How Dr. Abraham George is Building a World Of Second Chances

After a near-death moment granted him a new lease on life, Dr. Abraham George chose to turn his blessings outward, creating opportunities so at-risk children can begin again

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After a near-death moment granted him a new lease on life, Dr. Abraham George chose to turn his blessings outward, creating opportunities so at-risk children can begin again

In 1965, three years after the Indo-China war, Dr. Abraham George—then a young captain in the Indian Army’s artillery division—came close to death. His regiment was stationed in the Himalayas at 14,000 feet, battling extreme cold and low oxygen.

“I was leading 300–400 soldiers in a no-man’s-land near the Chinese border. We were digging bunkers by blasting through rocks, preparing for possible conflict,” he recalls. One explosion went horribly wrong, leaving him severely injured.

In the aftermath, as he lay recovering, a new resolve took shape: to build a life that would matter—and to use it in service of others.

 

As a child, he had watched soldiers train near his grandfather’s home in Thiruvananthapuram. “I was fascinated by it all—the discipline, the uniform. I was a mischievous kid, but I wanted to join the military.

My parents didn’t know much about it, but they supported me. I joined the National Defence Academy at the age of 14,” he says.

In his memoir, Mountains to Cross, Finding Life’s Purpose in Service, released last April, Dr. George recounts the moment of the accident as a fateful crossroads. In an interview with the Reader’s Digest India, the social entrepreneur, philanthropist and the founder of Shanti Bhavan Children’s project says it made him pause and think about what he was doing. “The [injury] was the breaking point,” Dr. George says. “But it changed my life.”

After being discharged from his duties on sick leave, he spent time with his family and pored over books. He was deeply influenced by Reverence for Life written by Albert Schweitzer. “It’s about the how we all have an obligation to help those who are suffering, and the sanctity of life itself,” he says. He was also moved by British philosopher, Bertrand Russel, a leading anti...

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