NRI doctor donates $20 million 
              to his native village in Kerala 
              Dr. Kumar Bahuleyan 
              went from extreme poverty to lavish living, only to find joy  
              after donating his fortune 
              to his village in India 
               
               
            Buffalo, NYC, July 31, 2007 
              Ranvir Chawla/Gary Singh  
            NRI doctor, Kumar Bahuleyan, 81, retired neurosurgeon 
              who lived and worked in Buffalo, N.Y., has returned to his villiage 
              to invest his personal fortune some $20 million in charitable projects 
              there, including a hospital, Health Resorts, offering luxury rooms, 
              health spas and exercise rooms. 
            Bahuleyan used to visit Chemmanakary regularly. Fifty 
              years after Independence, unemployment was high, the village still 
              did not have potable drinking water, sanitation, electricity, roads 
              and health centres. "Even marginally well-off people had no 
              concept of sanitation", said Bahuleyan. "Chemmanakary 
              was a beautiful village contaminated by the people's lack of awareness". 
            In 1989, the emotionally aroused doctor was determined to "clean 
              up the mess" established a not-for-profit-private organization 
              to bring basic healthcare to Kerala villages. " I put all my 
              money of more than Rs 10 crore into the foundation. My attempt was 
              to come back here and do some community work," he says.  
            The Bahuleyan Charitable Foundation began with a health survey 
              to pick a target area. It chose an area comprising 17 sq. miles 
              with a population of 66,356. The foundation plunged into a latrine 
              construction programme in this area where 5009 of the 18,362 houses 
              did not have latrines. So far 619 latrines meeting WHO standards 
              and costing Rs 4,000 each have been built. "The people initially 
              had no clue what to do with a latrine and started using it as a 
              store room," says Bahuleyan. 
            In 1993 the foundation built a small clinic in the village to treat 
              pregnant women and children. Demand was so high in spite of poor 
              accessibility (there were no roads leading to the clinic), that 
              the centre was soon upgraded and moved to Vaikom town. The foundation 
              also spent Rs 50 lakh to construct a 6 km road to the main highway 
              and subsidiary roads to link the clinic. 
            In 1995, the Vaikom wing of The Indo-American Hospital opened with 
              30 beds. " It was named to highlight the fact that it is built 
              with the money I earned in the U.S. and to acknowledge the American 
              tax payer's contribution," explained the doctor. 
            But with most of the patients being poor the hospital was making 
              little by way of revenue and its very existence was threatened. 
              " I started this whole project out of my sentiments, with no 
              planning," said Bahuleyan. "However I realized I had to 
              do something revenue generating to make it viable." 
             A project consultant was roped in and he suggested the idea of 
              building a super specialty hospital to attract paying patients. 
              "We decided to have a neuro centre in Chemmanakary and opened 
              with the most modern equipment in November 1996." 
            A super specialty hospital in the hinterlands? 
            "Why not?" asked the doctor." Hospitals are all 
              built in cities which are inaccessible to the villagers. I want 
              to develop my village and its economy. Treatment here is at roughly 
              one-third the cost of city hospitals and free on cost for the poor." 
            The hospital today is the hub of life in Chemmanakary. Indeed a 
              far cry from the early days when the villagers viewed Bahuleyan 
              and his motives with suspicion. And Chemmanakary has finally made 
              it to the map and the millennium- electricity, drinking water, health 
              care and all.  
            Kumar Bahuleyan told local Buffalo News Paper:  
            
              - “I was born with nothing; I was educated by the people 
                of that village, and this is what I owe to them,” Bahuleyan 
                said recently in Buffalo. 
 
              - “I’m in a state of nirvana, eternal nirvana,” 
                he said. “I have nothing else to achieve in life. This was 
                my goal, to help my people. I can die any time, as a happy man.” 
              
 
              - “My dream is to see this all running without my help, 
                so I can pass away peacefully, knowing that I created something 
                and gave something back,” he said. 
 
