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Real Heroes, Real Stories - Common Man

Posted: 10 years ago
Jai Ho was falsely sold to the audience as a movie about the Common Man, how the common man can be a hero, how the common man can bring social change through helping one another, this is how it was promoted, instead, it turned out the be a superhero film, where the filmmakers were so devoid of any creativity whatsoever that they didn't even bother to give him any superpowers.

How Jai Ho should've been?, they could've easily taken inspiration from real life heroes.

Bai Fang Li: Selfless donation to poor students

The last instalment of Unsung Heroes series is one hero provided financial help to poor students. But this is no millionaire -- he made a living by pedalling a pedicab. Bai Fangli donated a total of 350,000 yuan to help more than 300 poor students continue with their studies. In 2005, he passed away at the age of 93.



For almost twenty years, to save up for his donations, Bai Fangli peddled his pedicab everyday.

His devotion started in 1987 when he was 74 years old. Bai had prepared to retire and say goodbye to his job.

But after coming back to his hometown, a group of children working in the field aroused his attention.

Bai's daughter, Bai Jinfeng said:" He asked why the children didn't go to school. And our relatives told him that it was because they were too poor to afford tuition. My father was worried so he decided to donate 5,000 yuan to the schools in our hometown. But for him, it was all he owned."

As soon as he returned to Tianjin, Bai went back to work. All of his earnings went to support the needy students.

His sons and daughters tried to persuade him to change his mind, as they wanted him to enjoy a relaxing life. But the father turned a deaf ear to them.

Bai Jinfeng also said:" At that time, he went out at dawn and wouldn't return until darkness fell. He earned 20 to 30 yuan each day. After returning home, he put his earnings in a place carefully."

Bai had always felt regretful that he was illiterate. So he hoped the next generation could change their destiny with education.

Bai Fangli: Selfless donation to poor students 



Later on, to increase his effort to assist students in need, Bai moved to a simple room near the Tianjin Railway Station. He waited for clients 24 hours a day, ate simple food and wore discarded second-hand clothes he found.

At the age of 82 years old, to his children's surprise, Bai made another decision.

He founded an education support fund with the help of loans.

But his life driving a pedicab continued.

Xu Xiuxiang, one of the workers of Education Support Fund, said:" He never forgot when to give money to the schools and often urged us to give his earnings to the school. Each time he gave the money he felt very happy and said he had completed his mission again."

In 2001, he drove his pedicab to Tianjin YaoHua Middle School, to delivering his last installment of money. Nearly 90 years old, he told the students that he couldn't work any more. All of the students and teachers were moved to tears.

Bai Fangli said:" I hope the students could study hard and get a good job, and then make contributions to our country."

A long journey of supporting and aiding students lasted two decades.

In 2005, he was diagnosed with terminal lung cancer.

Although he had kept none of his earnings for himself, he was left with his selfless spirit and love.


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Posted: 10 years ago

Wheelchair-bound & battling cancer, this doc's still a surgeon


CHENNAI: He is 80, battling throat cancer and can barely talk, is confined to a wheelchair because of an accident, has undergone a triple bypass surgery and has a heart that functions only up to 18% of its capacity. Where would you expect such a man to be? Confined to a hospital bed, of course.

Dr Sharad Kumar Dicksheet is confined to hospital beds indeed, but only to fix people's defective faces and body " something that the plastic surgeon has been doing free of cost for poor patients for the past 42 years. Advancing age and ailments have not been able to slow him down. With precise moves and extremely neat sutures, it takes him less than 30 minutes to perform a cleft lip surgery on a one-month old child. Speed and efficiency are his two mantras and he performs 100-150 surgeries a day.

"In 30 minutes, he corrected my son's cleft lip and did not charge anything for it," said a grateful Banitha Venkatagiri, mother of Surya, the one-month old child. The baby is one of the numerous patients to benefit from the skills of Dr Dicksheet, who is in Chennai for three days until January 20 to perform free surgeries for the underprivileged at the DMM Hospital in Sowcarpet. This is the first time he is performing such surgeries in the city.

A Padma Shri awardee, Dr Dicksheet lives in New York for six months and spend rest of the time in India, from September to March, travelling across ten states solely to perform surgeries for cleft lips, squint eyes, facial scars, ptosis and birthmark removal. Such operations usually cost Rs 25,000 but he does them for free, clocking 2,66,000 surgeries in India in the past 42 years.

Dr Dicksheet met with an accident in 1978 which rendered his right side paralysed, and subsequently underwent a triple bypass surgery after suffering a severe heart attack. But he shows no signs of stopping or slowing down. "He prefers small children and young men and women of marriageable age for surgeries as he does not want them to live with the ignominy of a disfigured face," said Sashi Munoth, Dr Dicksheet's coordinator and member of the Bharatiya Jain Sangathan, which funds the surgeries.

Each year, he travels through Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, Gujarat, Chattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh, Delhi, Uttar Pradesh, Karnataka and Rajasthan to perform the surgeries. "My troubles are nothing when compared to the problems of children who come in for surgeries and the stigma they face in life because of their disfigurement. My sole aim in life is to give them a better life," said Dr Dicksheet.

briahna thumbnail
Posted: 10 years ago
bhais doings remind me somewhat of michael jacko. loved his music, the legend he was, BUT...
 
 
Posted: 10 years ago
Escapism? Different strokes for different folks.
Should of sent this to Salman personally though... along with the dozens of other actors and actresses who don't bother to incorporate realism into their movies.

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Posted: 10 years ago
Any praise would be less for these two heroes. I was moved to tears reading the two stories. Thankyou for sharing them Heisenberg.

Swetha-Sai thumbnail
Posted: 10 years ago
Respect and salute to these two hero's! 
Thanks for sharing them, @Heisenberg.