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HPR HERO CHANDRASEKHAR SANKURATHRI
HPR HERO CHANDRASEKHAR SANKURATHRI

To know our next hero is to come face to face with love.


This is the story of raw courage. A story of character and of humility. But above all this is a true love story: of a flame that refused to dim in the heart of Chandrasekhar Sankurathri for the last 40 years. 


A love that this man has carried for his wife who left him 30 years ago.


Chandrasekhar’s story begins in Kakinada - a small village in India, a village steeped in poverty and where education is given short shrift. Little or no importance is given to literacy and basic health facilities. Girls go to primary schools only to drop out soon after to become wives, mothers and housekeepers. Innocence is sacrificed all too soon at the Altar of expediency, a practice all too acceptable, all too normal to most.


Abigail Adams had once said, “If we mean to have heroes, statesmen and philosophers, we should have learned women.” Although it has been a struggle for generations in countries all over the world to fight for the basic rights of women, basic education has been given the go by in the third world because of the endless struggle to come to terms with life. But all it has taken since time immemorial is for that one courageous person to have taken a stand and bring about a change. A change for the vulnerable, the weak, the sick, the poor and the naive.


In Kakinada, Chandrasekhar Sankurathri came in as that one messiah for the sick, the weak and the poor. But a messiah who had his own cross to bear. A cross that few can carry, and fewer still carry others’. 


Chandrasekhar grew up in in Rajahmundry which is 60 kilometers from Kakinada. Immensely talented, his hard work and intelligence saw him complete his Bachelors, then his Masters in Zoology and finally a PhD in Science. His appetite for excellence was insatiable which led him to Alberta for a Fellowship and finally become a biologist at Health Canada in Ottawa. 


“The people in Canada were some of the most beautiful, friendly people I had ever met. I came here on a sponsorship to complete my Masters, but then I stayed on.”


In 1975 Chandrasekhar returned to India to get married. His bride was just 24, and like most marriages in India this was an arranged one. But mention the name of his wife and Chandra's eyes light up like a thousand candles.


“She was a born musician, and an artist to her fingertips," he proudly proclaims. And yet, "her humility" was her second name. "The way she spoke to others and treated everyone equally with love and respect, especially children, is what stood out most.”


“We had initially applied for a Green Card to go to US.” Even better job prospects added to the fact that Manjari’s own brothers and sisters were all settled in the U.S. led to this decision. Their green card finally arrived in 1982. “But Manjari refused. She was so happy in Canada. This was her home now.”


Chandrasekhar pauses to laugh when asked if he can recall some really special moments with Manjari. “Where do I begin? They were all special! She was such a passionate mother and a wife, always taking care of the three of us, always cooperating with me. I never saw her getting angry ever!”


One can see in Chandrasekhar’s eyes, how deep his love for his wife is.


“But she left me...and so did my children, Srikiran and Sarada. They were just 6 and 3 at the time.” Chandrasekhar’s gentle voice breaks.



June 23rd 1985:


Air India Flight 182, Montreal-New Delhi: Canada’s very own 9/11, this ill-fated Air India flight was close to touch down at Heathrow when a bomb exploded mid-air. 


It was the first bombing of a 747 jumbo jet and the single largest mass murder in Canadian history. The majority of the victims were Canadian citizens of Indian ancestry.


Manjari, Srikiran and Sarada, Chandrasekhar’s wife and two children were on that flight. “They were going to India to visit family,” says Chandrasekhar. Three of the 329 people killed in that flight, just like that.


The RCMP Air Disaster Task Force zeroed in on Talwinder Singh Parmar, a Sikh preacher to be the mastermind behind the blast. Parmar had fled to Canada from Punjab in 1982, when India issued a warrant for Parmar's arrest and asked for his extradition, alerting Canada that Parmar was a wanted terrorist who had fled India. Canada later denied the request. 


Three years later, following an official raid that was carried out by the Indian government on the holiest Sikh shrine located in Punjab led to a colossal turmoil among the Sikhs all over the world. Parmar vowed revenge on India. Parmar’s right hand man, Inderjit Singh Reyat, also from Punjab and settled in the UK was originally linked to the International Sikh Youth Federation – a Sikh separatist group banned in the UK under anti-terror laws in 2000, had spent his childhood in Coventry. He finally moved to Vancouver, Canada, with his wife, Satnam Kaur.


“My Manjari loved children,” Chandrasekhar’s account of his wife forces us back to his story.

