Brandon Woolf talking to Cole Whipps Brandon Woolf sits on a foldable chair, in front of a foldable table, next to a Brooklyn mailbox in New York. For any passerby, he is ready to write a letter on a vintage portable Royal typewriter. A chalkboard sign in front of him says: “Free Letters for Friends…
Category: True Story
075. Udaybhai: The rickshaw driver who practises gift economy
Udaybhai Jadav If you are in Ahmedabad in the state of Gujarat, India, and you engage Udaybhai’s autorickshaw, you will be in for surprises. You will find newspapers and magazines to read, free snacks and water, and even a dustbin. But the biggest surprise comes when you get off at your destination. Udaybhai’s meter reads…
074. Ruth Bader Ginsburg: Notorious RBG!
Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg Ruth Bader Ginsburg, who died on September 18, 2020, served as a judge of the US Supreme Court for 27 years. Only the second woman to be appointed to the Court, RBG (as she came to be known) was outspoken and instrumental in advancing reproductive rights, gender equality, healthcare access, and…
073. Dr. V: Lifelong mission to eliminate preventable blindness
Dr. G. Venkataswamy Dr. G. Venkataswamy, popularly known as ‘Dr. V’, graduated from Stanley Medical College, Chennai in 1944. He joined the Indian Army Medical Corps but had to retire in 1948 after developing rheumatoid arthritis. The condition became so severe that he was bedridden for over a year. For a time, he struggled even…
070. Gregory Boyle: Transforming gang members in Los Angeles
Father Greg Boyle Gregory Boyle joined the Jesuit Order more than three decades ago. He was sent to the Dolores Mission in Los Angeles, which, at that time, was the poorest parish in the city and had the highest concentration of gang activity in the world. Father Greg witnessed the devastating impact of gang violence…
069. Compensating indigenous knowledge: Promise and failure
Aarogyappacha In December 1987, a team of scientists was on a botanical expedition in the Western Ghats in Kerala, India. They had taken with them a few members of the Kani tribe as their guides. The scientists noticed that the guides were eating a plant that seemed to keep them energetic even during tough treks….
068. Jadav Payeng: The Forest Man of India
Jadav Payeng In 1979, floods washed a large number of snakes ashore on the sandbar of the river Brahmaputra near Jorhat in Assam, India. After the waters had receded, 16-year-old Jadav Payeng saw the dead reptiles. That changed his life forever. “The snakes died in the heat, without any tree cover. I sat down and…
066. Rosa Parks: Not giving up her seat in a bus, sparking a movement
Rosa Parks On the evening of 1st December 1955, 42-year-old Rosa Parks was sitting in the front seat of a bus in Montgomery, Alabama, US. Those days, there was segregation in buses with the whites sitting in the front and the blacks in the back. Rosa was in the first row of the black section….
065. Bhutan: Thunder Dragon conserves its biodiversity
Bhutan or the Thunder Dragon, with its thick forest cover and immense biodiversity, is called the ‘oxygen tank’ or the carbon sink of the world. Out of an area of 40,000 sq km, 72% is under forest cover. This ecosystem supports 7000 species of plants, 165 species of mammals, and 700 species of birds. No…
064. Underground Railroad: The escape route for slaves
Harriet Tubman The Underground Railroad was not a real railroad with tracks and trains. It was just a series of routes and hiding places that slaves from the American South used in order to reach places of freedom in the North. It is said that slavery began in America in early 17th century. Black Africans…