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Vol. XXXIV No. 6, July 1-15, 2024

Welcoming a missing person

It was a tale fit for the silver screen that played out in real life. A man who went missing 28 years ago as a young lad was reunited with his family, who couldn’t believe that the brother they had given up for dead was actually alive! The unkempt-looking man, wearing dirty clothes, came to the notice of Udavum Karangal functionaries when he turned up to collect the free food being distributed to pavement dwellers under the NGO’s Food Sharing Project on March 9. He was found to be mentally unsound, and social workers brought him to the Shantivanam Homeat Thiruverkadu, Chennai.

Kumar, when he was brought to Udavum Karangal, with Vidyaakar.

After a bath and shave, some food and clean clothes, the man revealed that his name was Kumar. This seemed to be borne out by a tattoo on his hand, along with another name, ‘Samuthra’. But Kumar was uncooperative and kept trying to escape from the home. He was kept under medical supervision, and his case was entrusted to an expert in reuniting missing persons with their families. The expert gleaned the information that Kumar was from Vellore, but could not trace his relatives there. Then, a chance remark led to establishing contact with the owner of a business named Sun Mobiles in Vaniyambadi – and the man was able to give details of Kumar’s family.

On hearing the astonishing news that Kumar had been found, his five siblings – two older brothers, two older sisters and a younger one – immediately rushed to the Udavum Karangal home in Chennai.  The family told the Udavum Karangal officials Kumar’s backstory – he had left home at the age of 17 to work in a small hotel in Chintadripet, Chennai, in 1996. His relatives said he had fallen in love with a girl, who may have been called Samuthra, the name tattooed on his hand. They said either the girl cheated on him, or he decided he didn’t like his job. One day, he walked out of the hotel and hadn’t been seen since.

Kumar (centre) is reunited with his family after 28 years. His five siblings rushed to Udavum Karangal’s Shantivanam Home when they knew he had been found. Photos: Udavum Karangal.

Kumar was reunited with his grateful siblings in the presence of S. Vidyaakar, founder-secretary, Udavum Karangal, and other officials of the NGO. He was given free supply of psychiatric medicines for a month and his family was advised to continue his treatment for at least a year, and to see that he was never left alone at any point. That’s one more success story in Udavum Karangal’s rescue, rehabilitation and reuniting mission.– (Courtesy: Grassroots – A Journal of the Press Institute of India.)

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