NRI businessman runs school for
deaf
21 Apr 2008, 1237 hrs IST , IANS
AHMEDABAD:
Success,
wealth and a
good life -
Praful
Lakhani, a
hearing
impaired
non-resident
Indian, had
it all. But
he decided
to run a
school in
Ahmedabad
for children
with similar
problems and
has several
other
philanthropic
activities
planned in
Gujarat.
"It is not
borne out of
any instinct
of
spiritualism.
It is all
about
corporate
responsibility
in its real
sense,"
Lakhani, 60,
who now
lives in
Ahmedabad
but
frequently,
travels to
New York,
told
reporters.
A mechanical
engineer by
profession,
he is the
promoter of
the US-based
Reliable
Group. The
group
provides
business
management
software and
IT services
to companies
that seek to
revamp
operations,
accounting
and
management.
Lakhani is
now running
a unique
school in
Ahmedabad
where
deaf
children
overcome
their
impairment.
Ironically,
Lakhani too
is afflicted
by the
problem. But
he has
overcome the
handicap by
learning to
read lip
movement. He
is now
passing on
the benefit
to hearing
impaired
children.
In response
to a
question as
what made
him turn to
such
children,
Lakhani
revealed how
he overcame
his
handicap. He
said: "Even
now I am
answering
your
questions by
reading your
lip
movement."
Lakhani said
his NRI
friend based
in New York
had launched
the school.
He was
finding it
difficult to
run it. "I
decided to
take over.
It is as if
the project
fell on my
lap," he
said.
The school
called Umang
has a
research
centre and
library.
Umang is
among the
few research
centres that
develop
materials
such as
books and
media for
the hearing
impaired.
The centre
also trains
nurses and
healthcare
professionals
on how to
detect
loss
of
hearing
in newborn
infants.
He said, "Umang
works with
government
and
non-government
agencies to
bring about
awareness of
various in
the area of
disability
due to
hearing
impairment.
We have
plans to set
up an audio
logical
service
centre and
an ear mould
laboratory,
a mobile
diagnostic
units and a
computer
centre.”
In the ear
mould
laboratory,
the
objective is
to make
customized
moulds. The
customized
moulds will
then be
fitted in
the hearing
aids, so
that they
work better.
Without the
moulds, the
efficacy of
a hearing
aid is only
80 per cent.
"Once it is
known that a
child has
overcome
hearing
impairment,
he or she is
sent to a
regular
school.
Umang's goal
is to bring
the
afflicted
children to
the
mainstream
of life,"
said Lakhani.
"Umang
provides
educational
services to
150 children
free of cost
through its
school,
which was
set up in
2003."
The school
will now
have its own
building to
be
constructed
on a plot of
5,000 square
yards in the
heart of the
city.
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