Brother and Sister to Raise $260,000
for Children’s Eye Care Project in
India
NEW YORK, NEW YORK, Oct. 9, 2007 – Nyan and Lehka Pendyala, ages 8 and 6, will launch a kid-inspired and kid-driven campaign on World Sight Day, Oct. 11th, to increase awareness of unnecessary childhood blindness. Their ultimate goal is to raise $260,000 for a specialized pediatric eye care unit and training center in
India, a project underway by ORBIS International, a nonprofit organization dedicated to saving sight worldwide. To make their target, the siblings are counting on other kids around the country to join their “Kids for Sight” campaign and come up with creative ways to help save the sight of children whose vision is threatened by treatable or preventable eye diseases.
"‘In Sanskirt, my name means ‘eyes’ and ‘vision.’ I want to help blind children see their family and friends,” said Nyan Pendyala. After he decided to forego gifts for his eighth birthday and request that donations go to ORBIS, his sister, Lehka, also stepped in to help. Her name means "line" and "writing" in Sanskrit. She noted, “If you can't see, you're going to have a hard time learning to read and write.”
Next generation of sight savers
Nyan and Lehka, both students at
Hampton’s
Central
Elementary School in Allison Park, Penn., a suburb of
Pittsburgh, will officially kick-off their “Kids for Sight” campaign in their respective classrooms on World Sight Day, which falls this year on Thursday, October 11th.
World Sight Day is a day set aside by the World Health Organization and member organizations of VISION 2020: The Right to Sight, a global initiative that calls attention to the plight of 28 million people around the world who are needlessly blind. Of particular concern are the 1.4 million blind children, three-quarters of whom live in the poorest regions of Africa and
Asia. The majority of the blind could have their vision restored, or blindness prevented altogether, if only they had access to appropriate eye care and timely medical interventions.
Though the campaign has not officially launched, Nyan and Lehka have already raised over $10,000 by sharing information and collecting donations online at their “Kids for Sight” webpage: www.orbis.org/KidsForSight.
Inspired by the Pendyala siblings, Luke and Emma Dias, ages 9 and 5, from
Madison,
Wis. are making coasters in support of the “Kids for Sight” campaign and selling them from a make-shift driveway stand. Watching the Dias kids, neighbor Jacob Thomack, age 5, jumped in to help. To date, the
Madison team has contributed $152 to the campaign with their sight set on donating more.
“The concept in the movie ‘Pay it Forward’ is happening before our very eyes,” said Nyan and Lehka’s father, Krishna Pendyala. “Once people got to know what they were doing, they started giving generously or began their own projects to help ORBIS save sight, even without Nyan and Lehka asking!”
Eye care for
India’s children
The kids have selected an ORBIS pediatric eye care project in
India as the beneficiary of their fundraising efforts.
India, where the Pendyala family is from originally, is home to almost a fifth of the world’s blind children and suffers from a severe lack of eye care professionals trained to treat children.
ORBIS will use the $260,000 contribution to support the Pediatric Ophthalmology Learning and
Training
Center at
Sankara
Nethralaya
Eye
Hospital in Chennai, where work is underway to train medical professionals in the early identification and treatment of pediatric eye diseases and to organize outreach camps in rural areas to screen children for low vision and other visual disorders. The funds will also help further research studies in the field of eye care and rehabilitation, especially as it relates to children, as well as support public awareness initiatives on the prevention of childhood blindness.
“What Nyan and Lehka are doing for ORBIS is magnificent,” said
Geoffrey Holland, executive director of ORBIS International. “At such a young age, their display of compassion is an inspiration to all of us. Their efforts will make it possible for so many children who are unnecessarily blind in
India to see their parents perhaps for the first time.”
Beginning today, Nyan and Lehka will help their teachers with classroom activities focused on eye health and blindness prevention. The siblings hope to teach their classmates how to protect their own eyesight, as well as explain ways they can help children living in poor countries far away gain access to quality eye care. To download the free educational resources produced by ORBIS and its global sponsor Alcon, visit http://www.eyecareeducation.com/.
To learn more about ORBIS, visit http://www.orbis.org/.
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