Saturday, May 19, 2012
بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم
In the name of Allah, Most Gracious, Most Merciful

Site Search

Dr. Yusufali's Observations

Kargil is situated at the very north of India in the (LOC) line of control with Pakistan. It is only 204km from Srinagar but takes about 8 hours to reach by road, which are open to all traffic from mid May to mid November. The views are breath-takingly beautiful except for the long journey and the interminable wait behind long army convoys.

Kargil town is small and its businesses mainly cater for local needs as well as the government and army presence. There are some 140, 000 people in and around Kargil. They inhabit mostly in the small villages spread far and wide in valleys wherever they can survive, in-between nothing but uninhabitable desert like areas. The villages are surrounded by green fields of rice and apricot trees in summer but winters are long, cold and snow bound, allowing very little in term of outdoor activities. They are very poor but proud and fiercely religious people.

From Kargil, we made a 3 hour journey to a village called Sankoo and later Namsoora. The very hard working and selfless local volunteers (2 teachers and an aalim) had arranged for us to meet with mostly children with disabilities. Their ages ranged from 5-34.

Their disabilities were heart wrenching. Child after child was shown to us who was unable to walk or sit, unable to feed themselves or to communicate and incontinent of urine and stool. Nearly all of them have had it since birth or very soon after. All births take place in homes where women are reluctant to go for medical help which is far and patchy and does not give confidence. Almost 60% of the disabled fell in this category.

Your heart goes out to the guardians who have been able to look after them so well. None smelt foul and although some of the children looked like they were one or two years old when they were five to ten years, it is probably from their inability to develop and take only liquid or semi liquid, rather than from lack of being looked after. For these group of people very little can be done medically except to deal with their day to day problems as they arise. Long-term prevention is what will drastically reduce their numbers. We need to help the community to think up and implement strategies which will not allow their brains from being damaged during birth and soon after. The guardians also need a lot of help in terms of material and moral support. The head man of Namsoora village repeatedly said he needs a "hospital" in his village.

There were two young ones who had epilepsy which was not treated from lack of resources. Both had decreased mental capacity from repeated uncontrolled fits. Both could easily be helped at least from further deterioration in their mental capacity and from accidents during fits by regular anti-epilepsy treatment which probably would be life long. We need some kind soul to adopt them.

There was a boy who had got burnt during a childhood accident and has lost his right hand. A grotesque stump remains. He could definitely be helped with rehabilitation and possibly an artificial limb.

Another bright young boy had weakness in his legs possibly from childhood polio he walks on the back of his bent left foot rather than his sole and could be helped with rehabilitation and possibly corrective surgery so that he could walk as normally as possible and lead as normal a life as possible. Any help we could give him and the boy without a hand would add immeasurably to their quality of life and future prospects.

One teenage girl has a birth defect which includes a disfiguring crimson/purplish birthmark on her left side of the abdomen right down to the thigh and increased blood vessels in the groin area with enlarged left foot and very large disfigured large foot toes but only partially so on the right foot. She probably has a malformation of the circulation of her lower limbs and potentially capable of help if she gets Vascular Specialist help.

One of the most distressing sight was a family of three (a sister and her two brothers) ranging from mid twenties to mid thirties who have a genetic disorder which manifests itself at a age of around 10 years when they start getting problems with their joints and progressively get knobbed hand joints, knees, becoming bent in the spine and eventually their muscles become small, stiff and inflexible so that they have bent knees and need to be carried from place to place. Even a little effort is very strenuous and they also have mental deficiency. I’m going to show their images to my colleagues to get an approximate diagnosis to see if any help can be extended to stop the progress of the disease. However this family needs a lot of help simply to survive as there is only a younger sister who is there to help them all and her prospects of marriage are dim simply because she may not be able to leave them on their own.

