Devil Soul
ELITE MEMBER
- Joined
- Jun 28, 2010
- Messages
- 22,931
- Reaction score
- 45
- Country
- Location
Sir Henry's forgotten dream
SHAMEEN KHAN
A dark green gate opens up to a courtyard, covered with trees and fallen dry leaves everywhere; there’s barely a clear path to walk on.
As I make my way to the courtyard, I take a look around and get a sense of despair; the pale construction is massive, but it is discomforting to see half the place covered in sand, while the rest is wrapped in cobwebs. Broken bricks are scattered all around, who took down the blocks? I wonder.
Standing alone and empty, the Sir Henry Eye clinic in Shikarpur, was once crammed with hundreds of patients in a day, who would come in for treatment from all over Sindh.
Renowned for saving the sight of over 100,000 people, Sir Henry Tristram Holland, a British medical missionary, travelled across India, Pakistan, Afghanistan, providing ophthalmologic surgery and care.
The hospital in Shikarpur was established when a Hindu philanthropist, Shri Hiranand Mendha in 1909, requested Holland to treat patients in Shikarpur. Holland agreed to treat the patients free of cost but asked the philanthropist to help him build a hospital.
In just a years time, the hospital became one of the largest eye clinics in the world, treating up to 600 patients at a time. Its success became widespread and soon, eye specialists from all around the world from India to the United States came to the hospital for training.
SHAMEEN KHAN
A dark green gate opens up to a courtyard, covered with trees and fallen dry leaves everywhere; there’s barely a clear path to walk on.
As I make my way to the courtyard, I take a look around and get a sense of despair; the pale construction is massive, but it is discomforting to see half the place covered in sand, while the rest is wrapped in cobwebs. Broken bricks are scattered all around, who took down the blocks? I wonder.
Standing alone and empty, the Sir Henry Eye clinic in Shikarpur, was once crammed with hundreds of patients in a day, who would come in for treatment from all over Sindh.
Renowned for saving the sight of over 100,000 people, Sir Henry Tristram Holland, a British medical missionary, travelled across India, Pakistan, Afghanistan, providing ophthalmologic surgery and care.
The hospital in Shikarpur was established when a Hindu philanthropist, Shri Hiranand Mendha in 1909, requested Holland to treat patients in Shikarpur. Holland agreed to treat the patients free of cost but asked the philanthropist to help him build a hospital.
In just a years time, the hospital became one of the largest eye clinics in the world, treating up to 600 patients at a time. Its success became widespread and soon, eye specialists from all around the world from India to the United States came to the hospital for training.