Time of India 30th December 2018 

Making the Indian Railways more disabled-friendly 

Virali Modi, 27, Disability rights activist IMG-20181226-WA0007 In 2008,
Virali Modi, who uses a wheelchair, was molested by two porters at a Mumbai
railway station as they carried her onto the train. "When we got inside the
compartment, the man holding my upper body wrapped his arms around my chest
and started touching and groping me," recalls Modi, adding that there was
"pin drop silence" from fellow commuters, who witnessed the abuse. "I didn't
say anything because I was scared they would drop me on the floor," she
adds. Modi, who lives between Mumbai and Kansas City, was so worried about
being "slut shamed" that she endured the same abuse on two other occasions
without raising her voice. However, these incidents impressed on her the
need for railway stations to be made more accessible. So, in 2017, she
started #MyTrainToo, an online petition, which has garnered over 2,33,000
signatures to date. Her campaign caught the attention of a railway official
in Kerala, who embraced the cause. Currently, six stations in Kerala have
been fitted with portable ramps and narrow, aisle-size wheelchairs. Modi,
27, became paralysed in 2006 in the US after numerous lumbar punctures were
performed in an effort to diagnose what she believes was a bout of malaria.
After waking up from a 23-day coma to find herself paralysed from the neck
down, Modi spiralled into depression, even attempting suicide twice, because
she was shunned by friends and family. "My distant relatives discouraged
their children from hanging out with me by saying, 'Don't hang out with
Virali or you will also become disabled,'" she recalls. "So, I have faced
that 'contagious wali' mindset." Modi, who was runner up in a Ms. Wheelchair
pageant, would like to pursue a career as a model and actress but has found
it difficult to break into the field because of her disability. So for now,
she is focusing on the campaign #RampMyRestaurant, which aims to make
eateries more accessible. "I hope to create more awareness and acceptance,"
says Modi. "I want visibility for those with disabilities in mainstream
media, social and corporate spaces." - Nergish Sunavala 

 



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