View Full Version : Kumar Bahuleyan : Paying back to life


Ignorant
16th August 2007, 09:56 PM
All it takes is a dream
He had a dream- of turning around his godforsaken village and improving the lot of its people. Unlike other NRIs he came back to India and spent all of his money to achieve this goal.

Village Chemmanakary Kerala India 1989

An apology for a village, it was a minuscule swampy hinterland. Unemployment was high, there was no sanitation, potable drinking water or healthcare. Majority of the underprivileged inhabitants were caught in a vortex of poverty, starvation and deprivation. Survival was tough and escape from the quagmire-an impossible dream.
Chemanakary is an hour drive from Kochi or Cochin airport.

http://www.kalathilresorts.com/uploadimages/doctor.gif

Chemmanakary Kerala India 1999

Paddy-fields and tiled houses dot the palm-fringed landscape. A tarred road links Chemmanakary to the rest of Vaikom taluk. Cold storages, provision stores, medical shops, healthcare centres and a super speciality hospital are now a part of the effervescent village, that is clearly on the move.

Set amidst serene ambience of Vembanad Lake, Dr. Bahuleyan’s Kalathil Health Resorts at Chammanakary - an hour’s drive from Kochi (Cochin) International Airport – is a unique travel and tour destination of Kerala. The Resort has rural country house settings that unobtrusively blend with modern amenities.

http://www.kalathilresorts.com/uploadimages/pgal_big2.gif

Chemmanakary's transformation took shape in the hands of a neurosurgeon, Kumar Bahuleyan, who invested his enormous private fortune to better the lives of his country cousins.

Born to a physician in the village, times were hard for the poor family. Young Bahuleyan was one of the two survivors in a family of five; three of his siblings died in their childhood. Fighting disease and hunger every step of the way, Bahuleyan struggled to get an education. The young boy's grit and sheer brilliance carried him through, with the help of many benefactors and government scholarships he went on to acquire a medical degree. Life was no cake walk, but " I am an eternal optimist",he says.

Bahuleyan's career, goaded by his ability to circumvent, started going places- the Kerala Government sent him to the UK for neurosurgical training as the state did not have a neurosurgeon at that time. He returned home to the Chinese aggression; the army gobbled him up for the armed forces did not have a qualified neurosurgeon.

Three years later he discovered " the Kerala Government did not have a place for me; my post had been filled by a freshman". He, a qualified neurosurgeon, had to sit at home twiddling his thumbs waiting for bureaucratic red tape to work around his case. His patience wore thin and a disgusted Bahuleyan fled to Ontario, Canada, seeking employment. He eventually ended up in Buffalo, USA, where for the first time in his life he achieved economic security.

Even as he was scaling professional heights, Bahuleyan used to visit Chemmanakary regularly. Fifty years after Independence, the village still did not have potable drinking water, sanitation, electricity, roads and health centres. "Even marginally well-off people had no concept of sanitation", said
Bahuleyan. "Chemmanakary was a beautiful village contaminated by the people's lack of awareness".

The emotionally aroused doctor was determined to "clean up the mess" and in 1989 established a not-for-profit-private organization to bring basic healthcare to Kerala villages. " I put all my money of more than Rs 10 crore into the foundation. My attempt was to come back here and do some community work," he says.

The Bahuleyan Charitable Foundation began with a health survey to pick a target area. It chose an area comprising 17 sq. miles with a population of 66,356. The foundation plunged into a latrine construction programme in this area where 5009 of the 18,362 houses did not have latrines. So far 619 latrines meeting WHO standards and costing Rs 4,000 each have been built. "The people initially had no clue what to do with a latrine and started using it as a store room," says Bahuleyan.

In 1993 the foundation built a small clinic in the village to treat pregnant women and children. Demand was so high in spite of poor accessibility (there were no roads leading to the clinic), that the centre was soon upgraded and moved to Vaikom town. The foundation also spent Rs 50 lakh to construct a 6 km road to the main highway and subsidiary roads to link the clinic.

The Vaikom wing of The Indo-American Hospital opened in 1995 with 30 beds. " It was named to highlight the fact that it is built with the money I earned in the U.S. and to acknowledge the American tax payer's contribution," explained the doctor.

But with most of the patients being poor the hospital was making little by way of revenue and its very existence was threatened. " I started this whole project out of my sentiments, with no planning," said Bahuleyan. "However I realized I had to do something revenue generating to make it viable."
A project consultant was roped in and he suggested the idea of building a super specialty hospital to attract paying patients. "We decided to have a neuro centre in Chemmanakary and opened with the most modern equipment in November 1996."

A super specialty hospital in the hinterlands?

"Why not?" asked the doctor." Hospitals are all built in cities which are inaccessible to the villagers. I want to develop my village and its economy. Treatment here is at roughly one-third the cost of city hospitals and free on cost for the poor."

