'); } -->
Next time your parental chest swells at Junior's stints in the soup kitchen, his 5K walk for cancer, his donation of Christmas money to charity, imagine how the parents of Sindhu Ravishankar of Cary must feel.
A year ago, Ravishankar, a 19-year-old N.C. State University sophomore, raised the money for and organized two daylong "eye camps" in rural villages in India, providing 945 eye screenings, 130 same-day prescription eyeglasses and 257 cataract surgeries. All free, for the poorest of the poor, who queued up in long lines.
"These are people who make perhaps 50 cents or $1 per day for an entire family," said Sashi Kumar, translating for Shivaprasad, who goes by a single name and represents the Lions Club International in India. "The eye camps were the difference between these people having spectacles or not, between them having surgery or not. What is astonishing is that it was such a young woman who made all of this happen."
Today, Ravishankar will be one of three teenagers honored with a Global Action Award from the Mercy Corps, an international humanitarian group. One of the judges who helped pick Ravishankar's work from among 3,000 nominations was Nobel Laureate Elie Wiesel.
A synopsis of her efforts: She raised $1,700 for the camps by giving recitals, playing both the Indian and "western" flute; she asked for donations to the eye camps in lieu of graduation gifts. She led the collection of hundreds of used eyeglass frames -- enough to fill a suitcase. And she persuaded doctors and nurses from hospitals in bigger cities in India to donate their time and services.
In the days before each camp, she and an army of volunteers, many of them relatives from her parents' hometown in India, not only hung signs and banners advertising the free services, they went door to door to spread the word among the largely illiterate villagers.
"We also had speakers on the rickshaws announcing that the eye camps were coming," Ravishankar said.
When the registration tables opened at 8 a.m., lines snaked down the street. Ravishankar, dressed in traditional Indian garb for the events, provided food and drink to all of the attendees. The people who needed cataract surgery were whisked straight from the camps to a hospital five hours away.
"To have paid for that kind of surgery would be 10,000 rupees or $200, which would be unthinkable for these people," said Kumar. "Especially for the elderly. They have no income. Most of them do not see a doctor even when they are very sick."
Remembering her roots
Ravishankar was born in India, but moved to the United States with her parents at 8 months. She and her sister, Seema, a 16-year-old student at Raleigh's Enloe High School, are typical American teens in many ways.
But their parents were determined to maintain an appreciation for Indian culture. Their father, Ravi Ravishankar, made certain his daughters learned the native language flawlessly. On annual trips back to India's Karnataka state, where he and his wife grew up, he also stressed the family's responsibility to the homeland.
"We have a comfortable life here," said their mother, Savitha Ravishankar, gesturing to the vaulted ceilings and gleaming hardwood floors in the family's elegantly appointed home. "We wanted our daughters to understand what kind of situation people in other parts of the world experience."
Ravishankar's charity work began in grade school, when she and Seema raised money, then bought, wrapped and delivered birthday presents to children being helped by the Raleigh Rescue Mission.
Get it all with convenient home delivery of The News & Observer.
The News & Observer is pleased to be able to offer its users the opportunity to make comments and hold conversations online. However, the interactive nature of the internet makes it impracticable for our staff to monitor each and every posting.
Since The News & Observer does not control user submitted statements, we cannot promise that readers will not occasionally find offensive or inaccurate comments posted on our website. In addition, we remind anyone interested in making an online comment that responsibility for statements posted lies with the person submitting the comment, not The News and Observer.
If you find a comment offensive, clicking on the exclamation icon will flag the comment for review by the administrators, we are counting on the good judgment of all our readers to help us.