This annoyance with the inherent inequality in the world has Devjani tutoring over 40 children from neighbouring bastis in her school Meitei Jagoi every weekend. Often unruly and indifferent to their teacher's approval, these children, Devjani confesses, give her a tough time initially. "But I keep at it. Discipline them. Teach them. Their personalities flower," she says proudly. So, for the past 16 years Devjani has pursued her mission single-mindedly. Currently, two of her students, Mamata Ghoroi and Raju Choudhury who participated in an all-India dance competition, are receiving a monthly stipend awarded by the Centre for Cultural Resources and Training. "Now they study because they can dance," observes the satisfied teacher, adding, "I could, perhaps, have done something else for these children but I chose to give them what I am best at."
As he trudges across villages like Fakalwara, Kengeri and Anekal on the outskirts of Bangalore, 45-year-old psychiatrist Dr Mohan K. Isaac is working out Devjani's sentiments. The additional professor in Psychiatry at the National Institute of Mental Health and Neuro-Sciences, Bangalore, believes it is a doctor's duty to reach out to those who find it difficult to access medical care.
Soon after he joined the profession, Isaac realised that mentally handicapped people, particularly in rural areas, are ignored and ill-treated by their relatives. A regular visitor to these villages for 20 years, Isaac helps identify and treat common disorders like schizophrenia and epilepsy. This, besides the time he devotes to his official responsiblities. "This is not a nine-to-five job and there is no money," says the doctor. "There is so much more to do. I am seriously considering premature retirement so that I can work for hapless patients full-time."
No acquaintance of Isaac, M.L. Dewan actually opted for early retirement from a UN job in 1982 to mobilise locals and conserve the Himalayan ecology in Ranichauri village of Uttar Pradesh's Tehri Garhwal district. "Lecturing impoverished villagers on the environment gets no results. You have to make it economically attractive to them," explains 75-year-old Dewan. So, he invests the bulk of his pension in importing seeds of commercially productive plants and distributes them through mahila mandals and schoolchildren, supervising their cultivation himself. His involvement in Garhwal's self-rejuvenation doesn't stop here. Every year, Dewan sponsors one local woman to study nursing, with the proviso that she return to serve her village for at least a year.
Even as he animatedly discusses his dreams, Dewan's voice mellows, recalling the accidental birth of his mission. While serving at the UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation in Rome, he had visited the Garhwal hills. "As I gazed at the majestic mountains getting denuded by man's greed, I suddenly felt that the hills were weeping. And so, here I am."