Nominating Abdul Sattar Edhi for a Nobel Award: Give Us Your Testimonials

Posted on January 23, 2007
Filed Under >Adil Najam, People
453 Comments
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Adil Najam

My posts over the last few days have all been designed to build up to this (here, here and here).

Irrespective of whether Abdul Sattar Edhi is a Pakistani or not, irrespective of how much most Pakistanis hold his selfless zeal in reverence – and irrespective also of all the ways in which a few have tried to malign him – I believe that Abdul Sattar Edhi deserves a Nobel Peace Prize. I need your help in putting together a nominations package.

I do not wish to make this a nationalistic thing. He would not like that. For me it is a humanistic thing. As he has made clear again and again, humanism and humanitarianism is more important than everything else; certainly it is bigger than nationalism.

Here is a man who has dedicated his whole life to serving the most marginalized and the most wretched in society. The destitutes, the mentally ill, corpses left by the roadside, children abandoned at his doorsteps, women kicked out by their families. When there is no one to go to, there is always Edhi Sahib to go to.

As importantly, he has done this – in his words – ‘wholesale’. He has single handedly built – literally by begging – a social services structure at a national scale. Bigger than what governments have. He has never taken a ruppee as salary himself. He lives in a two room apartment that most middle class Pakistanis would not call home and he oversees the largest ambulance network in the world, now with airplanes and helicopters, a multi-million dollar enterprise of relief, of goodwill, and of humanitarianism. If he does not deserve the Nobel Award, I do not know who does.

As I had mentioned in the last post, the Edhi Foundation is collecting signatures on a petition that he be given the Nobel Award. I like other bloggers (here, here, and here) would urge you to sign that petition and join the thousands others who already have.


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But I think we can do a little more. Here is how.

I checked out the website of the Nobel Peace Prize Committee and looked at their nominations procedure. It is not clear whether they accept petitions or not, but it turns out that they do have categories of individuals who can make nominations (which are due by February 1). One of those categories is “university professors of social science, history, philosophy, law and theology.” I am not sure if I have much standing with them, but I fit into that category, and therefore I believe I have the ability to formally send in a nomination, and I plan to write in a nomination letter over the next few days.

What I would like to do, then, is to ask you all to write your own testimonials to why Abdul Sattar Edhi deserves a Nobel Award in the comments section. We want to gather as many testimonials/comments as possible.

Personal stories and examples of how he touches people’s lives and meets the ideals of the Nobel Peace Prize are especially useful.

So let me please request you for your help. If you agree with me that Abdul Sattar Edhi deserves a Nobel Peace Prize:

  • Please leave a testimonial in the comments section saying that he deserved the award why you believe that Abdul Sattar Edhi deserves a Nobel Peace Prize.
  • Please email this post to your friends and ask them to do the same.
  • If you are a blogger, please spread the word on your blogs and to your readers and ask those who agree with my proposition to leave a testimonial.

And to meet the deadline we need to do all of this in the next few days. I have no pretensions that a letter from one professor will do the trick. But since I have this ability, I want to at least give it a shot. At least we would be able to say, we tried.

What do you say, folks?

453 responses to “Nominating Abdul Sattar Edhi for a Nobel Award: Give Us Your Testimonials”

  1. A Pakistani says:

    There is also a misinformation campaign about Moulana. I met him first time some thirty years ago at his centre in Kharadhar. He was sitting on a wooden bench ready to listen, ready to help. Then I recall an incident in the middle of 1984. My office was in Adamjee House. I had a messenger named Abdul Ghafoor. I asked him to go to our Human Resource Department that was located in the next building called Textile Plaza. Some lift repair work as already going on in Textile Plaza Abdul Ghafoor boarded on lift and it crashed, he was badly injured. As soon as we knew we ran out to take care him. I immediately called Civil Hospital and Edhi Ambulance. I still recall that Edhi Ambulance was there within 6-7 minutes. There was no trace of hospital ambulance. This is something i personally witnessed and experienced. Later on I had more than one opportunities to meet Moulna in person and listen to his views. His bank accounts and safe deposit lockers were in the same bank where i was working. By that time i had become his fan. There are countless stories how moulna has helped the humanity. But I have restricted myself to my own personal experience. Moulana is a humable, straightforward person and calls a spade a spade. Those who criticize him are like the proverbial person who tries to spit on the the moon.

  2. salimdost says:

    All praise is due to Allah, the Great. Mr Edhi, is doing more work of helping poors, sick and less fortunate ones. He is a pillar of Pakistan. We need more and more souls like. It’s my prayer that may God keep him in His mercy. Amin.

  3. Aikynai says:

    I’m currantly studying in Pakistan at the Aga-Khan University.I’m doing the project about Edhi Foundation. The more I read and learn about the foundation and a man who founded I do not stop admiring with his noble and honest activities for the good of his people. Nowadays, it is so difficult to find such kind of a person. We should be proud of him and take example from him, in order before dying it will be not painful for the purposeless lived years. So, I’m 100% for him to get A Nobel Prize.

    Regards
    Aikynai

  4. [a} says:

    Just read his biography, A Mirror to the Blind. He’s an amazing man, mashallah.

  5. Abro says:

    I agree that Edhi Sahab is one of those Paksiatnis that makes me feel proud to be a Pakistani.

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