“When she had first moved from India to Canada, she was very reserved,” Chandrasekhar continues, “but then she went on to make a lot of friends. Kids loved her, and the feelings were always mutual. Music continued to remain her first love. Dividing her time between music and work all the way up until the birth of our children, she finally quit her job to devote all her time raise them.”


“I was asked to go and identify their bodies.”


Chandrasekhar’s horrifying line draws me back to his inescapable truth again. “But I wasn’t able to identify them. I’m happy I wasn’t able to, otherwise I would have had to live with the vision of their lifeless bodies etched in my mind forever.”


How does a man in Chandrasekhar’s shoes make sense of it all? Does he find it convenient to harbour hatred in his heart for those belonging to a certain religious sect? Or is it easier to lose faith in God altogether? Or is it easier still, to plot another revenge to keep the terror going? Perhaps commit suicide, taking down another 300 people with him?


Chandrasekhar chose to dedicate the rest of his life to the poor and helpless instead.


“Yes, I am grateful, that through it all, I did not become a burden on anyone,” is all he says.

Days, weeks, months passed by. Friends, family all came forward to offer emotional support to a dazed man, not quite broken yet.


“I don’t think it sunk in when I got the news that day. It was mainly disbelief. I could not understand why people were coming and talking to me.....nothing made sense to me.”


“I searched for answers, for some kind of a meaning. But I didn’t get any answers.”

Chandrasekhar relied on and was thankful to a lot of very close friends and family who stood by him like a rock through the toughest times. “But I couldn’t really openly share my grief with anyone. After all, who could truly understand what I was going through within?”


After the initial couple of years, Chandrasekhar started realizing slowly that had to do something purposeful to keep on living.


“I had lost the reason to live for myself, for my family.” It was now time to live for others.


Call it destiny, call it a will to step into something greater, Chandrasekhar gave up his job and was on his flight back to India. “My wife loved children,” he repeats.


Perhaps as a way to feel closer to her, Chandrasekhar decided to work with children in India, in a village where Manjari spent her childhood. 


“There is such a huge want of welfare of children in India, for education of the girl child, and for girls to finish higher education, that no matter what one does, it can never be enough.”


Realizing he could not go on living meaninglessly anymore, he decided it was time to pick up the pieces and start his life all over again for those who needed help. “Manjari had always wanted to do something for kids. I just filled in her shoes.”


Chandrasekhar walked the talk. A foundation was created in his wife Manjari’s name that was dedicated to working for the betterment of children through education. Today, over a span of more than 3 decades of single minded perseverance, one of Chandrasekhar’s many projects has provided free education to over 2,360 rural children, mostly to girls.


Chandrasekhar speaks with equal passion about his project as he does about his wife. “The Manjari Sankurathri Memorial Foundation was established in 1989 towards developing education, health care, and disaster relief programs.” This was followed by the establishment of Sarada Vidyalayam (School in Sanskrit) in 1992 that he named after his daughter Sarada. Since its launch, the school has had a zero drop-out rate. Fees, books, uniforms, meals and medical checkups are all provided free of cost with the help of the money raised by the foundation. “Most girl students in our village did not continue beyond middle school. They would get married by the time they were 12 years old. I wanted to change that. Today, all our girls complete high school. Most complete their graduation, then got jobs and then get married. This is a huge change from the time I had started out more than two decades ago. 


To be honest. I never expected it.”


No more do elementary school girls in Kakinada and neighbouring areas go to primary classes only to drop out after a few years to assume the responsibility of a wife, a mother and a housekeeper. And most of all, it is not an acceptable part of life for these girls anymore.


“Our number one priority lies in value based quality education for the poor in India, and to eliminate child labour.”Chandrasekhar also runs a vocational school for women who do not have money or are incapacitated. This school provides the much needed job skills to the unemployed youth.


In 1993, Chandrasekhar established the Srikiran Institute of Ophthalmology named after his son. Since the hospital’s inaugural in 1993, more than 2,16,858 cataract surgeries have been performed, giving 100% free treatment to the poor that include free eye examinations, free surgery, free medication, free accommodation, free food while patients are in the hospital and even free transportation. The Government of India has recognized the Srikiran Institute as one of the eleven training centres for Ophthalmologists. 


“Eye care is one of the most ignored areas of healthcare in the rural, tribal areas of India. There are no eye doctors or any facilities for the poor and so they don’t even have any knowledge about eye care. When I started out over two decades ago, I noticed that they had to travel 500-600 km to bigger towns and cities to get decent treatment. But in reality how many of these could really travel? They were all just lost. There is rampant blindness in the rural parts of India. And so I set up the Srikiran Institute to provide accessible, affordable, equitable and quality treatment.”


