Hindu-Muslim Amity | SabrangIndia News Related to Human Rights Thu, 22 Jan 2026 11:06:43 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.2.2 https://sabrangindia.in/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Favicon_0.png Hindu-Muslim Amity | SabrangIndia 32 32 A rare yet heart-warming coincidence: Hindu-Muslim Kidney transplant https://sabrangindia.in/a-rare-yet-heart-warming-coincidence-hindu-muslim-kidney-transplant/ Thu, 22 Jan 2026 11:06:43 +0000 https://sabrangindia.in/?p=45572 A Hindu’s kidney in a Muslim’s body, and a Muslim’s kidney in a Hindu’s body—you tell me, what religion does this kidney belong to? Yesterday’s incident in Sambhajinagar shows that at certain moments, neither God nor Allah comes running to help. What comes instead is humanity and wisdom.

The post A rare yet heart-warming coincidence: Hindu-Muslim Kidney transplant appeared first on SabrangIndia.

]]>
A Hindu man and a Muslim man—both suffering from kidney failure—needed transplants. Their wives were ready to donate their kidneys, but the blood groups of each husband-wife pair did not match.

By a remarkable coincidence, the Muslim woman’s blood group matched the Hindu man, and the Hindu woman’s blood group matched the Muslim man. Understanding the situation, both women made a thoughtful and humane decision and agreed to exchange donors, giving both men a new lease on life.

At a time when when hatred-driven politics and people spreading religious animosity push others to turn against one another, this scene offers a much-needed sense of hope and reassurance.

Thanks Sakal newspaper for this story of Everyday Harmony (: हिंदूची किडनी मुस्लिमाच्या; तर मुस्लिमाची किडनी हिंदूच्या शरीरात; तुम्हीच सांगा, या किडनीचा धर्म कोणता?)

Chhatrapati Sambhajinagar: Closed doors of the operation theatre. Outside, the anxious heartbeats of relatives. There was neither religion nor caste here—only the will to live. Driven solely by love for their dear ones, a Hindu woman’s kidney was transplanted into a Muslim man, and a Muslim woman’s kidney into a Hindu man. This surgery was carried out at Care Sigma Hospital.

In the city, campaigning for the municipal corporation elections has come to an end. In some wards, the election turned into a Hindu–Muslim issue instead of focusing on development and civic concerns. While all this coloured the public sphere, elsewhere a Hindu woman donated her kidney to a Muslim man, and a Muslim woman donated her kidney to a Hindu man, saving their lives.

The surgery was performed at the Care Sigma Hospital. The kidneys of two men—one Hindu and one Muslim—had failed. They were undergoing treatment, but there was no option other than a kidney transplant. Not wanting to lose their life partners, with whom they had shared a lifetime of summers and monsoons and stood together through joy and sorrow, both wives agreed to donate their kidneys.

However, a problem arose because the blood groups did not match, so neither woman could donate a kidney to her own husband. As a result, both were left helpless. Meanwhile, the Muslim woman’s blood group matched the Hindu patient, and the Hindu woman’s blood group matched the Muslim patient—because blood is neither saffron nor green; it is simply blood.

Senior nephrologists at the hospital, Dr. Pradeep Saruk and Dr. Shrikant Deshmukh, counseled both families. After that, the women decided to donate their kidneys to each other’s husbands. As a result, not only were two lives saved, but a new bond of blood was formed beyond the walls of religion.

During this entire process, valuable support was provided by anesthetist Dr. Pramod Apsingekar and his colleagues, transplant coordinator Vishal Narwade, OT technicians, and other staff members. For this, the hospital’s Managing Director Dr. Unmesh Takalkar, Director Dr. Manisha Takalkar, and Chief Operating Officer Sameer Pawar congratulated the entire team.

Related:

In Grief, She Chose Peace: Himanshi Narwal appeals for communal harmony on slain Lt Vinay Narwal’s birthday

Harmony in diversity: Surendra Mehta’s mission of unity at Kullu’s Pir Baba shrine

Tamil Nadu sets example of communal harmony amidst a polarised country

The post A rare yet heart-warming coincidence: Hindu-Muslim Kidney transplant appeared first on SabrangIndia.

]]>
Two Sons, One Spirit: Muslim men perform Hindu mothers’ last rites in Rajasthan and Kerala https://sabrangindia.in/two-sons-one-spirit-muslim-men-perform-hindu-mothers-last-rites-in-rajasthan-and-kerala/ Thu, 25 Sep 2025 07:16:54 +0000 https://sabrangindia.in/?p=43785 From two corners of India, Muslim men stepped forward to give abandoned Hindu women a dignified farewell, with no camera, no politics—just love—they performed last rites like true sons, reminding us that compassion still rises above creed, caste, or faith

The post Two Sons, One Spirit: Muslim men perform Hindu mothers’ last rites in Rajasthan and Kerala appeared first on SabrangIndia.

]]>
At a time when religion often divides and headlines spread hate, some stories shine like quiet lights of hope. The stories of Asgar Ali from Rajasthan and T. Safeer from Kerala remind us of the India that lives in kindness, not conflict. Their actions show that humanity is still stronger than hate—and that being truly Indian means standing by each other, no matter the faith.

