I want to be a...

05.01.21 09:51 PM Comment(s) By BMI

What is the value of a promise?  It doesn't matter to whom you made the promise; it is still an important commitment.

November 23, 2018

In the fall of 2018, I travelled to Lucknow in Uttar Pradesh in response to an invitation. Most of the Uttar Pradesh rural area is served by farmers work small farms to provide a living for their families.  On the visit to Lucknow, I visited St. Francis School for the Hearing Impaired.  It was a visit that has a lasting impact on me.  

  

Ninety students gathered excitedly and waited for more than an hour for me to complete treating patients brought to the school.

  

A large room contained more than 90 students gathered to present a dance and ask guest questions through a sister translating for me using sign language.

  

I was told by the sister who started the dance music that the music was solely for my purpose since they could not hear it at all.

Following the dance, a student raised his hand and asked, "Do they have deaf people in Canada?"

 

I then asked the assembled students, "Does anyone know what they want to be when they finish school."

 

A long silence was followed by a girl at the back of the room stood and announced, "I want to be a tailor."

 

"Great, I responded, do you sew now?"  

 

The sister, signing to the students at my side, quickly told me they are a very poor family.

 

The girl said, "No, I don't have a sewing machine."

 

I felt a little more than plain stupid. "Ok, you have one now.  We will buy you one."

 

It was a promise that I intended to keep; I offered money for a sewing machine to my host, who had arranged to take me to the school.  He refused to accept the money and insisted that he would buy the machine and arrange delivery to the girl.


I had no idea what was the girl's name.  I just trusted my promise would be kept.

Second Trip to Lucknow - November 2019

After travelling 23 hours from Calgary to India, I had 4 hours; to rest, shower, and be driven to the New Delhi train station.  I was once again heading to Lucknow, about a 6-hour train ride.

 

I asked about the girl who wanted to be a tailor, and they told me that she graduated, left the school, and the school administration had changed.  The potential tailor still had no sewing machine, and now I had no idea how to find her.  We visited a leper colony on this trip and did not return to St. Francis School for the H.I.

 

It bothered me that the young lady had not received her sewing machine.  In rural Uttar Pradesh, a poor family would have little chance of acquiring a sewing machine. The girl's aspirations of being a tailor would likely not be realized without sewing practice and instruction.

Who was that girl?  - November 2020

I wrote to Bishop John Mathias and asked about providing Christmas gifts to the now 130 students at the school and requested a list of the students and age levels.  I also asked if he could track down the girl to whom I promised a sewing machine.

 

He did!  The Bishop found the girl's name and contact details.  I now can keep the promise made to her two years ago.

 

Her name was Jyoti.  She lived in a rural village about a 4-hour drive north of Lucknow.

 

I ordered a sewing machine, and we had contacts from Jalandhar drive more than 20 hours overnight to visit her and show her how to operate the machine.

Jyoti has a 90% hearing loss.  She is one of 7 children who live in very rudimentary housing in the village.  She has two brothers and four sisters.  Two of her sisters suffer from learning challenges.  Girls in rural Uttar Pradesh have tremendous challenges without suffering any special needs.  Here is a family with three girls who have special challenges.

Jyoti and her family are happy to have a sewing machine. 

Plans are underway to find suitable training for Jyoti in the art of tailoring.

 

ANOTHER CFTW SUCCESS!  


Only made possible by donations from those who love. 

BMI

Share -