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Muslim Clerics Fighting Polio in India

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  • Muslim Clerics Fighting Polio in India

    Muslim clerics go door-to-door to fight resurgence of polio in India

    LUCKNOW, India, Nov. 12, 2006
    By BISWAJEET BANERJEE Associated Press Writer


    (AP) Farzaan Siddaqui beat up the last health workers who visited his home to vaccinate his children for polio. Like many Muslims in India, he thought the program was an infidel plot to make his community infertile.

    Local health workers tried again Sunday, this time led through Siddaqui's Muslim neighborhood by a local cleric, one of scores of community leaders volunteering for an anti-polio campaign in India's most populous state, Uttar Pradesh.

    The campaign aims to vaccinate some 50 million children across the impoverished state, which has seen 438 polio cases this year, 25 of them over the past week. A smaller number of cases have also emerged in some other states, raising fears of a widespread resurgence of a disease once nearly wiped out in the country.

    Sunday's campaign focused on Uttar Pradesh's Muslim neighborhoods, where many residents have routinely stayed away from polio immunization programs.

    As the health care workers approached Siddaqui's house in Lucknow, one of them whispered, "This is a negative locality for us. Polio vaccine is a big no for them."

    Siddaqui assaulted health workers in August as they tried to persuade him to immunize his 3-year-old son and 1-year-old daughter.

    But this time, Wajhat Valdi _ a cleric who would normally spend the day preaching at a local mosque _ walked in while the health workers stayed outdoors.

    It did not take him long to win over Siddaqui, who came out smiling some 15 minutes later. A vial of polio vaccine was handed to Valdi for Siddaqui's children.

    Within moments, others in the neighborhood joined in.

    "I am so happy that they have listened to me," Valdi said. "It was the will of Allah that I should come here."

    Polio infects children younger than 5, spreading through contaminated water and attacking the nervous system. The disease can cause paralysis and deformation or be fatal.

    Three years ago, India almost wiped out the disease after an intense nationwide vaccination campaign, but a combination of factors _ including illiteracy and superstitious beliefs _ kept many children from receiving immunizations.

    Nearly three-quarters of new polio cases in Uttar Pradesh were in Muslim families, said A. K. Mishra, the top bureaucrat in the state's health department. Most Muslims in the state are poor and illiterate.

    In the past, banners and posters were put up in villages warning Muslims against allowing health workers into their homes. Propaganda spread that polio vaccines were a form of sterilization and a Western ploy to reduce the Muslim birth rate.

    On Sunday, clerics and community leaders appeared on local television channels, urging Muslim families to vaccinate their children.

    "Polio drops are safe and do not affect the health of your children," said Khalid Rashid, also a cleric, in a television appeal made in Urdu.
    http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2006/...8LBQ9CG0.shtml

  • #2
    Re: Muslim Clerics Fighting Polio in India

    Polio does not scare them, vaccine does

    Vidya Krishnan

    Karula (Moradabad), November 12, 2006

    On Sunday, a ?pulse polio day?, families at Karula village in Moradabad, Uttar Pradesh, hid their sons at home and took their daughters to vaccination booths. The reason? Most villagers feared that the vaccine would make the children impotent.

    ?You can vaccinate my four daughters if you want, but not my son,? said Vimla, who refused to get her youngest child immunised. ?If my son is destined to get polio, then no vaccine can save him.? It is the same story at Chakfazalpur, Kundarki, Kuselpur and other villages in western UP.

    The promotional programmes by Amitabh Bachchan and Sachin Tendulkar have had little effect in these villages. "We know how best to raise our children," said Shakeela of Kundarki. "If something happens to my son, I will suffer, not the government."

    Pandhari Yadav, district magistrate, Moradabad, said the districts in western UP had the lowest routine-immunisation rate. "About 1,500 families in these districts refused polio vaccine for their children," he said. The fallout is that UP is the state worst hit by polio. It accounts for 438 of the 521 cases reported nationwide.

    "Members of a particular community think the vaccine is sinful. Since the vaccine has a light tinge of red, they think it is blood," said Rashmi Bhatnagar, a social activist at Husenpur village, Moradabad.

    "My grandmother told me the vaccine was poisonous," said Hussain, 8, whose younger sister should have been administered oral polio vaccine on Sunday. But the family at Chakfazalpur made sure the girl was not taken to the immunisation centre. In this village, children were asked by their parents not to go near polio booths.

    In Moradabad, Yadav has planned a campaign to reverse this. The administration has asked religious leaders, teachers and panchayat heads to talk to villagers.
    http://www.hindustantimes.com/news/181_1842400,0008.htm
    Last edited by ruthbeme; November 12, 2006, 10:33 PM. Reason: To add a link

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