Wednesday, April 26, 2017
Abdul Sattar Edhi Why Google honours him today
Abdul Sattar Edhi Why Google honours him today
Abdul Sattar Edhi: Why Google honours him today
Abdul Sattar Edhi, who founded the worlds largest volunteer ambulance network, would have been 89 years old on Tuesday.
Abdul Sattar Edhi founded the worlds largest volunteer ambulance network in Pakistan, the Edhi Foundation.
Unlike wealthy individuals that fund charities in their names, Edhi dedicated his life to the poor from the age of 20, when he himself was penniless in Karachi .
The reach of Edhis foundation grew internationally, and in 2015 the organisation raised $100,000 in aid relief for the victims of Hurricane Katrina.
Edhi was born before partition in Bantva Gujarat, India on February 28, 1928.
He died last year in Karachi of renal failure. He was offered treatment abroad, but insisted on being treated in a government hospital at home.
A team of "Googlers" decides who gets the doodle treatment, the tech giant says [Screenshot from Google] |
The Edhi Foundations slogan is: "Live and help live".
Tuesday would have been his 89th birthday.
In his honour, Google changed its logo in the United States; Iceland; Portugal; Australia; New Zealand; Japan; Estonia; UK; Denmark; Ireland and Pakistan to a doodle, or illustration, of Edhi.
Google hailed Edhis "super-efficient" ambulance service.
"In celebration of Abdul Sattar Edhi, lets all lend a hand to someone in need today," it said.
The technology giants team has created over 2,000 doodles for homepages around the world. Among those recently celebrated are Pramoedya Ananta Toer , Fred Korematsu and Edmonia Lewis .
"The doodle selection process aims to celebrate interesting events and anniversaries that reflect Googles personality and love for innovation," the company says.
No religion higher than humanity
With more than 1,800 ambulances stationed across Pakistan, the Edhi Foundation is Pakistans largest welfare organisation. In 1997, the foundation entered the Guinness World Records as the "largest volunteer ambulance organisation".
If you call 115 in the South Asian nation, the Edhi Foundation will answer.
People have become educated, but have yet to become human Abdul Sattar Edhi |
In his words, at the start of his work, Edhi "begged for donations" and "people gave".
This allowed him to convert a tiny room into a medical dispensary. He also bought an ambulance that he himself drove around.
Raising more donations and enlisting medical students as volunteers, his humanitarian reach expanded across the country
Today Edhi Foundation runs outpatient hospitals, a child adoption centre and rescue boats.
It also helps in the burials of unidentified bodies .
There are cradles for "unwanted babies" outside Edhi emergency centres.
READ MORE: Thousands attend funeral for Pakistans legendary Edhi
Throughout his life, Edhi emphasised the humanitarian, rather than religious, motivation for his work.
His foundation receives "zakat" (Islamic charity) donations, which he used to help Muslims, Christians and Hindus.
Asked why he helped non-Muslims, he said: "Because my ambulance is more Muslim than you."
He also famously lamented: "P eople have become educated ... but have yet to become human."
When he died, Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif said: "Edhi was the real manifestation of love for those who are socially vulnerable, impoverished, helpless and poor. We have lost a great servant of humanity."
Nobel Peace Prize
Throughout his life and after he died, many questioned why Edhi never received the Nobel Peace Prize.
Pakistani philanthropist Edhi dies at 88 |
After the nominations in 2014, the hashtag #NobelPrizeforEdhi was created ; many said he should have been recognised instead of Malala Yousafzai , who is also from Pakistan.
In an interview with the Express Tribunenewspaper, Edhi said: "I dont care about it. The Nobel Prize doesnt mean anything to me. I want these people, I want humanity."
In that same interview, he recalled an incident that he would never forget.
"There was a woman who committed suicide by jumping into the sea along with her six children," he said. "I was really saddened while giving them ghusal (Islamic washing ritual after death) as part of the funeral rituals."
According to Pakistans Nation newspaper, the State Bank of Pakistan will next month issue a commemorative coin of Rs50 in memory of Edhi.
Edhi, who lived a modest life, helped impoverished people of all backgrounds [Anjum Naveed/AP] |
Source: Al Jazeera News
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