Warrier in Chennai
S Sreedhar collects unknown, unclaimed bodies from hospitals and old
age homes and performs their last rites. He has been doing this for
the past 24 years. Shobha Warrier continues our series on
Extraordinary Indians.

A lazy Sunday morning, when the majority of people relax with a cup of
hot coffee and a newspaper, S Sreedhar is at the mortuary at the
general hospital in Chennai. The hospital authorities hand over 17
bodies wrapped in a white cloth to him. No, they are not his
relatives. In fact, all those 17 people are strangers to him --
unclaimed bodies with no one to give them a last farewell.

Sreedhar takes all these unknown bodies to the cemetery, and gives
them a decent burial after showering them with rice, flowers and milk
with a prayer on his lips. They are buried because the names or
religion of the dead are unknown. If the deceased are Hindu and from
an old age home, he gives them a proper cremation according to Hindu
rites.





Back home, Sreedhar, associate vice-president, IndiaInfoline, does not
feel bad that his weekly holiday starts in a burial ground. On the
contrary, he feels calm and blissful, having bidden farewell with
dignity to some unknown souls.

Sreedhar started this service of cremating the unknown 24 years ago in
1985 after he happened to read the book Daivathin Kural (God's voice)
by Chandrasekharendra Saraswati, the Paramacharya or senior
shankaracharya of the Kanchi Mutt.

"In the book, he says that a dead man should be given a decent
farewell irrespective of the caste or religion the person belongs to.
When the atma (soul)) leaves the body, it should be given a proper
farewell. This is the belief of all Hindus."

The observation made Sreedhar think of all those unknown and unclaimed
bodies in the hospitals and the abandoned old people in old age homes.
And when he expressed his desire to cremate the abandoned bodies to
the Paramacharya, he blessed Sreedhar and asked him to go ahead.


Image: S Sreedhar has ensured that the abandoned get a decent funeral
Photographs: Sreeram Selvaraj

Thanks rediff.com
V.Subramanian Aum.

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