The hospital today is the hub of life in Chemmanakary. Indeed a far cry from the early days when the villagers viewed Bahuleyan and his motives with suspicion.

Most of the work force in the hospital is locally drawn, except for the specialized slots. " Thanks to the hospital, our youth have a channel of employment. Agriculture has received an impetus and the general quality of life here has improved." Said Sivaramakrishnan, 62. "Our sick people do not die for want of medical attention any more," said Zuhara Begum, 45. "What more do we need?"

According to Bahuleyan if "all the NRIs adopted a village each in India and did something for its people, underdevelopment in this country would soon be a thing of the past. When I hear these so-called NRIs crib about the lack of facilities here I tell them that the problem is with them and not with the country, It's they who have changed, not the land- after all, weren't they living here at one point in time? They come back and build huge mansions, with that money I can build 100 or more latrines. Don't we all owe a little something to our motherland?"

Though he pleads guilty of having strayed from his original vision of bringing general healthcare assistance to Chemmanakary, Bahuleyan says that he is taking steps to rectify this. He plans to upgrade the Vaikom clinic into a centre of excellence for women and children.

A multilingual learning centre is also under construction where the doctor plans to introduce computers and Internet facilities." " I am targeting the children here, " he says. " I want to take them off the streets so that in future even the specialized posts in the hospital can be filled by local hands."
The doctor claims to be a "in a state of nirvana" today. He says: " I am a dreamer; a professor of ideas. Everything I have achieved in my life is because of my dreams."

"I have also done some unpardonable things in my life," he says with a laugh. "But for a village boy desperate to do something, the world didn't offer very many choices."

However, it's yesterday no more; the little boy has grown up and today the world is his oyster. And Chemmanakary has finally made it to the map and the millennium- electricity, drinking water, health care and all.

Ignorant
16th August 2007, 10:12 PM
About two weeks ago there was a small news item somewhere hidden among daily routine news that an Indian American who made millions as a neurosurgeon and lived a lavish life, once owning a Rolls-Royce, five Mercedes-Benzes and an airplane has donated $20 million to his native village in Kerala.

What is the story of this man?

There are very large number of Indian doctors in the United States who mainly came to the country in past 3 decades but a grand majority during 1980s. Most of these physicians get educated in India supported by a poor resourceless country and they migrate to the US for making MONEY to enrich themselves and to enrich their families. Sooner or later they forget all their promises and determination to do something for their country and they become Americans. American health care system is one of the biggest in the world but the most corrupt, most evil, most foolishly run by greedy lawyers and large hungry corporations that engage in health practices that has destroyed health of majority of Americans, whereby almost 80% of Americans live a sick and disgusting life thanks to the great american medical system.

Very few, may be one out of 5000 of these doctors ever go back to India, mostly for personal reasons more than professional or charity reasons. Some of them go to India just to show off or to get a feel good effect to make themselves comfortable in their eyes, when they go to do some charity work but that is nominal or merely a big nothing.

Coming back to our story, Kumar Bahuleyan, 81, who was born to a Dalit familly in India, decided to donate his personal fortune as a gratitude to his village, to establish a neurosurgery hospital, a health clinic and a spa resort in Chemmanakary, in Kottayam district of Kerala.

"I was born with nothing; I was educated by the people of that village, and this is what I owe to them," Bahuleyan said in Buffalo where he has lived since 1973.

"I'm in a state of nirvana, eternal nirvana," he said. "I have nothing else to achieve in life. This was my goal, to help my people. I can die any time, as a happy man."

The urge to do something for his village arose some 20 to 25 years ago, when Bahuleyan returned to Chemmanakary and was struck by how little it had changed.

"The village remained absolutely the same - not a road, no school, no water supply, no sanitary facilities," he said. "I looked in the (people's) faces and saw the same people living in the same miserable conditions I had grown up with."

Bahuleyan has come full circle: from dire poverty in India, to the lifestyles of the rich in America and back to his native village, where he's traded his Mercedes for a bicycle, The Buffalo News reported.

The Indian American doctor lost two younger brothers and a sister to water-borne disease in 1930s.

"I was the oldest, feeling very helpless, listening to the screams of these dying children, one by one," he told the paper. "Their cries stuck in my psyche. Even now it haunts me."

As a former 'untouchable', belonging to the lowest strata of Hindu society, Bahuleyan had to take a roundabout route to school because he wasn't allowed to pass within a few hundred yards of the Hindu temple.

A star student, he went to high school, then a premedical school run by Christian missionaries before attending medical college in Madras, now called Chennai.

Later he went to the United Kingdom for neurosurgical training at a college in Edinburgh, Scotland, where he spent six years before returning home. But he couldn't land a job in his specialty.

