Maharashtra: As Mai, Sindhutai spent all her life giving orphans food, a roof & hope | Pune News – Times of India

PUNE: Social worker Sindhutai Sapkal moulded her incredible life from personal setbacks to care for thousands of abandoned orphans, giving them food, a roof and hope.
The celebrated social worker and activist, who was honoured with a Padma Shri in 2021, died on Tuesday at the Galaxy Care Hospital in Pune. She was 74.
Sapkal was undergoing post-operative care after a diaphragmatic hiatal hernia surgery at the hospital on November 25.
“Her left lung had collapsed due to diaphragmatic hernia that she suffered from for more than five years. She was recuperating post-surgery. However, her condition started worsening after the lung infection she developed five days ago for which she was put on non-invasive ventilator support. She suffered a massive heart attack and died at around 8.10pm on Tuesday,” Sapkal’s treating doctor Shailesh Puntambekar said.
Her death was mourned on social media by several people. “The untimely demise of the veteran social worker Sindhutai Sapkal has come as a huge shock to all of us. Her work in taking on the role of the mother of orphaned children will serve as inspiration to generations,” NCP leader Sharad Pawar said in his tweet.
“Not just of orphans, but Sindhutai was a mother to all, and was a symbol of enthusiasm. Her taking on the mantle of humanitarianism and social work will serve as a direction to the society,” BJP leader Vinod Tawde said in his tweet.
Sapkal was popularly known as Mai (mother), by the 1,500 orphaned children she had taken under her care. She also ran several orphanages across Maharashtra. Some are in Pune and its surrounding areas.
She had four biological children before she was 20 and had left her marital home after suffering domestic abuse. In the early days, Sapkal sheltered at railway stations and cemeteries with her children, and took to begging to make ends meet.
Her plight made her empathize with orphans and abandoned children, whom she then took under her wing and thus began a lifetime of work caring for them.
She also worked with adivasi communities for their welfare, even confronting then-Prime Minister Indira Gandhi to demand compensation for a family attacked by a bear in a tiger reserve. Her demand was promptly met with.
Some of her children carried forward their mother’s work in children’s welfare, including her biological daughter, with others also achieving professional success across sectors.
Her life and times inspired film maker Ananth Mahadevan to direct Mee Sindhutai Sapkal (I Am Sindhutai Sapkal). The Marathi film with Tejaswini Pandit, Jyoti Chandekar, Upendra Limaye, and Neena Kulkarni in leading roles won several National Film awards, including the special jury award.

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