A Cut Above

Meet these post-millennials bringing smiles to children who have lost their hair to ailments

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Meet these post-millennials bringing smiles to children who have lost their hair to ailments

"I know I cannot change a person or the choices they make. However, having the capacity to make a difference in the life of not one, but many, is something I aspire to," says 19-year-old Amatullah Vahanwala. Evidently, she walks the talk. She and Niharika Jadeja started Hair for Happiness, a hair donation drive. The proceeds of the campaign go to the Little Princess Trust, a British non-profit that helps create wigs for children suffering from hair loss due to cancer treatments and other illnesses. It all began in November 2015, when Amatullah and Niharika,  class XI students of Bengaluru's Candor International School, were discussing their community service project. Niharika told Amatullah about her first hair donation experience at the age of nine and that she was eager to do it again. "This set off a chain of brainstorming sessions, and we came up with the concept of Hair for Happiness," says Amatullah, now a BBA student at the Centre of Management Studies, Bengaluru.  "Painstaking research goes into finding treatments for debilitating diseases. However, it makes me sad that people who are suffering are treated like numbers on a graph, nothing more and nothing less," says Niharika, who is now studying molecular and cellular biology at the University of California, Berkeley, USA.

For the youngsters, the thought of helping a child regain their self-esteem was a huge motivator. This helped them overcome various obstacles along the way. For instance, all the hair donation organizations they initially found would only accept longer strands (12 to 13 inches) of untreated hair. "But the Little Princess Trust had a minimum requirement of seven inches of hair and didn't have too many issues about dyed and treated hair," says Amatullah. This opened up a larger donor pool.

The process began with creating a Facebook and a GoFundMe page for financial donations. The first contribution came in early 2016 at school when fellow student Tanya Gupt...

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