Asia

He Still Gives Sight to the Blind

In India, It Is Written-sponsored eye camps are following in Jesus’ footsteps.

Bobbie Jo Srikureja
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He Still Gives Sight to the Blind
Two women, their surgery completed, eat before heading home from the It Is Written-sponsored eye camp in Uttar Pradesh, India. [Photo: Eyes for India, It Is Written]

Have you ever wondered what it might be like to step back in time? Perhaps you jet back 2,000 years and find yourself in a Jewish village of Jesus’ day? When He showed up in town, the quietness was broken. The desperate poor rose from their squalor. They pressed into His presence for the healing they could secure in no other way. Would you fear to feel the press of that desperate crowd, with each one anxious he or she might miss the hoped-for healing?

A time machine was not required in January 2019, when I found myself in the unfolding light of dawn in the Indian state of Uttar Pradesh. As shadowy figures took form around me, I knew I was seeing what Jesus saw and feeling what He must have felt. I wished He was there to touch the lives that flowed past.

A World in the Shadows

Three men move quickly through the morning mist. One looks weather beaten, one is middle-aged, and the last is a lad of only 10 years. Opaque eyes tell of his darkness since he was young. In the cataract belt of India, it is all too frequent that young children are born with or develop cataracts at an early age. The lad sweeps his head to and fro. Perhaps he’s listening to the murmuring world about him.

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Because the middle-aged man had cataract surgery in one eye already, he steers the other two skillfully toward the door of the clinic, where the It Is Written television ministry is sponsoring an eye-care camp. Today, all three men will be operated on. Grandfather will see for the first time in 10 years. Father will gain sight in his second eye. And our doctor hopes it’s not too late for the young son to recover some sight. No one knows whether or not his brain will know how to see once the obstruction to light is removed.

If only he had come sooner.

Next to the Hindu temple a short distance away, I see another soul. I notice she’s bent low over a leaf plate stitched together by thin twigs. The fingers of this frail woman scoop lentil mush into her mouth. Two hundred others are eating just as she is. They all had eye surgery the day before. When the sun rises higher, they will head home, excited about recovered sight.

When the small heap of nourishment is gone, the woman folds her disposable plate, rises to throw it away, and washes her hands. I expect to see her stand straight up, but her slight frame stops unfolding when her head is at waist height. I inhale sharply. Osteoporosis has robbed her of height. Her entire world view is the earth beneath her feet. She is forever locked into this boomerang-shaped stance. If only the healer were here to cure more than just her sight.

I turn to the sound of shuffling. I see a blind woman’s anxious steps sweep the unfamiliar road as she haltingly gropes her way to the clinic. I wonder how far she has come. Some I’ve spoken to have traveled a day and a half by train. The milling crowd parts to let this stumbling woman through. Hope is within reach. The sticker above her right eye indicates one blinding cataract will be removed. Tomorrow, less faltering feet will move with solid determination homeward.

Jesus Is Here

The crowd continues to flow past. How is it possible there are so many? Poverty has treated each one cruelly. The want of proper food has left their eyes to suffer. Lack of money has delayed them in seeking and securing a cure. But now they are finally here, each with hope for a better tomorrow. I have been told they arrive in waves of 400 or more each day. By the end of the ten days scheduled for this camp, at least 4,000 will come seeking help, and more than 2,000 will receive their sight again. 

I wish Jesus were here.

A smile nudges at my feeling of helplessness. Jesus is here. In the form of His friends, He has shown up in town today. Through the eye camps sponsored by It Is Written and the faithful work of Jacob Prabhakar and his team, the desperate poor can gain the healing they could secure in no other way.

I’m not afraid to feel the press of this desperate crowd, each one anxious he or she might miss the hoped-for healing, because I know there is help beyond that clinic door. Through the hands of sacrificial donors, the surgeon, the dedicated nurses, and numerous volunteers, Jesus is certainly here.

There is hope for tomorrow.

The original version of this commentary was posted on the It Is Written blog.

Bobbie Jo Srikureja

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