






Dr.Gurdeep Kaur
Associate Professor
SGND Khalsa College
Department of Political Science
&
National Service Scheme Programme Officer
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Inspired by Olympian Ajmer Singh, whose body was donated to PGI in January, these people have also pledged to donate their bodies to PGI for medical research.
Now they are planning to run a body organ donation campaign.
“A few years back, a pro- fessor from Amritsar Medical College told me that there was an acute shortage of bodies for research in medical colleges. The education of medicos was facing a setback due to this shortage,” said Amrik Singh Gill, who is one of the initiators of this cam- paign. He is an organic agriculture consultant staying in SAS Nagar, Phase II.
He says that around two years back, he along with wife Raj Gill pledged to donate their bodies to PGI.
“At that time, PGI’s Head of the Department of Anatomy told us that being a research institute, PGI requires around 25 bodies a month but they were getting just two. Then I realised how even dead bodies were important for living human beings,” says Singh.
He then shared the idea with his neighbour Brigadier H.S. Cheema (retired) and his wife Raj Cheema. “Both of them immediately agreed,” says Singh. Soon, it began tak- ing the shape of a campaign.
More people joined in and it almost became a community.
Today, sitting among the donors, H.S. Cheema proudly says, “I am the most eligible candidate among all these, because each day, I am growing older for the greater common good.”
with thanks : sikhsangat
SikhsIndia
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But welcomes move by Pakistan government to start Guru Nanak Dev International University
The Pakistan government is all set to lay the foundation stone of Guru Nanak Dev International University (GNDIU) at Nankana Sahib on April 17. The Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee (SGPC) here has welcomed the move, but it is surprised, and irked, at not being invited for the event.
Claiming to be the paramount representative body of Sikhs, the SGPC feels ignored as it has not been taken into confidence while finalising the date for the significant event, to be attended by world Sikh leaders. SGPC chief Avtar Singh Makkar says he things their criticism of Pakistan on various issues, including the recent beheading of a Sikh by the Taliban near Peshawar, may not have gone down well with the government of the neighbouring country. “We often criticise them. We are not like those who stoop low and turn sycophants ignoring the critical issues confronting the Panth,” says an agitated Makkar, confirming that no invitation has been received by them.