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Sr Teslin Poovathanickal is proud of the wounds on her face. “Oh, they are my Ruby’s gift,” the 43-year-old member of the Preshitharam Sisters says as she runs her fingers over the marks.
Ruby, a 26-year-old woman with speech and hearing impairment who gets violent occa-sionally, scratched Poovathanickal’s face in a fit of anger a few months ago. But the sister saw the incident as part of her mission.
“She beats and spits on us. But after some time, she would come and say, ‘Sister, sorry,’ and we forget our pain,” says the nun, who works in Sanjoe Bhawan (House of St. Joseph), a rehabilitation centre for women age 18 and older with various handicaps.
Sanjoe Bhawan is part of Sanjoepuram (City of St Joseph) Children’s Village in Chandpur, one of the few institutions in India that offer inclusive educa-tion. Poovathanickal serves there with 17 other nuns from four congregations, all members of the Syro-Malabar Church.
The village currently shelters 64 girls and women, ages 10-36, with disabilities, such as speech, vision and hearing impairment, cerebral palsy and developmental disorders. Some residents are orphans or children of prisoners.
The complex includes the Infant Jesus Senior Secondary School, where students from neighboring villages study with the Sanjoepuram children up to the 12th grade.
The school has 522 boys, all day students, and 368 girls, including 39 from Sanjoepuram.
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