One wonders, what’s in store for Chandrasekhar Sankurathri, a one-man army, who has brought about a colossal change to the helpless and needy but leads an extremely modest life himself. “I can’t be here forever. My time is running out, I can see that.


But there is still so much to do. Mosquitoes are causing horrible diseases among humans that are proving to be fatal. I want to eliminate the root cause of this. So much can be curbed. Being a biologist, I can do this. But I cannot do it alone, and need help from volunteers and sponsors.” Chandrasekhar also talks passionately of starting a mother and child project, to help provide proper healthcare to rural mothers and their infants. All this apart from ‘Spandana’, a disaster relief program, another charity started by him in 1998 to provide basic necessities such as food, drinking water and medications to displaced persons affected by cyclones and floods in eastern India. 


Sankurathri Foundation is running because of large hearted sponsors. But now the foundation is struggling to make ends meet as expenses are getting higher and donations are not. I see the disparity. I know disparities are there everywhere in the world. But the disparity in India is so shocking, so wide, and so unacceptable. We have to do more, much, much more.” 


Chandrasekhar’s relentless pursuit to make lives of the poor a little bit easier continues tirelessly as he wakes up every morning at 4 am and starts his day. “Nothing can be achieved without discipline,” he explains.


A messiah, an angel, a parent... Call him what you will, but there is not a shadow of doubt that this modern-day God has shown to the world that no matter how hard our struggles, how deep our pain, it is in each one of us to help others no matter what. Only then can we create a better world.


“I am not really alone in all of this. I know that somehow, somewhere, Manjari, Srikiran and Sarada never really left me. They are with me till today in every step of the way,” Chandrasekhar concludes.


Chandrasekhar Sankurathri, we bow down to you, and to the love that you have carried in your heart all these years for your wife, your children and for humanity. Thank you.


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HPR HERO AYKAY IMAD
HPR HERO AYKAY IMAD

There was a time when Aykay Imad had set out to do something for others. That was more than a decade ago. It was a fight for freedom. But he failed. A failure that a lot of us will find hard to come out of, at least completely


The Beginning


HPR Hero, Aykay Imad, has an undying spirit that refuses to stop moving forward, in spite of some old scars that just won't heal. But those are memories of a time in his life that was filled with hopelessness and despair, that one can't erase easily. Watching babies being killed in Ghaza, refugees being treated like mere objects, basic human rights being stripped off people: his was a past that was enough to harden him and ruin his faith in humanity forever. "Being born as a Palestinian refugee and raised in Lebanese camps without a status or an identity", can permanently damage one's childhood.


"Still, as I grew up amongst the mass atrocities that were happening around me, I began to realize that I could not just sit and watch injustice happening right in front of my eyes. I was in this world to serve a purpose, and that was to help others get their rightful place in life. Young, still just a school boy, I knew I had to change all those things gone horribly wrong. From a straight A's student, my grades and interest in studies all came crashing down as I started to involve myself in protests against tyranny. For 7 years after that, I fought every day and every night. I got involved with revolutionary movements and started forgetting about my own self, my family, my school and my responsibilities. My only responsibility was to get my people the freedom they deserved. I lost my parent's support as they were unable to bear my lack of interest in school and my growing involvement with revolutionaries, fighting for social causes in a place they always knew was a lost cause from the start. Our relationship soured, as I was often forced to sleep out on the streets being thrown out of my home while still confident that I thought I could change the very nature of extremists"


7 years later, Aykay Imad finally gave up. The government, the wars, the lost innocence, the mass bombings all finally broke his spirit. The young boy who thought he could go out and change the system, became a victim of the system himself. Hardened, lost and dejected, Imad finally lost faith in others and in his own self. He quit fighting and he quit dreaming after what was perhaps going to be his biggest failure, his biggest challenge in his life. With a soul so sickened, a heart so hardened, and a body tired all in his teens, Imad applied to universities in Canada, and left his past behind forever.


The Next Chapter


The frustration of Imad's failure haunted him for years to come. He was leading a life, yes. He went for his classes at one of Canada's best university where he got accepted. Life was routine, perhaps even much more than what a lot of people in his shoes now could have only wished for. "But I was lost on so many levels. I was living, and yet not. Something huge was amiss. I had failed to help people, I had failed in my mission. But then again, I realized that my parents were right all along. Fighting for your rights sounds glorious only in some countries." But from where Imad comes, fighting for your rights can only be a young boy's dream at most.


