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Society

A Touching Tale Of Leprosy In Kashmir

"We all have the same story here. After my family abandoned me, it was these people who adopted me and looked after me for all these years."

Photo of four men in the leper colony

A place to be accepted

Junaid Kathju

SRINAGAR — Nizamuddin Bajad, who claims to be 100 years old, was a young man when he arrived in a leper colony situated on the banks of Nigeen lake, far from the noise and crowd of Srinagar city.

Bajad, a resident of Chattaragul village in Ganderbal district, had lived all his life as a nomad, traveling across stretches of Jammu and Kashmir with his flock of sheep and goats. Then one day, he suddenly fell ill and was diagnosed with leprosy, also known as Hansen's disease.

"I was married and was living a happy life as a Bakarwal. But everything changed when I was diagnosed with this disease," Bajad said, while sitting with his old friends outside his apartment.

The hope of a leper colony in Srinagar

Leprosy is a chronic infectious disease and mainly affects the skin, peripheral nerves, mucosal surfaces of the upper respiratory tract and eyes. It can occur at all ages and is likely transmitted through droplets, from the nose and mouth, during close and frequent contact with untreated cases.

With no medication back then to treat the disease, Bajad's family left him on his own before he found his way to the leper colony in Srinagar.

"I had nowhere to go. My family left me at god's mercy. I was devastated. But after arriving here I got a new lease on life," he said.

Nothing short of a miracle.

In the 1980s, after the discovery of medicines labeled as multidrug therapy (MDT), leprosy became a treatable disease. The medicine was nothing short of a miracle for patients like Bajad, who till then were considered "untouchables" by society.

Living in the colony for the past 60 years, Bajad has not only been cured but also gotten married and started a new family.

"When I arrived in this colony, there were many like me, who too were abandoned by their families and were on their own. It gave me hope that I am not alone in this," he said. "I found a new life here and it is my home now."

The colony, which currently consists of around 71 leprosy patients, is the only rehabilitation center of its kind in the Valley. Built during the 19th century under the Kashmir Medical Mission by Britishers, the colony, which gives a serene feeling because of its green ambiance, consists of 62 quarters, a mosque, a double storied hospital and a graveyard.

The colony is currently looked after by the Directorate of Health Services, Kashmir. The department provides food, medicine and clothes to the patients. They also receive a monthly allowance from the social welfare department.

Photo of houses and trees on the colony

The housing on the colony.

cdn.thewire.in

Married with children


Though the people, belonging to different places, were initially compelled to live a life in exile in the colony, over the years, their bonhomie, love and care for each other have made this place their permanent home.

Sharifuddin Sheikh, who is the spokesperson of the Leprosy Association that consists of the elderly people of the colony, said that after finding treatment for the disease, most of them who were abandoned by their families got married and started a new life here.

"Many of us, whose families have left them alone fearing that they too will catch the disease, later got married here after receiving proper medical treatment," Sheikh, who is blessed with two healthy children, said.

"It has been 35 years now since I have been living here. In 1994, I got married to a woman who, like me, had no one else in her life," he said. "I have two sons. One has done post-graduation and is working in a private company. Both my sons are healthy and are living a normal life."

I came here when I had no one in my life.

Sheikh's wife Zarifa is also content in the colony. "I came here when I had no one in my life. My life was full of hopelessness. But god gave me a good husband and caring children," Zarifa said.

Sheikh said they all live like a big family in the colony.

"Everybody knows each other here. It is like a big joint family. We look after many patients who are old and have no family. Besides, there is always a medical team on duty in the hospital, which looks after all of us," Sheikh said.

Sheikh said it has been many years since any new patient arrived in the colony.

Junaid Kathju is a freelance journalist based in Srinagar. He tweets@JunaidKathjoo.

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Green

Forest Networks? Revisiting The Science Of Trees And Funghi "Reaching Out"

A compelling story about how forest fungal networks communicate has garnered much public interest. Is any of it true?

Thomas Brail films the roots of a cut tree with his smartphone.

Arborist and conservationist Thomas Brail at a clearcutting near his hometown of Mazamet in the Tarn, France.

Melanie Jones, Jason Hoeksema, & Justine Karst

Over the past few years, a fascinating narrative about forests and fungi has captured the public imagination. It holds that the roots of neighboring trees can be connected by fungal filaments, forming massive underground networks that can span entire forests — a so-called wood-wide web. Through this web, the story goes, trees share carbon, water, and other nutrients, and even send chemical warnings of dangers such as insect attacks. The narrative — recounted in books, podcasts, TV series, documentaries, and news articles — has prompted some experts to rethink not only forest management but the relationships between self-interest and altruism in human society.

But is any of it true?

The three of us have studied forest fungi for our whole careers, and even we were surprised by some of the more extraordinary claims surfacing in the media about the wood-wide web. Thinking we had missed something, we thoroughly reviewed 26 field studies, including several of our own, that looked at the role fungal networks play in resource transfer in forests. What we found shows how easily confirmation bias, unchecked claims, and credulous news reporting can, over time, distort research findings beyond recognition. It should serve as a cautionary tale for scientists and journalists alike.

First, let’s be clear: Fungi do grow inside and on tree roots, forming a symbiosis called a mycorrhiza, or fungus-root. Mycorrhizae are essential for the normal growth of trees. Among other things, the fungi can take up from the soil, and transfer to the tree, nutrients that roots could not otherwise access. In return, fungi receive from the roots sugars they need to grow.

As fungal filaments spread out through forest soil, they will often, at least temporarily, physically connect the roots of two neighboring trees. The resulting system of interconnected tree roots is called a common mycorrhizal network, or CMN.

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