In two separate incidents—one from Bhilwara in Rajasthan, and another from Thiruvananthapuram, in the deep south—Muslim men came forward to perform the last rites of abandoned Hindu women. They did not do this for fame or praise, but simply because they saw these women as mothers, as humans, as part of their own hearts and broader eco-system of shared existence.

Story One: Bhilwara – a mother’s love beyond religion: Shanti Devi’s quiet life

According to a Dainik Bhaskar report, in Jangi Chowk, a small neighbourhood in Gandhi Nagar, Bhilwara, lived 67-year-old Shanti Devi. She had no one—her three daughters and a son had all passed away before her, in 2018. For the past 15 years, she had been staying alone, renting a room in the house of Salim Qureshi. Her neighbours, especially the youth in the area, saw her as a loving, motherly figure.

She was unwell for a long time and was admitted to Mahatma Gandhi Hospital, where a young Muslim man, Asgar Ali, took care of her. On September 14, 2025, she passed away during treatment.

Who would perform her last rites?

After her death, one question filled the air with silence: “Who will do her last rites? Who will lift her bier? Who will light the funeral pyre?”

There was no family around to carry out the rituals. But there were people—not by blood, but by bond.

Asgar Ali Khan, along with Ashfaq Qureshi, Shakir Pathan, Firoz Qureshi Kancha, Abid Qureshi, Asgar Pathan, Inayat, Jabid Qureshi, and other local youths stepped in.

These were all young Muslim men who had grown up seeing Shanti Devi as more than a neighbour. To them, she was “Ammi”, the mother who cared, who asked if they had eaten, who prayed for them during tough times.

“We carried her like our own mother”

The group prepared for her funeral with care and respect. By the evening, a few distant relatives of Shanti Devi arrived from Madhya Pradesh, but the heart of the ceremony belonged to the young men who had already stepped into the role of sons.

“Since I was three or four years old, Shanti Devi gave me love like a mother. Even during Covid, she asked about my health every day. When she passed away, it felt like my own mother had left me,” — Asgar Ali, as Bhaskar reported

They carried her body on their shoulders, arranged a hearse, and took her to the crematorium. There, they performed the last rites strictly according to Hindu customs, lighting the pyre and chanting “Ram Naam Satya Hai”—a chant they had heard a thousand times at other funerals, but this time it came from their own hearts.

“We will immerse her ashes at Triveni Sangam or Matrikundia, as per her wishes,” — Asgar Ali

The neighbors—especially women who lived near Shanti Devi—couldn’t hold back tears. One said, “No son could have done more than what these boys did for her” as reported

Story Two: Thiruvananthapuram – a son by choice, not blood

Down south, in Kadinamkulam village, 44-year-old Rakhi, a woman from Chhattisgarh, was living in a Christian rehabilitation centre for people with mental illness. She was recovering well, but cancer had taken over her body.

As she neared her final moments, Rakhi expressed a simple, emotional wish that “When I go, please perform my last rites according to Hindu traditions.”

But Rakhi had no known relatives. She couldn’t even recall her home address. With no family to perform the final rites, the caretakers turned to a familiar and compassionate face—T. Safeer, a Muslim panchayat member from the area.

“My religion teaches me to respect the dead”

Safeer didn’t hesitate. Despite being a devout Muslim, he said“When someone has such a last wish, we must do everything we can.”

“My religion has taught me to give final respect to every human being, whether family or stranger” — T. Safeer, Panchayat Member, The Mooknayak reported

He contacted the local crematorium in Kazhakoottam, learned the rituals, and performed every custom with full sincerity. From dressing the body to lighting the pyre, Safeer stood alone—yet as a son would. Even the local Imam of his mosque supported him.

“This is not against Islam. In fact, it’s the very essence of it—to honour the dead,” — Local Imam

Remarkably, this was not Safeer’s first such act. Just two weeks earlier, he had performed the funeral rites of another abandoned Hindu woman from the same centre.

Two stories, one message: humanity is our real religion

From the deserts of Rajasthan to the backwaters of Kerala, these two stories are not just rare exceptions—they are reminders of our shared heritage.

In Bhilwara, a group of young Muslim men carried a Hindu woman like their own mother.
In Thiruvananthapuram, a Muslim panchayat worker became a son to a dying woman who had no one. In both cases, there was no social media campaign, no publicity, and no expectations of reward. There was just humanity—pure, simple, and powerful.

These men didn’t see themselves as Muslims doing a Hindu’s last rites. They saw themselves as sons fulfilling the final duty to their mother.

Related:

Banu Mushtaq Inaugurates Mysuru Dasara Amid Controversy: A triumph of secularism and Constitutional values

Pahalgam Attack: Kashmir unites in heroic resilience amid terror attack, proving humanity’s strength against hate narrative

‘What happened to Ali Mohammad was wrong’: UP temple’s Muslim caretaker held for offering namaz; Hindu priest to arrange bail, says he served with dignity for 35 years reports TOI

 

The post Two Sons, One Spirit: Muslim men perform Hindu mothers’ last rites in Rajasthan and Kerala appeared first on SabrangIndia.

]]>