Anthem Against Poverty from 'Mozart of Madras'
Ranjit Devraj 

NEW DELHI, Sep (IPS) - If ever music could wipe poverty off the face 
of the earth, then India's internationally rated musical genius, A. 
R. Rahman's latest composition, "Pray for My Brother", could do a 
job the United Nations dearly wants to see happen. 

"Could you ever listen, could you ever care to speak your mind? 

Only for a minute, for only one moment in time! This joy is around 
you. 

Show me the love we must find. Are you searching for a reason to be 
kind? He said pray for my brother..." 

Thus go the strains of Rahman's latest composition written for the 
Sep. 14-16 U.N. World Summit in New York but first presented at the 
People's Summit Against Poverty (PSAP) last week, which saw a 12,000-
strong crowd from Asian countries gather in the Indian capital to 
highlight the causes of poverty and how they could be removed. 

Accompanying Rahman -- often referred to as the "Mozart of Madras" 
for his sheer musical genius -- at the release of the anthem at a 
concert during the PSAP was Junoon, the well-known Pakistani band 
and the local group Indian Ocean. 

The People's Summit, Sep. 3-4, was designed to be the South Asian 
chapter of the Global Call for Action Against Poverty (GCAP) the 
worldwide alliance committed to making world leaders live up to 
their promises, and to making a breakthrough in fighting poverty in 
2005. 

At the PSAP, which included delegations from Pakistan, Bangladesh, 
Sri Lanka, Thailand, Malaysia and Nepal, the crowds demanded that 
governments stop privatisation of basic services such as health, 
water and education and provide these as the right of citizens, 
using funds now being squandered on buying arms. 

Rahman described his number, already a hit, as a ''wake-up call to 
end poverty,'' especially the kind that causes large numbers of 
people in India to die needlessly and agonisingly from tuberculosis 
often leaving behind helpless dependents. 

''One-third of the people in the world who die from TB are Indians 
and this pains me,'' said Rahman, last week, when he visited 
Mangolpuri -- a slum cluster in the western part of this sprawling 
capital, ridden with disease and wretchedness but co-exists with 
glittering shopping complexes, air-conditioned software parks and 
bungalows set into tree- lined boulevards. 

Globally around two million people die of TB every year and 30 
percent of the world's TB population lives in India. ''There is 
close link between TB and poverty,'' he observed 

Rahman moved easily through the adoring crowds stopping to speak to 
TB patients placed on Directly Observed Treatment Short-course 
(DOTS) that involves ensuring that victims received their daily 
doses of a special cocktail of powerful drugs, without fail and 
continuously over six months. 

The international celebrity patiently heard complaints including 
those from Sahasi a volunteer agency that organised Rahman's 
interaction with TB patients but is no longer involved with DOTS 
administration because of a new policy. ''We used to give patients 
their doses but the government now wants that patients be treated 
only in government hospitals,'' explained a volunteer. 

With the general air of apathy at government hospitals there have 
been reports of patients dropping out of DOTS, a dangerous trend 
because they then quickly develop multi-drug resistant tuberculosis 
(MDRTB), which is difficult to cure and translates into a death 
sentence for poor patients. 

But the ever-beaming Rahman, who is international brand ambassador 
for the World Health Organisation's ''Stop TB Partnership'' was in 
the Mangolpuri slum mainly for the launch in India of a network of 
TB patients called ''TB Sangharsh'' (Fight TB) capable of tackling 
the disease in the slum. 

"TB Sangharsh is the first of its kind in this country and has been 
created so that TB patients can get treatment with or without the 
help of government hospitals,'' said Sarla (full name), who leads 
the campaign. 

''Sangharsh has set an example in Mangolpuri which I want to take to 
other parts of India,'' said Rahman adding that more than anything 
else there was a need for awareness of what TB is and what can be 
done to stop it, especially by involving the patients themselves. 

The newly formed network will closely work with both NGOs and 
patients and advise them about different kinds of treatment 
available and the need for regular and uninterrupted treatment. The 
network will also help counter stigma associated with the disease in 
India. 

At Mangalpuri, Rahman exhorted people to demand treatment against TB 
as their right. ''Your health is important not only to you and your 
family but to all of society,'' was his simple but forceful 
argument. 

Over 200 national and international organisations, including the 
World Bank and the World Health Organisation, are partners in the 
Stop TB Partnership, launched in March 2004 with the aim of 
identifying at least 70 percent of infectious TB cases globally and 
effect an 85 percent cure rate by the end of 2005. 

Because of his high profile and mass popularity, Rahman was named 
ambassador for the programme and he has frequently taken time away 
from a busy schedule composing music, including for India's huge 
movie industry, to go to slums and wherever else TB lurks to build 
awareness against the disease. 

courtesy: http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=30244

raghu








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