Skip to main content

Salute you, Sisters

12 May is International Nurse's Day. 

The only time I spent as many as ten days at a stretch in a hospital was when I fractured my foot following a fall from my scooter. That was four years ago. I lay in the hospital bed with my leg bandaged heavily from knee to foot and raised on a couple of pillows. My surgeon accompanied by a junior doc and a nurse came every morning to examine the condition of my foot. Nurses came at regular intervals to give me medicines as well as to check whether I was following instructions properly. 

There was a particular nurse who came at about 6 o'clock every morning to give me quite a few medicines one of which was an injection. One morning when she came I was in the washroom. She was not quite chuffed with my adventure. I didn't tell her that I was doing it every morning with the help of the walker I had got a relative to steal into my room. I explained to her that I had no other choice in that matter. She understood though she warned me not to let the doctor see me moving out of the bed. 

She came every morning and continued to be on duty till late afternoon. I asked her one day, "Don't you have any day off?"

"Hmm," she hummed reluctantly. She obviously didn't want me to ask her personal questions. 

"I see you on duty every day," I persisted. "And you are very meticulous too," I added. Who doesn't like a good word about herself? But I wasn't offering her hollow flattery. She was good, really good at her job. 

We became friendly enough for me to ask her a few more questions about herself. "How many years have you been here in service?"

"Just completed a year."

"Before that?"

"I was in the Gulf. Then certain family problems brought me back home."

One day, towards the end of my sojourn in that room on the third floor of the hospital on the bank of the Thodupuzha River, I took the liberty to ask her whether she was paid a good salary since she came with a long experience from the Gulf. She refused to answer. But I had established a rapport with her and so I went on. "Rs 20,000?"

She looked at me as if to mean whether I was out of touch with reality. Which hospital in Kerala pays nurses that sort of salary?

It took me a year to discover that the hospitals in Kerala most of which are run by religious institutions paid the nurses as little as Rs 8000 per month. There are a few exceptions, of course. [Today the situation is slightly better due to government interference.]

Kerala is a state that refers to nurses as "angels". Today's Malayala Manorama, a leading newspaper in Kerala, pays a huge editorial tribute to nurses and it is titled, "Angels, Greetings with Folded Hands". I was told last year by a knowledgeable person that this newspaper has a hospital near Kottayam and the nurses are not treated any better there than elsewhere, let alone as angels. 

"You are an exemplary nurse," I told my nurse in that Thodupuzha hospital as I was leaving the hospital after a ten-day stay during which she got just one day off. A weekly off. 

She smiled at me. That's all. Not a word. And the smile was certainly not angelic. It was too sad for that. 



Comments

  1. That's really sad that such people who are performing their duties so efficiently, are being paid peanuts for their selfless service. While the powers that be (read politicians) are earning in crores, for doing literally nothing! What a shame!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. A lot of people are exploited in our world, that's the sad truth. A doctor is paid in lakhs and a nurse in the same hospital gets a few thousand. I wonder why such a disparity should exist. The same happens with many other professions.

      Delete
    2. Exploitation is, perhaps, the mostly used form of human action...it varies in intensity, impact or intention, but even the least powerful has a suppressed wish to taste its flavour...it pains, but who cares?

      Delete
    3. True, most of us are exploiters or will be if given the chance. I believe a good leader can make a big difference. Didn't Gandhi alter the people's views significantly?

      Delete
    4. True leadership indeed induces a positive shift in social paradigm....society has much entropy inbuilt.....through years of learning wrong things with strong conviction

      Delete
  2. Very good sharing .Nurses are also as respectable as Doctors in this Pandemic and always. I have came to from news that about 800 Nurses have sent to Gulf (Kuwait) recently. A big salute to all the nurses.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. These days nurses are doing a lot of service putting themselves in peril just like the doctors. The service deserves to be appreciated.

      Delete
  3. Great to read.
    Kudos to all the nurses _()_

    ReplyDelete
  4. They deserve a lot more than that. At least there is the recognition they have been getting recently. Salute to the selfless heroes.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Maybe one of the many potentially good outcomes of this pandemic is that the nurses will get a better due. I hope so.

