A Messiah for the Abandoned Sick

Gurmeet Singh has brought care and compassion to the lives of patients who have no one.

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Gurmeet Singh has brought care and compassion to the lives of patients who have no one.

ARE YOU IN PAIN? This is the question Gurmeet Singh usually asks when he enters a government hospital ward in Patna.

It is a damp and grubby facility with lime-green walls and stained tiled floors. Half a dozen gurneys for sick patients are scattered all over the ill-lit place. A fetid smell of urine and stale food fills the air. When night falls, rats slink out of a defunct fireplace and scurry for food.

The food-dinner comprises rice, lentil soup and some vegetable gruel-is insipid. A doctor and a nurse come on their rounds a couple of times a day. At other times, the patients appear to be left to their fate.

The place has the appalling moniker of the ward for lawarisor the abandoned. Put simply, it treats patients who have no family or have been rejected by them. When they recover, they are usually sent away to rehab homes-or returned to the streets.

For its inmates, the ward can be their home for months on end, for the streets, where they usually live and forage for food and shelter, can be a harsher place.

Tonight, it appears, nobody is hurting.

On a bed, lies a young woman who has had her limbs amputated after she was hit by a train. She's also pregnant.

The nurses call her Manju. Questions about her family, home and the father of the baby draw a blank. Some nights ago, they found her weeping on the cold floor after she was bitten by rats.

But when Singh enters the ward, her face lights up, and she smiles wanly.

In the bed opposite her, a bed-raggled woman with wild hair and wearing a dirty green jacket over a torn cotton gown trembles all the time. Tonight, she's holding a loaf of bread that the hospital gave in the morning. One night, other inmates say, she fell off the bed and lay on the floor for a while.Across the roo...

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