In these areas although schools and smartly dressed school children were visible, health facilities were hardly seen except in large towns like kargil, etc. 80% of the disabilities seen were due to lack of basic health facilities especially during birth and soon after. My guess is there is a very high infant mortality. There is a strong link between female education and child survival and that should be our long term plan. However we cannot wait ten to fifteen years for this to happen and so we should try and help our people with basic health care. An excellent thought from discussion during this trip could be empowering local girls who have had basic schooling and helping them with a training certification and probably a driving license for a motorcycle very similar to the Chinese barefoot doctors. This could provide health education and basic health care but mainly connecting the villages to the health facilities.

I have confined my comments to the disabled, but during my trip I saw the tangible results of the help given to build schools, mosques, orphanages and help to the sick and needy. I feel that Comfort Aid International and Al-Imaan Foundation are doing an excellent job and deserve our full support. This support should be moral and monetary but more important it could be from contribution to the cause with our time and expertise. May Allah give us that strength and give them Jaza-e-kheir.

Dr. Afzal Yusufali
971-4-3378115

ROKMININEWS ERROR: File not found: images/phocagallery/thermometer/thumbs/phoca_thumb_l_2012_ramadhan_iftaar_fund.jpg?imagesid=f68968d88b68a08f625c04684dcdb617ROKMININEWS ERROR: File not found: images/phocagallery/phanderi_sadaat_girls_school/thumbs/phoca_thumb_l_pandheri%20sadaat%20school%201.jpgROKMININEWS ERROR: File not found: images/phocagallery/Afghanistan/shobokand/thumbs/phoca_thumb_l_elementary_school_%20shobokand%201.jpg
Move
-

Newsletter - February 17, 2012

Top Headline

CAI will insha'Allah, our 17th year, distribute monthly iftaar rations to the poor and destitute, enabling these families to eat a healthy meal this Ramadhan. We have an ambitious schedule, feeding 7,000 families (about 42,000 individuals) in Afghanistan, India, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and...

Read More...

CAI has alhamd'Allah secured 75% financing for the rehabilitation of a girls school in the very poor district of Pandheri, Nagau Sadaat, a township of almost 100% poor sadaat families.  The current school is in miserable condition, not making much progress towards a quality education...

Read More...

These orphans at our Zahra Boys Home in Sirsi were recently awarded excellence in education awards for their performance in regional board exams for UP, India. Considering these children were received at the orphanage in very primitive conditions only about two years ago, this is...

Read More...

After agonizing delays due to severe winter in Afghanistan where even dirt was frozen solid, construction of CAI's 11th elementary school (this one for girls only) is on tailwind, insha'Allah due for completion first week of June. About 400 girls will have a solid, secure and warm structure...

Read More...

Comfort Aid International

  • Public Forum I was interviewed by Ahlulbayt TV in London in May 2012. Click on the links below to view: Part 1 Part...
  • Donate to Comfort Aid Your generous donations are what make these projects possible. Please take a moment to make a difference...
  • Ijaaza To view renewal of Ijaaza issued by Ayatullah Sayyed Ali Seestani to CAI, please click here. (Click...
  • Welcome to Comfort Aid There are many things and issues that a Muslim can tolerate; we have to be accepting of change in the...
  • 1
  • 2

Public Forum:

I was interviewed by Ahlulbayt TV in London in May 2012. Click on the links below to view:
Part 1
Part 2

CAI and donors/supporters win prestigious recognition by Islamic Insights Magazine. Click here to read.

ALI YUSUFALI - MY WORLD
Keep up with my blog for the latest updates on CAI's work and my travels.

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

Sign up to receive more information on Comfort Aid's ongoing projects.

  • JoomlaWorks Simple Image Rotator
  • JoomlaWorks Simple Image Rotator
  • JoomlaWorks Simple Image Rotator
  • JoomlaWorks Simple Image Rotator
  • JoomlaWorks Simple Image Rotator
  • JoomlaWorks Simple Image Rotator
  • JoomlaWorks Simple Image Rotator
  • JoomlaWorks Simple Image Rotator
  • JoomlaWorks Simple Image Rotator
  • JoomlaWorks Simple Image Rotator
  • JoomlaWorks Simple Image Rotator
  • JoomlaWorks Simple Image Rotator
  • JoomlaWorks Simple Image Rotator