Twenty years of blood donation drive for this Chennai college
The Hindu
Through various drives and incentives, The New College in Royapettah has been encouraging its students and faculty to donate blood
The New College is celebrating a noble milestone this year. The institution completes two decades of its journey in encouraging students to donate blood. Recently, the YRC unit of the college organised its 83rd blood donation camp and donated 258 units to Royapettah Government Hospital blood bank and Red Cross Blood Bank.
In all these years, the students of the college have donated more than 12,000 units of blood to various government hospitals.
In 2004, the college initiated the first camp with 62 students from the college coming forward for the cause.
“It was our former principal, professor A Kadar Basha, who asked me to initiate this social project in the college,” says J. Sulaiman, who has been NSS programme officer for The New College for many years.
Doctors from Government Hospital in Royapettah and the Indian Red Cross were invited to explain to students the importance of blood donation. “I still remember how they were motivated when they heard that a unit of blood helps three to four patients,” says Sulaiman.
Students of NSS, YRC and Rotaract Club were the main donors but soon they started campaigning among classmates. As social media was not so prevalent back then, the management used to send our a circular ahead of every camp.
“During the initial years, we had a doctor from a private hospital come to college as many patients from other states struggled in getting blood,” says Sulaiman, who is now director for social service at the college. To build momentum, photographs of student donors were pasted on the notice board as a mark of appreciation.
When Kaleeshabi Mahaboob, Padma Shri awardee and the first Indian Muslim woman to perform nadaswaram on stage, says she almost gave up music once to take up tailoring, it feels unbelievable. Because what the world stood to lose had that happened was a divine experience. On stage, flanked by her husband Sheik Mahaboob Subhani (also a Padma Shri recipient) and her son Firose Babu, Kaleeshabi with her nadaswaram is a force to reckon.