      Delete
  5. It is sad but the true state of affairs for the nursing community. Only lip service of being called "angels" but nothing on the ground.In the movie Take off, the principal character states this fact.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

The Adventures of Toto as a comic strip

  'The Adventures of Toto' is an amusing story by Ruskin Bond. It is prescribed as a lesson in CBSE's English course for class 9. Maggie asked her students to do a project on some of the lessons and Femi George's work is what I would like to present here. Femi converted the story into a beautiful comic strip. Her work will speak for itself and let me present it below.  Femi George Student of Carmel Public School, Vazhakulam, Kerala Similar post: The Little Girl

Yesterday

With students of Carmel Margaret, are you grieving / Over Goldengrove unleaving…? It was one of my first days in the eleventh class of Carmel Public School in Kerala, the last school of my teaching career. One girl, whose name was not Margaret, was in the class looking extremely melancholy. I had noticed her for a few days. I didn’t know how to put the matter over to her. I had already told the students that a smiling face was a rule in the English class. Since Margaret didn’t comply, I chose to drag Hopkins in. I replaced the name of Margaret with the girl’s actual name, however, when I quoted the lines. Margaret is a little girl in the Hopkins poem. Looking at autumn’s falling leaves, Margaret is saddened by the fact of life’s inevitable degeneration. The leaves have to turn yellow and eventually fall. And decay. The poet tells her that she has no choice but accept certain inevitabilities of life. Sorrow is our legacy, Margaret , I said to Margaret’s alter ego in my class. Let

Sanjay and other loyalists

AI-generated illustration Some people, especially those in politics, behave as if they are too great to have any contact with the ordinary folk. And they can get on with whoever comes to power on top irrespective of their ideologies and principles. Sanjay was one such person. He occupied some high places in Sawan school [see previous posts, especially P and Q ] merely because he knew how to play his cards more dexterously than ordinary politicians. Whoever came as principal, Sanjay would be there in the elite circle. He seemed to hold most people in contempt. His respect was reserved for the gentry. I belonged to the margins of Sawan society, in Sanjay’s assessment. So we hardly talked to each other. Looking back, I find it quite ludicrous to realise that Sanjay and I lived on the same campus 24x7 for a decade and a half without ever talking to each other except for official purposes.      Towards the end of our coexistence, Sawan had become a veritable hell. Power supply to the

Thomas the Saint

AI-generated image His full name was Thomas Augustine. He was a Catholic priest. I knew him for a rather short period of my life. When I lived one whole year in the same institution with him, I was just 15 years old. I was a trainee for priesthood and he was many years my senior. We both lived in Don Bosco school and seminary at a place called Tirupattur in Tamil Nadu. He was in charge of a group of boys like me. Thomas had little to do with me directly as I was under the care of another in-charge. But his self-effacing ways and angelic smile drew me to him. He was a living saint all the years I knew him later. When he became a priest and was in charge of a section of a Don Bosco institution in Kochi, I met him again and his ways hadn’t changed an iota. You’d think he was a reincarnation of Jesus if you met him personally. You won’t be able to meet him anymore. He passed away a few years ago. One of the persons whom I won’t ever forget, can’t forget as long as the neurons continu

William and the autumn of life

William and I were together only for one year, but our friendship has grown stronger year after year. The duration of that friendship is going to hit half a century. In the meanwhile both he and I changed many places. William was in Kerala when I was in Shillong. He was in Ireland when I was in Delhi. Now I am in Kerala where William is planning to migrate back. We were both novices of a religious congregation for one year at Kotagiri in Tamil Nadu. He was older than me by a few years and far more mature too. But we shared a cordial rapport which kept us in touch though we went in unexpected directions later. William’s conversations had the same pattern back then and now too. I’d call it Socratic. He questions a lot of things that you say with the intention of getting to the depth of the matter. The last conversation I had with him was when I decided to stop teaching. I mention this as an example of my conversations with William. “You are a good teacher. Why do you want to stop