Tiruchi,
Updated:
Tiruchi,
Updated:
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Volunteers of the Jamaat-e-Islami Hind and the Students Islamic Organisation of India at the information centre at Noor Ul Huda Masjid in Tiruchi on Thursday.
| Photo Credit: HANDOUT
Volunteers affiliated to the Jamaat-e-Islami Hind (JIH) and the Students Islamic Organisation of India (SIO) have set up an Information and Counselling Centre for COVID-19 patients at the Noor ul Huda Masjid in Alwarthope in the city. The volunteers provide guidance for COVID-19 patients including availability of beds in hospitals, connect them to distributors of oxygen concentrators and provide tele-counselling through a team of doctor-volunteers.
Coimbatore: The pandemic has left many daily wagers, guest workers and the homeless people dependent on community support for food in the district and.
Donations, volunteer efforts: Diaspora comes forward to help India tackle the Covid second wave
Individuals, parliamentarians, and organisations run by NRIs are all attempting to help India continues to reel under the unrelenting Covid-19 second wave. 5 hours ago KhalsaAid/Twitter | Volunteers of Khalsa Aid with pilots from Virgin Atlantic, who flew down donated supplies to India.
Before the news of India’s massive Covid-19 second wave and the tragic collapse of the healthcare system made it to the front pages of the international press, it was already being conveyed across the continents on WhatsApp. Indians around the world had a direct line to the medical calamity, as they heard about the difficulties faced by family, friends and neighbours in the country.
Amid the chaos, Muslim organisations are coming forward to help people as daily cases rise exponentially
In the capital New Delhi, many clerics have announced that they are setting up isolation centers for patients. PHOTO: SOCIAL MEDIA
NEW DELHI:
With the number of daily coronavirus cases in India hitting record highs, Muslims in several parts of the country have turned mosques and madrassas (Islamic schools) into Covid-19 care facilities to aid patients.
India has been witnessing a staggering surge in infections of more than 300,000 daily since April 22, which has severely strained the country’s health system, leading to massive shortages of hospital beds, oxygen and critical drugs.
(RNS) In the grip of a deadly second wave of COVID-19, religious charities and faith-based organizations are among the many civil society groups that have stepped up to mobilize COVID relief efforts.