Voluntary Blood Donation Is An Extraordinary Gift, But These Three Men Went The Extra Mile

These are ordinary people, but they have been voluntarily and religiously donating blood for decades. Even the coronavirus cannot stop them

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These are ordinary people, but they have been voluntarily and religiously donating blood for decades. Even the coronavirus cannot stop them

As the country went into a lockdown due to the coronavirus in the last week of March 2020, voluntary donation at blood banks nearly came to a grinding halt. On the other hand, the demand for blood from hospitals, for emergency surgeries, thalassemia patients and pregnancy-related operations, increased manifold.

While many voluntary donors stopped visiting blood banks because of the fear of contracting the virus, there was a band of heroes who continued to follow their schedule of donating blood every three months.

Here, we look at three such extraordinary men—who have remained voluntary donors even through the pandemic.

Rahul Sholapurkar, 61

When Sholapurkar got a call from the Indian Red Cross Society (IRCS) enquiring whether he could help the organization get in touch with regular donors and motivate them to donate blood, he jumped in.

He started checking out and contacting the numbers of voluntary donors from the IRCS database. Citing his own efforts, he convinced scores to come to the blood bank in central Delhi and donate their blood. "There is fear in the air due to the coronavirus, and it is not easy to overcome it. It was my task to inspire confidence in blood donors and tell them that it is absolutely safe to donate blood," Sholarpurkar says.

He has been donating blood for more than 40 years now—163 times to be exact, probably the highest in India. That is almost four times a year; it is also the maximum number of times a person can donate blood in a year. "As I complete 90 days after a donation, I feel my body and mind dragging me towards a blood bank," Sholapurkar laughs. The IRCS calls people like Sholapurkar 'centurion blood donors'—in other words, those who have donated blood more than a hundred times.

According to Sholapurkar, blood donation is not only a healthy practice, it is also one way of showing that you care for others. "Voluntary blood donation is a very personal t...

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