Nun, a train accident survivor, runs center for abandoned children in India

By Saji Thomas | OSV News

KHANDWA, India (OSV News) — Sister Ambika Pillai is seated at a table answering questions from children who are busily creating decorations out of colored paper.

Sister Pillai, a member of the Daughters of Our Lady of the Garden, is the secretary of Navjeevan (New Life) Children’s Home in Khandwa, a town in the central Indian state of Madhya Pradesh.

The children at the center mostly come from broken families — typically abandoned or orphaned — who end up loitering around train stations; oftentimes, their fathers were addicted to drugs and their mothers were unable to make enough money to support their families.

“In some cases, children run away after being scolded or questioned by parents for something,” Sister Pillai told Global Sisters Report, adding that in such cases, “we do our best to reunite them with their families.”

Wearing a loose black skirt and a shawl swung around her neck, the nun gets up from the table and walks with the help of a crutch and a prosthetic leg.

Six years ago, she lost her left leg in a train accident.

Students have breakfast at Navjeevan (New Life) Children’s Home in Khandwa, India. (OSV News photo/Saji Thomas, GSR)

Sister Pillai, a founding member of Navjeevan, had played a key role in developing the children’s home since its inception in 2003, helping rebuild the shattered lives of runaway children until Jan. 4, 2017, a day that changed her life forever.

“I used to move around in trains looking for abandoned children,” the 45-year-old nun said, recalling the day of the accident. “On that day when I was about to get down at Lonavala station, the train suddenly accelerated and I could not put my feet on the platform.”

She was pulled under the train wheels that cut her left leg instantly. “I was in full consciousness and could see my dismembered leg was moving with a wheel.”

“I cried for help and after the initial shock, people pulled me up from the track and put me on the platform,” Sister Pillai said.

The surgeon in the hospital told her 80% of her leg would be amputated, prompting her tears at the realization that she would be disabled for life. She smiled as she welcomed visitors, “despite crying within,” she recalled.

“I realized on the hospital bed that I had to decide whether to be happy or unhappy for the rest of my life,” Sister Pillai told GSR. “God wanted me to live and that’s why he took only my leg,” she paused before adding, “God could have avoided it.”

She recovered from the trauma with long counseling and confidence-building therapies.

“I could not have been here now if they had not supported me and believed in me,” the sister said about her superiors and fellow sisters in the congregation, standing with her throughout her recuperation.

In August 2022, she resumed her work as the secretary of the children’s home and with additional responsibility of being the superior of the local six-member community.

Sister Pillai’s “dedication to serve the runaway children even after losing a leg is amazing,” said Pranay Barve, one of her friends who is tasked by the railways to identify such children.

The nun and her team teach the children art, craft, basic computers and etiquette in addition to helping them with their daily school classes.

“It is a round-the-clock job, as we have to monitor them every moment,” Sister Pillai said, adding that the children often come to the center with psychological issues.

Sister Pillai said it was love for children that prompted her to work on the streets and railways because that’s where children often become victims of exploitation and abuse, she stresses.

Her only regret now is that she cannot drive vehicles like she did before the accident. “Standing even for five minutes is painful,” she said.

“But I can help them and their families through counseling,” she emphasized, which mainly focuses on reuniting broken families, drug addiction among men, and women’s various issues.

For this, Sister Pillai has enrolled in a master of science course in applied psychology with specialization in counseling and psychotherapy.

She already has a master’s degree in social work, diplomas in counseling, psychology and family counseling from different universities. She completed the diplomas from her sickbed.

Sister Indu Toppo, who also is a Daughter of Our Lady of the Garden, assists Sister Pillai’s outdoor engagements and coordinates work in the children’s care home. She said Sister Pillai is proof that a disability is no hindrance when it comes to work.

“She never gives us the feeling that she has some problem, but does everything together with us and encourages us,” Sister Toppo told GSR.

Sister Pillai and her team have so far supported more than 600 boys until they turned 18, the legal age limit to stay in a care home. They send the girls to a government center in the city.

The sister’s center now has 24 boys, who study in government and private schools.

Durgesh Sanjay, a 12th grader in the center, said he was surprised that Sister Pillai is still working for them after the accident. The nun had found him on a railway platform in Khandwa.

The 16-year-old boy, who had lost his father as a child and mother during the COVID-19 pandemic, now wants to become a police officer.

If Sister Pillai “had not brought me to this center, I do not know what would have happened to me,” he said.

Govinda Jugunu, a former resident of Navjeevan, recalled how the nun brought him to the center from a railway platform as a child. He said they still do not know how he landed at the station: Either his parents abandoned him there or he ran away from home.

“I am still in search of my parents and family but unable to trace them,” said Jugunu, who is now 24 and working in a nongovernmental organization as a child project coordinator in Indore, the commercial capital of Madhya Pradesh.

He calls Sister Pillai his mother who had helped him complete 10th grade even after leaving the center. “She keeps supporting me,” he told GSR.

Sister Pillai, who was born in a Hindu family in the southwestern Indian state of Kerala, said even her vocation to Catholic religious life had come with great difficulties.

“Ours was a traditional Hindu family that offered special prayers for deities,” she said. “But whenever we performed those prayers, my mother would behave as if possessed.”

Someone told her parents to meet a Catholic priest in the nearby church. The priest prayed over her mother, and the association led her family to become Catholics.

However, their relatives pressed them to return to Hinduism; everyone except now-Sister Pillai stopped going to church.

After completing 12th grade, she told her parents that she wanted to become a nun, but they asked her to continue her studies.

“I left home saying I was going for studies and later everyone came to know that I was in a convent.”

Following the accident, one of her aunts remarked it was a punishment for her becoming a nun, Sister Pillai said.

“Now I realize all that what happened in my life is as per God’s plan and therefore, I accept it without any complaint.”

Author: OSV News

OSV News is a national and international wire service reporting on Catholic issues and issues that affect Catholics.

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