Bangkok Post

City Of Joy inspiratio­n still working for India’s poor

- LaURENCE THOMaNN aFP

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

His life helping people in the megaslums 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 said at the Inter-Religious Center of Developmen­t (ICOD), an NGO he co-founded in Gohalopata, a village 75km 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.”

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 US$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.’”

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 said.

“He is my spiritual father.” Brother Gaston’s day begins at 5am 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.

 ?? ?? Brother Gaston Dayanand praying at the InterRelig­ious Center of Developmen­t in Gohalapota village, Howrah district, southwest of Kolkata, on March 19.
Brother Gaston Dayanand praying at the InterRelig­ious Center of Developmen­t in Gohalapota village, Howrah district, southwest of Kolkata, on March 19.
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