Covid-19 Pandemic: KIIT & KISS Reach the Unreached
The Covid-19 pandemic has disrupted and devastated the normal life and livelihood of people all over the world. Odisha too has been hit hard by the pandemic. Many organizations and individuals have come forward to supplement the Government’s efforts to deal with the emergent situation. Kalinga Institute of Industrial Technology (KIIT), Bhubaneswar and its sister institution Kalinga Institute of Social Sciences (KISS), under the leadership of its Founder Prof. Achyuta Samanta, have also taken a series of initiative right from the outbreak of the disease and have been at the forefront of Odisha's war against the coronavirus.
In one of the most significant measures
in Odisha's war against Covid-19, Kalinga Institute of Medical Sciences (KIMS),
a constituent of KIIT Deemed to be University, set up four ultramodern
dedicated Covid hospitals with the support of the Govt. of Odisha, located in
Bhubaneswar and three tribal-dominated districts of Odisha. The hospitals have
a combined bed capacity of 1200. KIMS Covid Hospital in Bhubaneswar, a
500-bedded state-of-the-art facility including 50 critical care beds, is
India's first standalone Covid hospital. The quick turnaround time in setting
up the Covid Hospitals has saved thousands of lives.
The Covid-19 pandemic is not only a
global health emergency, it has also caused a grave humanitarian crisis due to
prolonged lockdowns and loss of livelihoods for millions. In a mammoth
community service response, KIIT & KISS reached out to various groups
facing hardship due to the extended lockdown. The intervention included the
distribution of food materials and other essentials to over 3 lakh pandemic-hit
people, including the disadvantaged people living in various slums, stranded
migrant labourers, who were also provided temporary shelter, and people living
in containment zones.
Community outreach activities of KIIT
& KISS strived to reach the hardest-hit and commonly overlooked people –
transgenders, sportspersons, physically challenged, sex workers, etc. They were
provided with allowances to cope with the prolonged lockdown. Food materials
and cash to meet other expenses for three months were given to priests and
other workers of several spiritual centres in Bhubaneswar, Cuttack, Puri and
nearby towns. The two institutions are providing groceries and cash for miscellaneous
expenses to over 40 orphanages, old age homes and leprosy centres in Kandhamal
district.
The student community is one of the
worst affected groups in the Covid-19 pandemic. KISS is a home for 30,000
tribal students from interior districts of Odisha pursuing their studies from
Standard-I to PG/Ph.D. level. Days before the outbreak of the pandemic, they
were sent to their respective homes in various districts of Odisha. As the
students are in their respective homes, KISS has been sending study materials,
dress and generous amount of dry foods at the doorsteps every month since
April. The monthly materials also contain sanitary napkins for the adolescent
girl students. This will continue until reopening of KISS.
KISS has taken a series of measures to
keep its students safe and healthy as well as ensuring that they remain
connected to the studies. Prof. Samanta, who has always put the education of
these tribal students above everything else, arranged for the textbooks, study
materials and dried food items to be provided at the students' doorsteps at the
start of the new academic year. KISS was one of the early institutes to
begin online classes and has been maintaining the academic schedule perfectly
for students of all levels.
Inspired by the Prime Minister’s call
for ‘Atmanirbhar Bharat’ (Self-reliant India), KISS has revved up its
vocational skill centre during the Covid-19 pandemic. The centre has been
scaled up to become a medium-size industry and is now making 25 different types
of vocational products. These products are marketed through well developed
distribution channel, besides fulfilling the in-house requirements of KIIT
& KISS. The sale proceeds from the centre are expected to make KISS
self-reliant in the coming years.
In a unique humanitarian gesture, KIIT
Deemed to be University has decided to provide free education to the children
of the Covid deceased in Odisha. The facility will be available for two
academic years: 2020-21 and 2021-22.
The first six months of the ongoing
pandemic has made many children orphans. Such children, particularly those
belonging to the poorer sections, are suffering an untold tragedy. They are
vulnerable to become victims of child abuse and human trafficking. KIIT &
KISS have adopted and are taking care of about 100 such orphans and providing
them monthly allowance ranging from Rs. 5000 to Rs. 10000, depending upon the
family size. As and when the academic institutions reopen, they will be
provided with free education and subsequently complete higher education in KIIT
& KISS.
Support to orphans and children of the
Covid-deceased has been possible due to its Founder, Prof. Achyuta Samanta’s
personal childhood experience of hunger and poverty that he had to suffer after
he lost his father at the tender age of four. He has always been striving to
ensure that no child is deprived of quality education because of untimely death
of parents or poverty.
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