walls
of a regular educational institution, Bhagat Puran Singh, on account
of his inborn zeal, has by constant personal effort, acquired a
vast amount of knowledge on various topics and in the words of Principal
TejaSingh "has reached the highest level of thought through
practically associating himself with the realities of life".
This passion of learning he manifested very early and is associated
with an equally great enthusiasm to spread light of knowledge among
others. He has, therefore, accumulated a large collection of books
and old copies of several journals. The number of books and journals
is evidently sufficient for running a small library and a reading
room.
In the main ward is housed another section of the publications,
and printing press which has to its credit not less than sixty books,
booklets, pamphlets, posters and placards. Looking at the wide range
of the subject of his publication, it can be said without exaggeration
that his printing department is verily a transmitting station of
valuable information for the guidance and reconstruction of man
and society.
Original in its concept, the institution represent a natural outcome
of an irresistible urge of Bhagatji to do his best for the poor
and helpless patients, who cannot gain admission into the hospitals.
Such an idea could, as a matter of fact, take its birth in the mind
of a poor man only and not a rich man, because the approach of each,
to such a social problem, is radically different. A rich person
always thinks in terms of endowing money and running his Own independent
hospital, self contained in every respect. He thinks of providing
his own doctors, his own equipment with medical or surgical apparatus,
an aspect of the hospital, which is very costly as it eats a lion's
share of the hospital's maintenance funds. This is all very well
in a place, where there is no hospital. But in a central city like
Amritsar, where a highly equipped hospital exists, what is needed
by the common man, is not another equally self contained hospital,
but greater boarding facilities, so that he may be able to avail
himself of the outdoor treatment provided by the central (standard)
hospital. The question of opening another hospital at one place
arises only when the existing facilities for outdoor treatment are
exhausted, since extension of outdoor facilities in a well-equipped
hospital costs only a fraction of the outlay necessary for an additional
hospital. This, according to Bhagatji, is the raison-de-etre of
Pingalwara and a suggestion for the consideration of rich persons,
interested in founding hospitals for public good.
Another contention of Bhagatji is that howsoever rich a man may
be and howsoever great his endowment, in the matter of establishing
or running a hospital, he cannot compete with or equal the collective
effort of society. Puran Singh's resourcelessness had led him to
the finding of a solution that has surpassed that of the wealthiest
man with his big endowment. In his resourcelessness he could not
think of any big endowment of money but the aforesaid two ideas,
which are greater than big endowments.
The problem of sickness in our country is awfully large. The helpless
and the homeless patient dying on the roadside is a very common
sight with us. In the city of Amritsar, by no means wealthier than
other cities of India, rather smaller in size than many of them,
not even the seat of government, the problem of the helpless patients
continued to persist for a long time before the partition of the
country. Though very rich and noted for their philanthropy, the
people of this city could not dream of the miserable plight of such
persons as are now looked after in the Pingalwara. With our people,
so poor is the notion of human dignity that the spectacle of a helpless
patient dying on the road-side, unattended and uncared for, is taken
as the inevitable fate of a human being.
As a man of deep religious feelings and convictions Bhagat Puran
Singh has solved this question by invoking and canalising the religious
sentiments field hitherto neglected even by notable men of all religions.
He has thus thrown a challenge to the religious people, to take
up earnestly this great neglected cause. This negligence goes to
mar the dignity of man and degrades our nation in the eyes of other
advanced people. Here is a call not only to the normal ritual, charity
to divert its flow but also to the daily charity in petty sums of
an anna or two. (five paise coin or ten paise coin).
Shree
Acharya Vinoba Bhave said the other day that the Indian temples
played a very significant part in the social and cultural life of
India. This Pingalwara is a temple of God without any idol or a
representative religious symbol of God installed in it. The only
symbol of God in the Pingalwara is the destitute bodily helpless
man. The aim and chief function of the Pingalwara is the care of
the physically helpless people, whether in the grip of infirmity
or old age or afflicted with sickness. But in view of its educational
activity, the institution is also a social laboratory wherein the
solution of many a social problem is not only discovered but from
where it is also broadcast with an effective and original method
of publicity. As such, this kind of temple represents a great effort
of intelligent humanitarianism and is destined to play its own role
in the cultural history of the country.
It is unfortunate that the word Pingalwara coined by Bhagat Ji,
does not fully convey the scope of its various activities and, for
some people, creates a queer impression, such as that of a leper
asylum' but the word is gaining a household currency in Northern
India. The appalling shortage of beds in the hospitals is resulting
in pushing a constantly increasing number of patients to the Pingalwara
which in Northern India, is now shouldering a central burden and
as such is entitled to obtain help from all persons in the region.
However, further to enlist the sympathy of the public a good deal
of publicity work has to be done in the territory. For this, more
funds are required since the income, though apparently large, is
not keeping pace even with basic expense of Pingalwara and the inevitable
gap not only keeps the standard of service in the institution too
low but also leaves little margin for further developmental work,
including publicity, for which Bhagat Ji has to make special efforts
to secure funds from persons interested in this sort of work.
Puran Singh's Pingalwara is truly a nucleus of a great humanitarian
movement. In the words of Principal Teja Singh it is "an island
of Gandhism in the midst of clamorous politics and show."
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