Lost in Pakistan Geeta reunited with mother: Late foreign minister's dream realised

The dream of the late Minister of External Affairs Sushma Swaraj to help a deaf-mute girl -- who had strayed into Pakistan some 20 years ago -- reunite with her family, was finally fulfilled here last week

Quaid Najmi Mar 11, 2021
Image
A

The dream of the late Minister of External Affairs Sushma Swaraj to help a deaf-mute girl -- who had strayed into Pakistan some 20 years ago -- reunite with her family, was finally fulfilled here last week. The girl, named as Geeta, 29, returned to her home in Parbhani, after a frantic search of over five years, and was reunited with her original family. This is the second such reunion witnessed in two different districts of Maharashtra in the past two months.

On January 26, Hasina Begum, who was wrongly kept in a Pakistani jail for 18 years, was finally sent back to her home in Rashidpura, Aurangabad.

Unfortunately, barely savoring her freedom for two weeks, Hasina Begum, 65, died of a sudden heart attack on February 9.

The second girl, Geeta, was luckier as she was not in jail, but found shelter with the Edhi Foundation, Karachi in Pakistan, which looked after her for years till she was sent back to India with Sushma Swaraj's efforts in 2015.

After she landed in India over six years ago, a massive nationwide search was launched by the government, semi-government agencies, NGOs like the Anand Service Society (ASS) of Indore, which was handed Geeta's custody in July 2020.

After a series of all-India travails to track her family, an NGO, Pahal Foundation (Parbhani) founder-directors Aniket Selgaonkar and Pradeep More helped the ASS find Geeta's kin in a village, Naigaon and handed her over to her mother on March 2 -- over 20 years after she was 'lost'.

Soon after Geeta arrived in India, the late Sushma Swaraj, (who passed away in August 2019) had given her custody to the Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chauhan, who had promised to locate her family. The Madhya Pradesh government entrusted the Indore Deaf Bilingual Academy which tried for nearly five years to locate her family before handing her over to the Anand Service Society (ASS).

ASS's Gyanendra Purohit's chanced upon a tiny clue -- Geeta's nose was pierced on the right side, common in the Marathwada region, instead of the usual left practiced all over -- and launched the search which ended in Parbhani.

"Other clues also clinched -- a maternity hospital outside the railway station surrounded by sugarcane fields, a childhood burn-mark on her tummy. Now, only the final DNA test remains," More told IANS.

Her overjoyed mother, Meena Waghmare, now Meena Pandhare, revealed that Geeta was actually Radha Waghmare and has siblings -- a sister Pooja Bansode, and a brother, suffering from a mental illness.

Selgaonkar said that Geeta loves Marathi cuisine which she missed during her long years in Pakistan and then in Madhya Pradesh, but is still reluctant to move in with her new-found family, now living in Naigaon.

"She is taking basic lessons in English, Hindi, Marathi and computers at the Pahal Foundation, and mostly clad in salwar-kameez all these years, learning to drape the sari, too," he added.

More and Selgaonkar say Geeta is independent-minded, and wants to stand on her own feet, earn a living before joining her familyy and maybe even "settle down" in life..

(IANS)

Post a Comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.