The year is 2019 and Yunus is recovering well. Though he still on medication, his earnings suffice to have the ends meet and afford his life-saving drugs which are costly. When the Centre abolished the special status of Jammu and Kashmir and put the entire erstwhile state under a lockdown, clamped down all means of communication and imposed restrictions on the movement of civilians, Yunus swung into action. After the first few weeks under the lockdown, Yunus said, he began to realise that patients with chronic ailments were running out of life-saving drugs.
“I went to the SMHS and SKIMS – two premier hospitals of the Valley – to get medicines. They did not have it. I went to several pharmacists and they too didn’t have many important medicines,” Yunus said. That is when Yunus thought of a plan. “I told myself that it is time to pay back to those unknown people who saved my life."
Despite restrictions and communication blockade, Yunus, with the help of some friends and acquaintances, compiled a list of people who needed life-saving drugs. The patients mostly included those suffering from kidney failures, heart diseases or cancer. “It doesn’t matter how rich or poor you are. In times like these, if you don’t have medicine on time, you are good for nothing. What use of the money if it can’t buy you medicine?" Yunus said.
After compiling the list of patients and the medicines they needed, Yunus flew to Delhi and bought the life-saving drugs. He spent his own money for all the expenses. On his return, he went to every patient’s home and distributed those among them without charging any money. “I am trying to pay back to people who pulled me through my worst time,” Yunus said. As the lockdown continued, the numbers on the list that Yunus had compiled began to swell. Through his friends, he learnt about other patients who were running out of life-saving drugs. “I and my friends travelled across Kashmir. Some people managed to come to us with the names and addresses of people who needed medicines. The number of people and demand for medicines grew,” he said.