Zürcher Nachrichten - 'City of Joy' inspiration still working for India's poor

EUR -
AED 4.341785
AFN 78.028377
ALL 96.794245
AMD 447.408056
ANG 2.11631
AOA 1084.117105
ARS 1708.386003
AUD 1.685211
AWG 2.128038
AZN 2.017355
BAM 1.960748
BBD 2.380056
BDT 144.414407
BGN 1.985424
BHD 0.445611
BIF 3501.479859
BMD 1.182243
BND 1.50209
BOB 8.16557
BRL 6.182655
BSD 1.181707
BTN 106.765406
BWP 16.322186
BYN 3.385743
BYR 23171.966812
BZD 2.376587
CAD 1.612887
CDF 2547.733818
CHF 0.915763
CLF 0.025819
CLP 1019.496041
CNY 8.212449
CNH 8.198939
COP 4294.001899
CRC 586.875925
CUC 1.182243
CUP 31.329445
CVE 110.54394
CZK 24.342628
DJF 210.108732
DKK 7.469998
DOP 74.407756
DZD 153.532609
EGP 55.578023
ERN 17.733648
ETB 183.298149
FJD 2.600108
FKP 0.865982
GBP 0.862996
GEL 3.186157
GGP 0.865982
GHS 12.945611
GIP 0.865982
GMD 86.89204
GNF 10367.159897
GTQ 9.063871
GYD 247.231168
HKD 9.235725
HNL 31.220781
HRK 7.537507
HTG 155.001121
HUF 380.895706
IDR 19811.736064
ILS 3.643691
IMP 0.865982
INR 106.96706
IQD 1548.00615
IRR 49801.995185
ISK 145.03801
JEP 0.865982
JMD 185.187291
JOD 0.83826
JPY 184.069945
KES 152.509252
KGS 103.387394
KHR 4768.031377
KMF 494.17727
KPW 1064.003808
KRW 1713.939315
KWD 0.363061
KYD 0.984785
KZT 592.444942
LAK 25418.030902
LBP 105820.273269
LKR 365.762945
LRD 219.792753
LSL 18.92716
LTL 3.490857
LVL 0.715127
LYD 7.470852
MAD 10.839652
MDL 20.011496
MGA 5237.193083
MKD 61.635428
MMK 2482.852516
MNT 4218.751034
MOP 9.509455
MRU 47.173034
MUR 54.253261
MVR 18.265934
MWK 2049.131324
MXN 20.399027
MYR 4.649168
MZN 75.368338
NAD 18.92716
NGN 1640.268227
NIO 43.48974
NOK 11.392335
NPR 170.82505
NZD 1.95491
OMR 0.454565
PAB 1.181677
PEN 3.978138
PGK 5.062775
PHP 69.823313
PKR 330.49034
PLN 4.223948
PYG 7839.782457
QAR 4.296943
RON 5.096056
RSD 117.429818
RUB 90.880676
RWF 1724.637263
SAR 4.433506
SBD 9.526636
SCR 16.235881
SDG 711.191278
SEK 10.530098
SGD 1.501277
SHP 0.886989
SLE 28.93537
SLL 24791.048015
SOS 674.201241
SRD 45.060612
STD 24470.047398
STN 24.561978
SVC 10.340092
SYP 13075.107266
SZL 18.934017
THB 37.422757
TJS 11.043059
TMT 4.149674
TND 3.417123
TOP 2.846558
TRY 51.402393
TTD 8.004163
TWD 37.347027
TZS 3054.963258
UAH 51.139442
UGX 4212.629909
USD 1.182243
UYU 45.51485
UZS 14466.503946
VES 439.369533
VND 30740.687809
VUV 141.322495
WST 3.223169
XAF 657.616391
XAG 0.013968
XAU 0.000239
XCD 3.195071
XCG 2.129674
XDR 0.817015
XOF 657.616391
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.817205
ZAR 18.869668
ZMK 10641.599935
ZMW 23.190419
ZWL 380.68183
  • RYCEF

    0.2800

    16.95

    +1.65%

  • CMSC

    -0.1050

    23.645

    -0.44%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • GSK

    0.7600

    53.23

    +1.43%

  • NGG

    1.5300

    86.14

    +1.78%

  • BCC

    2.8900

    84.64

    +3.41%

  • RIO

    3.6260

    96.146

    +3.77%

  • CMSD

    -0.1700

    23.91

    -0.71%

  • BTI

    0.7750

    61.765

    +1.25%

  • VOD

    0.3250

    15.235

    +2.13%

  • BCE

    0.3550

    26.185

    +1.36%

  • RELX

    -5.0450

    30.485

    -16.55%

  • AZN

    -4.7100

    183.7

    -2.56%

  • JRI

    -0.0500

    13.1

    -0.38%

  • BP

    1.0900

    38.79

    +2.81%

'City of Joy' inspiration still working for India's poor
'City of Joy' inspiration still working for India's poor / Photo: DIBYANGSHU SARKAR - AFP

'City of Joy' inspiration still working for India's poor

Decades after inspiring a best-selling novel that brought readers into slums near Kolkata, 86-year-old ascetic Gaston Dayanand is still working for India's poorest.

