Amte married Indu Ghuleshastri (later called Sadhanatai Amte).[7] She participated in her husband's social work with equal dedication. Their two sons, Vikas Amte and Prakash Amte, and daughters-in-law, Mandakini and Bharati, are doctors. All four dedicated their lives to social work and causes similar to those of the senior Amte. Prakash and his wife Mandakini run a school and a hospital at Hemalkasa village in the underprivileged district of Gadchiroli in Maharashtra among the Madia Gond tribe, as well as an orphanage for injured wild animals, including a lion and some leopards. She left her governmental medical and moved to Hemalkasa to start the projects after they married. Their two sons, Dr. Digant and Aniket also dedicated their lives to the same causes.[14][15] In 2008, Prakash and Mandakini received the Magsaysay Award for Community Leadership.[16]

Amte followed Gandhi's way of life and led a spartan life.[4] He wore khadi clothes made from the looms at Anandwan.[4] He believed in Gandhi's concept of a self-sufficient village industry that empowers seemingly helpless people, and successfully brought his ideas into practice at Anandwan. Using non-violent means, he played an important role in the struggle for the independence of India.[18] Amte also used Gandhi's principles to fight against corruption, mismanagement, and poor, shortsighted planning in the government. However, Amte never disowned God. He used to say that if there are hundred thousands of universes then God must be very busy. Let us do our work on our own.[19]


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Pradeep Sawant who worked with a cable operator said, "These people know that this is a dangerous place in the monsoons. Every year they vacate it during this time and come back later. Some go to their relatives in other parts of Mumbai and some to their villages. But this year they did not go. They are mostly construction workers and in the rains their work is scarce".


In the three states visited, Human Rights Watch researchers encountered a striking fear of discrimination that affected people's inclination to seek health services and community support. In Kerala, some whom we interviewed were willing to meet only outside of their neighborhoods, for fear that our visit might reveal to their neighbors that they were HIV-positive. Several NGO community workers reported that if they were not careful, even visiting their clients could stigmatize them. "In slums, people are cramped," one worker told us. "Because we make regular visits, people come to know that something is wrong. People think they are HIV-positive and don't let their children mingle with their children."79 In one village in Tamil Nadu, even when conducting interviews in a private room, NGO staff asked us not to say the word "positive" in English but to use "plus" instead, for fear that someone outside might overhear and understand that the person was HIV-positive. The director of an orphanage in Tamil Nadu told us: "There are children here whose parents I know are positive and I don't tell them so. I don't even put it in the file that the parents were HIV-positive because I am so afraid of the stigma."80 In Chennai, an NGO community health worker told us that only one woman out of thirty with whom she works "can be open" about her HIV status.81 A twenty-three-year-old man who had been injecting drugs since age thirteen told us that only his immediate family and one HIV-positive friend knew he was HIV-positive. He told us that if others found out, he would commit suicide, fearing that the neighbors "would literally stone me to death."82

There are primary health care centers, but they are often not very near and people have to walk great distances to reach them. There are usually private doctors in the village, but if they won't treat you, where do you go?

Shanthy's son, age seven, was also positive, and, she said, "he is sick all the time." "My son is not taking any medication. He took some last year, but this year we couldn't buy them.... There is a doctor in the village, but he asks for too much money and we can't afford it. There is not any money to take him to Tamburam."126 According to staff of a local NGO, "the government subsidizes the train ticket, so with a hospital note it costs about 25 to 30 rupees [U.S.$0.52-0.63]. But the railway station is far away and it costs about 15 rupees [U.S.$0.31] to get there."127

Until the fourth grade, Sharmila attended a church-run school; there was no government school in her village, she told us. According to her grandmother, the priest paid for her school fees. Sharmila told us that she liked to study Tamil, math, English, and drawing, but that the teacher separated her from the other children:

In contrast, in Kerala, outside the city of Thiruvananthapuram, Human Rights Watch interviewed neighbors of two children orphaned by AIDS who told us that the public health department had come to the village and given a class about HIV. A woman who said she attended told us, "At first we were afraid but then we learned about HIV, about how the disease comes."337