             
            The executive director of a Buffalo sailing school, Bill Zimmermann, 
              who is helping Bahuleyan set up a sailing and boatbuilding school 
              in Chemmanakary. The venture is designed to teach sailing and boatbuilding 
              skills to the Indian villagers, provide more jobs and use its profits 
              to help fund medical treatment for the villagers.  
            Once Bahuleyan got hooked on the concept, he started spending 50 
              hours a week at Zimmerman’s Seven Seas Sailing School, located 
              on the Buffalo ship canal, trying to learn about his latest venture. 
             
            “He’s not mesmerizing or evangelical, but he seems 
              like a living saint,” Zimmermann said. “He does nothing 
              but imbue a sense of calm and decency. He brings out the best in 
              you.”  
            In 2004, the foundation opened the Kalathil Health Resorts, offering 
              luxury rooms, health spas and exercise rooms.  
            Bahuleyan's latest idea, East India Seven Seas Sailing company, 
              plans to invite applications from Americans willing to spend a few 
              weeks in India, to volunteer in Bahuleyan's hospital and to teach 
              sailing. 
            BIO  
             Young Bahuleyan was one of the two survivors in a 
              family of five; three of his siblings died in their childhood to 
              water-borne disease in 1930s. “I was the oldest, feeling very 
              helpless, listening to the screams of these dying children, one 
              by one,” he said. “Their cries stuck in my psyche. Even 
              now it haunts me.” The Indian American doctor lost two younger 
              brothers and a sister  
            I suffered from smallpox and typhoid fever.. ...“The good 
              Lord saved me for a purpose,” he said. “I believe that, 
              even today.”  
            As an “untouchable,” Bahuleyan had to take a roundabout 
              route to school because he wasn’t allowed to pass within a 
              few hundred yards of the Hindu temple, even though he was born a 
              Hindu. Bahuleyan had attended a lower-caste school and reached the 
              top level at age 12 or 13. 
            A star student, he went to high school, then a premedical school 
              run by Christian missionaries before attending medical college in 
              Madras, now called Chennai.  
            Fighting disease and hunger every step of the way, 
              Bahuleyan struggled to get an education. He was born so poor that 
              he didn’t wear his first pair of shoes until he went to medical 
              school.  
            The young boy's grit and sheer brilliance carried 
              him through, with the help of many benefactors and government scholarships 
              he went on to acquire a medical degree. Life was no cake walk, but 
              " I am an eternal optimist", he says. 
            The Kerala Government sent him to the UK for neurosurgical 
              training as the state did not have a neurosurgeon at that time. 
            He returned home to the Chinese aggression; the army gobbled him 
              up for the armed forces did not have a qualified neurosurgeon.  
            Three years later he discovered " the Kerala Government did 
              not have a place for me; my post had been filled by a freshman". 
              He, a qualified neurosurgeon, had to sit at home twiddling his thumbs 
              waiting for bureaucratic red tape to work around his case. His patience 
              wore thin and a disgusted Bahuleyan fled to Ontario, Canada, seeking 
              employment. He eventually ended up in Buffalo, USA, where for the 
              first time in his life he achieved economic security. During his 
              26-year career, Bahuleyan was in private practice, with offices 
              on Linwood and Kenmore avenues and Main Street. He also served as 
              a clinical associate professor in neurosurgery at the University 
              at Buffalo before retiring in 1999. And he made millions.  
            
              - Once owning a Rolls-Royce, five Mercedes-Benzes and an airplane
 
              - Back to his native village, where he’s traded his Mercedes 
                for a bicycle. 
 
             
            “I compare it to a kid who gets a toy, plays with it, throws 
              it away and gets another toy,” he said. “I knew it was 
              wrong, but I didn’t care. It was the hedonistic phase of my 
              life.”  
            It slowly dawned on Bahuleyan, especially after he went back to 
              India, that he was getting no joy from his lifestyle.  
            “I woke up in the morning feeling terrible,” he said. 
              “I kept asking myself, ‘What am I doing?’ ” 
             
            Dr. Bahuleyan, who lives in Buffalo with his wife pathologist Dr. 
              Indira Kartha since 1973, now spends half the year here, the other 
              half in India. In his native land, he oversees his foundation’s 
              work, gets around on a bicycle and still does almost daily surgery. 
             
              
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