"I was finally in a land that allows a person the freedom to do anything. And ironically, of all the times I could have done something, I now became completely directionless. I forgot the one thing that I was born to do: Help and motivate others. What good was my life now? What was I doing at a university in Montreal, studying Engineering?" Nothing made sense to Imad.


The Final Chapter


A serious accident in the city left Imad bed ridden for months to come. Lying in his bed at a hospital in Montreal, Aykay Imad felt even more lost than he had ever before. He had no motive and nothing to live for. Already hollow emotionally, he was physically left incapacitated as well. His doctor said he won’t be able to move for a long time.


"And then, out of nowhere, I had but one thought in my head. I couldn't let myself ruin my life anymore. I had my entire life ahead of me and I had to get back on my feet. I could not go on living in the horrific memories of my past anymore. I just had to let go of things I had no control over and moveon." Aykay became determined to transform his life completely, and write his final chapter himself. He was alive after an accident that could have left him dead. Realizing this to be a second chance to change a lot of things, Imad grabbed on to his life with both his hands. It was time to help himself, so he could go out and help people again.


"I had failed once, yes, a failure I thought I would never come out of. Yes, it still hurts that I could do nothing to stop the senseless bombings and killings and stabilize the political unrest in my homeland, but I have accepted finally, that there are some things I just can’t control."


A first phone call went out to his parents to bridge the gap that was long overdue. A first time, at realizing that life is too short to have distances, and some relationships are just too precious not to take care of.


Imad went back to the gym to throw himself back in form. Proper training, an excellent diet and the courage that didn’t stop at anything soon saw him dead-lifting 400+ pounds only a few months later. “The only way I could do it was having enough mental toughness and self confidence to build physical strength.” For the first time Imad saw hope. He started to believe in the power of the self all over again. He began training his body, to be strong and to stand up again. To walk again. Slowly but surely,the physical training he underwent brought about miraculous changes in him, not only physically, but emotionally as well. The power of a strong mind and a strong body pulled him out of the hospital bed and out of his defeatist attitude forever.


"I understood the importance of discipline. And the value of having a healthy body. You can lose everything, but if you have your health, you have hope. But if you don't have health, all the money in the world will not bring you happiness." Ever since, Aykay made it his mission to spread the importance of having and maintaining a healthy body. “I want to make the world a better place. I want to motivate and inspire people so that they can take the initiative and courage to change mentally and physically; to look at me and say if Aykay did it so can we. I want to go to schools and talk to younger people about life, the future, being strong, fitness, the importance of family and show them how to stand up for themselves. I was bullied when I was a kid, but now, I’m physically strong and mentally even stronger. We can't keep on building societies based on fear or violence. My dream is as big as my love for this world. I change lives every year through my Personal Training, my overall positive outlook about life and through my motivational posts on social media. My goal today is to inspire generations.”


Today, Aykay Imad is one of the most well loved physical trainers amongst his clients. As a fitness motivator, he gives people his invaluable gift of having a positive spirit and the will and courage to be strong. With more than 6,000 followers over social media from around the world as well as clients that keep him at the gym round the clock, Aykay starts his morning by meditating and then sending out inspirational messages to all in his circle. He sums up his life with a famous quote: "I was looking for someone to inspire me, motivate me, support me, keep me focused. Someone who would love me, cherish me, make me happy. I realized that all along I was looking for myself."


Aykay Imad attributes his own attitude to his father’s undying courage. His father, who has seen the worst during his own lifetime, from being thrown out of his once-secure job of a pharmacist due to Lebanese authorities not allowing Palestinian refugees to have higher paying jobs, to witnessing members of his family being killed one by one by soldiers of warring nations, Aykay’s challenges seem microscopic in front of his father’s. However, to have witnessed his father gather his life all over again from scratch, and rise to the top as field personnel officer at a social service agency, gave Aykay the much needed confidence he has today. Perhaps Aykay's will to start his life from scratch comes from his father. Perhaps he learnt, that no matter what, life must go on. And for his life to go on, he must be healthy and strong. And that is what he now wants to carry on telling people.


His only grief now: When first thing in the morning, Aykay sees people looking irritable, angry, unhappy. "People have so much, they don't even realize it! Just look around, at all that you have, look at the freedom you have! Return that smile, say a quick hello, be humble, and be nice! Life will be so much more beautiful!”


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