Girls may face more difficulty finding care and protection due to entrenched social discrimination against women and girls. For example, when Monisha S.'s husband died of AIDS in 2002, she said, she stayed in their village in rural Tamil Nadu with her five-year-old son and one-and-a-half-year-old daughter and worked in the fields.362 Her parents were dead and her sister refused to see her because she was HIV-positive, she told us. As she began to get sick, her husband's brother visited her and said, "I'm taking the boy because he might get infected." However, the man and his family refused to take her daughter. "I am waiting for her test result to come," Monisha explained. "But positive or negative, they won't take care of her." Staff at the care home where she was living told us that the family did not want to take her because she was a girl.363

According to social workers for the NGO SANGRAM, in the villages in Maharashtra where they work, relatives are often especially reluctant to take care of girls orphaned by AIDS.365 Some suggested that a lack of options for girls' care is pushing down the already low average age of marriage: if they have no other alternative, HIV-positive parents may marry off their daughters before they die simply so the girls will have someone to care for them. A community health worker in Chennai also explained:

According to staff at the home, when Sajeesh's uncle and grandmother brought him to the home, about three hours from their village, they said, "Please take care of him because if he's sick at home, we can't do our work, and we are living on daily wages. Sometimes we have to lock him up and go to work. If he's at home, we have to care for him. We lose our wages, and we have nothing for our whole family."452

Human Rights Watch interviewed a seven-year-old boy who, with his mother, was expelled from their village in Andhra Pradesh because they were HIV-positive. Human Rights Watch interview with seven-year-old boy and his doctor, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, November 11, 2003. Worse, villagers in Andhra Pradesh reportedly stoned to death persons suspected of being HIV-positive in 2003 and 2004. See Shaikh Azizur Rahman, " Indian Officials to Investigate Stoning of Woman With HIV," Washington Times, July 14, 2003; Ashok Das, Hindustan Times (Andhra Pradesh), March 2, 2004, www.hindustantimes.com/on/img/0.gif, republished in [email protected] list serve by [email protected], March 3, 2004.

Barnala

 Couple commits suicide: A couple allegedly committed suicide by hanging themselves at their house in Mehal Khurd village in Barnala district on Saturday. SHO Sardara Singh said the duo committed suicide due to poverty. The deceased have been identified as Beant Singh (36) and his wife Rani Kaur (35).Batala

 15 injured in mishap: At least 15 persons, including women and children, were injured when a private bus overturned on the Amritsar-Gurdaspur national highway near Satkohia village, 23 km from Gurdaspur, on Saturday. The police rushed the injured to the Gurdaspur Civil Hospital. Chandigarh

 Another extension for staff: Aiming to defer the payment of retirement dues by another year, the Punjab Government on Saturday allowed one-year additional extension in service to its employees. The government had earlier extended the retirement age from 58 to 59 years and it has now extended it to 60 years. With this, the state's payment of retirement dues worth Rs 1,000 crore will be deferred by a year. Revenue body elects chief: Kanwar Narinder Singh, Tehsildar, Payal, was on Saturday elected president of the Punjab Revenue Officers Association in an election held at Phillaur. He will head the body for three years. Faridkot

 Ex-reader gets jail: A judicial officer's former assistant was on Saturday sentenced to life by Faridkot district and sessions judge for killing a youth. Following a tiff, Gian Chand, former reader, and his son Yashu shot a youth named Vishal Chopra dead with a revolver in Kotkapura in December 2011. Yashu is still on the run. Hoshiarpur

 Woman robbed of Rs 50,000: Two motorcycle-borne youths snatched a bag containing Rs 50,000 cash from Sudesh Rani in Mukerian on Friday. Sources said the unidentified youths robbed Sudesh after she had withdrawn the money from a Punjab National Bank branch in Mukerian. A case has been registered. Ludhiana

 City gets new ADCP: Swapan Sharma was posted as the Additional Deputy Commissioner of Police-4 (ADCP-4) on Saturday. Earlier, he was transferred to the security of the Chief Minister from the city. During the term of the ADCP traffic, he initiated the tow away drive effectively.Moga

 Married woman kills self: A 35-year old woman, Charanjit Kaur allegedly committed suicide by electrocuting herself in Baghapurana town of Moga district on Friday. Her father Surinder Singh alleged she had been harassed by her husband Surinder Mohan for the past few years. A case of abetment to suicide against Surinder Mohan has been registered. Ropar

 Hockey tournament kicks off: The two-day school hockey tournament being organised by the Rupnagar Hockey Academy began at Gobind Valley, began here today. As many as eight teams are participating in the tournament. be457b7860

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