Text size:

His life helping people in the mega-slums of Pilkhana formed the plot of Dominique Lapierre's 1985 book "The City of Joy", which was later turned into a Patrick Swayze movie.

Born in 1937 to a Swiss working-class family in Geneva, Brother Gaston said he remembered deciding at six years of age to dedicate his life "to Christ and the poor".

"I never wanted to be a priest," the brother of the Prado congregation told AFP at the Inter-Religious Center of Development (ICOD), an NGO he co-founded in Gohalopataa village 75 kilometres (45 miles) southwest of Kolkata.

"The church would never have let me live in a slum with the poor, but my life was about sharing with the poorest."

A trained nurse, Brother Gaston arrived in India in 1972 to work with a French priest in a small self-help centre in Pilkhana.

"It was the biggest slum in India at the time, they said in the world!"

Having arrived on a tuk-tuk, he surprised the local residents by entering on foot.

"I didn't want to enter a place where there are so many poor people, on a rickshaw, like a rich person," he said.

"I went to places where there were no doctors, no non-governmental organisations, no Christians. That is to say, places that were completely abandoned."

- 'Chicago on the Ganges' -

One day in 1981, Brother Gaston said he received a visit from Dominique Lapierre, who was "sent by Mother Teresa".

The well-known French author, who wanted to write a novel "about the poor", convinced the ascetic of his sincerity.

The two men became friends.

Lapierre, who died last December, described Brother Gaston as "one of the 'Lights of the World' whose epic of love and sharing I had the honour of recounting in my book 'The City of Joy'."

Translated throughout the world, Lapierre's novel, published in 1985, sold several million copies.

"He financed all my organisations at a rate of $3 million a year, almost all his royalties, for almost 30 years," Brother Gaston said.

But the film adaptation of the novel, in which Swayze plays a fictional doctor, displeased him: "I frankly hated this film. 'The City of Joy' has become 'Chicago on the Ganges'."

- Surrounded by leprosy -

At the time of Lapierre's visit, Mother Teresa was receiving medicine from all over the world.

She donated large quantities to the self-help centre, which Brother Gaston was able to use.

He trained nurses and established a dispensary.

"I had the medicine, I didn't need anything else," he said.

"We quickly had more than 60,000 patients the first year, 100,000 the second. Three years later, we had a small hospital."

As soon as he arrived in India, he decided to adopt the nationality.

"It took 20 years, of course," he said.

Brother Gaston was born with the surname Grandjean.

In India, he chose the surname "Dayanand", meaning "blessed (ananda) of mercy (daya)".

He worked for a long time with Mother Teresa's brothers caring for people suffering from leprosy in Pilkhana.

"I stayed for 18 years, surrounded by 500 lepers, in a very small room," he said.

Abdul Wohab, a 74-year-old social worker, said: "Gaston is a saint."

- 'A board to sleep on' -

Now white-haired and confined to a wheelchair, Brother Gaston is still trying to help those in need in the northeastern province of West Bengal.

Of the 12 NGOs he founded since moving to India, six are still active, including the ICOD, which has taken in 81 people of all faiths, including orphans and the elderly, as well as those suffering from disabilities and mental health problems.

Brother Gaston said he spends "three-quarters of (his) days meditating" on his bed, facing Christ.

"I had never had anything else but a board to sleep on. Now I live like a bourgeois in a big bed," he said.

"But it's not me who wanted it," he added with a laugh.

"The worst part is that I accept it."

The ICOD's co-founder and director, Mamata Gosh, nicknamed "Gopa", watches over the man who taught her to be a nurse 25 years ago.

"Before him, I didn't know anything," the 43-year-old told AFP.

"He is my spiritual father."

Brother Gaston's day begins at 5:00 am with three hours of prayer, in front of a reproduction of the Shroud of Turin overhanging an Aum, the symbol of Hinduism, in his tiny oratory adjoining his room.

Dressed all in white and barefoot, he sits in his electric wheelchair and visits each of the residents of the thatched hamlet, then returns to his room in the late morning.

On his bedside table sits a Bible, a crucifix, his glasses and an old laptop that he uses to keep in touch with his NGO's donors.

"I will earn my bread until the last day of my life," he said.

U.Ammann--NZN