From Deseret News archives:
Mother slowly breaking 'curse' in India
So, as she tossed and turned in her hotel that night, Douglas prayed. "'I'm just a housewife. Tell me what I should do.' And the thought came to me: 'You can at least look at them. You can at least acknowledge that they're suffering.' And the next day I did."
Six years later, Douglas is now a veteran activist fighting to end leprosy in India. The organization she started around her kitchen table now works with 20,000 people who live in 45 leprosy colonies, providing them with microloans, mobile health clinics and schools. This Sunday her Rising Star Outreach nonprofit will be featured in a PBS documentary, "Breaking the Curse," which will air on KUED-TV tonight at 6.
Douglas grew up in Utah, graduated from Skyline High School in 1970, went to college, married an Atlanta boy and settled down in Georgia to raise nine children. It was the death of her oldest daughter, Amber, that eventually led her to India.
Leprosy results from a microbacteria, a genetic propensity and a lowered immune system. But the disease's rotting flesh and disfigurement have for millennia led people to believe that people who contract it are being punished by God. India has outlawed the caste system, but "it's still alive and well," Douglas discovered, with Untouchables on the bottom rung. "Even their shadows are considered cursed."
When Douglas first started her nonprofit organization, she admits, she was afraid to touch the people she wanted to help. "Now we hug them and kiss them and high-five them. And the touch we give them is the greatest thing we can do."
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