Apurva P
Feb 28, 2022
Since 1984, he has served as Rotary director, been a member or chair of several committees, zone coordinator, training leader, member of The Rotary Foundation Cadre of Technical Advisers, and district governor. He is also the chair of the Rotary Foundation (India).
Working on projects Participating in service projects through Rotary changed Shekhar as a person and made him empathise more with the needs of others. Soon after joining the club, he started working on various projects that benefited rural communities locally.
His contribution towards health work began with the Rotary Club, Mahanagar in Kolkata. There, among other things, he helped pioneer a programme called Saving Little Hearts that, over the years, has provided more than 2,500 free heart surgeries for children from India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal, and Africa. Before the programme went international, it started locally to perform just six surgeries within our community. In addition to this, under his leadership, Rotary, together with the Research Society for the Study of Diabetes in India, hosted a nationwide blood glucose testing camp on 29 September (World Heart Day). The camp was spread across more than 10,000 sites in India, with more than 2,000 Rotary and Rotaract clubs participating in the effort. More than one million blood-sugar tests were conducted in a day, an accomplishment recognised by the Asia Book of Records. In February 2022, Shekhar also laid the foundation stone for a 600 bed super speciality hospital with Eastern India Rotary Welfare Trust in association with Techno India Group. Apart from his goals in India, Shekhar is making overseas trips to developing countries like Nigeria and Uganda to inspect a slew of projects sponsored by RI for the education of girl children from low-income households. He also signed a collaboration agreement with the government of Uganda for RI’s India chapter to construct an eye hospital, and provide free-of-charge heart surgeries for 100 Ugandan children in India. Restoring faith and homes Under his leadership, various environment-friendly initiatives are being implemented by Rotary clubs the world over, including the installation of solar panels, recycling, and encouraging tree plantation in communities. In 2004, the Indian Ocean Tsunami devastated the Andaman and Nicobar Islands – destroying thousands of homes and leaving many areas without electricity and running water. When Shekhar visited Little Andaman Island, the builder in him immediately wanted to build homes for the homeless islanders. He decided to construct 500 homes on Little Andaman. “Some of the poor conditions I saw in those communities strengthened my commitment to service. I truly understood the plight of my brethren. Some of the most life-changing experiences have been where I was able to assist a family with heart surgery for their child with a congenital heart disorder, or when I was actively involved in the on-ground rehabilitation efforts for those displaced in Andaman and Nicobar Islands after the 2004 Tsunami,” he says.
At the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Glasgow in November, Rotary International President, Shekhar Mehta, declared that mangrove restoration will become one of the key threads of Rotary’s environmental focus. The Rotary President pinpointed needs in India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, the Maldives, Seychelles, Kenya, and Tanzania for Rotary programmes of mangrove planting and education.