"They (government) didn't know what to do with me," he said. "There was no position available for a neurosurgeon. Many people didn't know what neurosurgery was."

So Bahuleyan went to Kingston and then Albany Medical College, before coming to Buffalo in 1973 to work with neurosurgeon Dr. John Zoll.

Bahuleyan never saw ice cream until he was in medical college in his early 20s. And he remembers buying his first pair of shoes as a young adult; he put the right shoe on his left foot and realised it didn't fit.

During his 26-year career, Bahuleyan served as a clinical associate professor in neurosurgery at the University at Buffalo before retiring in 1999. And he made millions.

"I didn't ask for the money," he told The Buffalo News. "The money came to me. My secretary said to me, 'Dr. Bahuleyan, you're making too much money.' I had never had any money. So I went berserk with money."

In 1989, he set up the Bahuleyan Charitable Foundation, which built a small clinic in India for young children and pregnant women in 1993 in south India. Bahuleyan's foundation built the Indo-American Hospital Brain and Spine Centre in 1996, starting with 80 beds.

None of the facilities carries his name.

In 2004, the foundation opened the Kalathil Health Resorts, http://www.kalathilresorts.com offering luxury rooms, health spas and exercise rooms.

Bahuleyan's latest idea, East India Seven Seas Sailing company, plans to invite applications from Americans willing to spend a few weeks in India, to volunteer in Bahuleyan's hospital and to teach sailing.

Bahuleyan, who lives with his wife, pathologist Indira Kartha, spends half the year in the US, the other half in India where he oversees his foundation's work, gets around on a bicycle and still does almost daily surgery.

purushottam
22nd August 2007, 04:54 PM
Thanks Ignorant For Posting 2 Inspiring Charecters. This Is How Positive Approach In Life Healps People In General. Apart From Political Field When One Heard Very High Social Services By Such Persons We Feel Enlighted Get Inspiration For Doing Some Exceptional Work. I Again Thank You. Keep Writing.

Mohan Jain
14th September 2007, 11:33 PM
Dear Enlightened Indian Citizen, PIO, or NRI,

We are pleased to invite you to IDCA's Fifth International Conference to be held in the Chicago area on October 6-7.
The conference Theme is:

" Gandhian Thought and Sustainable Development".
Invited Keynote speakers are:

Satish Kumar, Editor, Resurgence & Director, Schumacher Institute, London, UK;

Bunker Roy, Founder & President, Barefoot College, Rajasthan, India;

Manoj Dabas, Regional Director, Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecology & Environment, New Delhi;

Ms. Sai Padma Bellana, President Lions Club, Gajapathinagaram, Activist for Empowerment of Handicapped.

Balbir Mathur, Founder and President, Trees for Life, KS.

Jay Sehgal, Managing Trustee The Sehgal Foundation, Gurgaon, India.

Following the opening session on Saturday morning, on Saturday afternoon and Sunday morning
we will have separate sessions on:

Education, Water, Healthcare, and Livelihoods

Finally, there will be a concluding session on Sunday, where we can have discussions and finalize an action plan for the year.

Let us know if you or anyone else you know would like to share your experiences of working in India in any of these areas. We will try our best to accommodate in the program. We would appreciate hearing from you by September 15.

We hope you can join us for two days of learning, enrichment and empowerment; find support for your projects or support other projects; strengthen or build your network, to develop or to accelerate your project for sustainable development of your village/ India, one project at a time, one village at a time!

Accommodation:

For all our out of Chicago friends we have a block of rooms available at Hilton Lisle/Naperville at a special rate of $95 per night for October 5-7. Please call at: 630-505-0900 and reserve your rooms before September 14 to take advantage of this rate.

The invitation and the registration forms are attached herewith for your convenience. We would appreciate if you will forward this email to your friends/family who may be able to join us and benefit from it.

Please Register Early and SAVE!

We look forward to hearing from you soon.

With warm regards,

Sincerely,

Mohan L. Jain, Ph.D.
Trustee and past President,
India Development Coalition of America

"Working Together to Accelerate Sustainable Development in India"
630-303-9592 (O)

jay jay
17th January 2008, 11:27 PM
indeed the brain drain..get education in India then move away !!!!

purushottam
18th January 2008, 09:24 AM
:rolleyes:Thanks mohan jain and ignorant. We Indians have problem that even after good education we cannot get good jobs in govt. concerned and they are being filled up by most incompetent persons for what ever reason. Therefore it is natural that water finds its level and moves in right direction . India and Indians have to suffer and let them suffer. The policy of any govt. is to appease a class of society and remain in power and to grab money. Govts,are not concerned about what you people wrote but the govt says remain unemployed though you may be competent to get good jobs but India is not for you people but for dull and incompetent people. Let accept the nonsense. :rolleyes: