The coronavirus pandemic has only amplified the grieving of those who have lost relatives. The strict rules and precautionary measures don't even allow the family to properly bid a respectful goodbye to their loved ones.
The peak of the second wave during April-May showed this to the hilt when families even struggled for the 'opportunity' to cremate their family members in Delhi and other places. ,
However, the work of individuals like Jitender Singh Shunty has ensured that almost every recently departed person gets a dignified cremation. Since March of last year, Shunty through his NGO Shaheed Bhagat Singh Seva Dal, has been cremating the bodies of COVID-19 patients. He says that to date, they have cremated over 2,600 virus-infected bodies.
But it's not that Shunty took to this work only during this COVID pandemic. The former Delhi Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) lawmaker and his NGO Shaheed Bhagat Singh Seva Dal have devoted their last 25 years to cremating unclaimed bodies in the city.
When the pandemic wreaked havoc in the country, Shunty and his team members continued to ferry and perform last rites for bodies who had no relatives to take care of them.
He has also received Padma Shri, India's fourth-highest civilian award, for his selfless service throughout the pandemic. During the incessant rise in COVID-19 cases and deaths during the second wave of the pandemic in India, Shunty continued helping the people in distress despite his own family being infected.
During the first wave, Shunty and his family were infected by the coronavirus. But it didn't break his spirit and he continued to ferry patients and conduct the funerals of dead bodies.
Sputnik reached out to the social worker to discuss his life, work, and challenges related to his unique endeavour.
Sputnik:You are the founder of Shaheed Bhagat Singh Seva Dal, an NGO that helps to cremate unclaimed bodies. What inspired you to take to this work at the outset?
Jitender Singh Shunty: I started this NGO in 1995. It all started when I saw a man, who did not have any money for the funeral of his child. He was picking up burnt logs of wood from someone else's pyre to use for cremation. I felt it was happening in a city where so many people live in houses worth millions of rupees but nobody can help a person who needs a funeral. It broke my heart.
We helped him cremate his child's body and decided that we will help everyone in Delhi facing a similar challenge. With the passage of time, we adopted 17 crematoriums and started providing cremation services free of charge. We also provided ambulance services for free. Now we have 18 hearse vans. So far we have cremated over 44,000 dead bodies in all these years.
Sputnik: You have been working and helping COVID patients and their family members since the beginning of the pandemic. How did it all start?