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在线翻译:
szdaily -> Kaleidoscope -> 
Indian diver saves more than 100 lives
    2020-11-10  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

FOR years, Shiva helped police find bodies in Hussain Sagar lake in the southern Indian city of Hyderabad. And then one day, he stopped someone before he jumped, saving a life for the first time.

Shiva, who uses only one name, says he was about 10 years old when he came across a group of policemen who were offering to pay anyone who would bring a body out of a nearby pond. Police in India are underfunded and poorly trained. Many don’t know how to swim and are not given funds to hire professional divers. So it’s not uncommon for them to rely on such informal, even risky, arrangements.

But when Shiva volunteered, he says, they were taken aback. “They initially refused saying I was too young. But I convinced them,” he recalls. He did the job and walked away with 40 rupees, now worth about US$0.54 but a decent sum for him at the time.

That was 20 years ago. He is now 30 and still helping the local police. Shiva lives right by Hussain Sagar, a large artificial lake in the heart of the city. A popular tourist spot, the lake is also used during the Ganesha festival for immersing idols of the Hindu deity. The statues disintegrate under water and Shiva fishes out the iron rods they are made of to sell to recyclers. But the lake is also a place where many come to die and Shiva often helps police retrieve bodies out of the water. Sometimes, he also helps them recover bodies from other rivers and lakes in the city.

Shiva does more than pulling bodies out of the lake — he often saves people before they jump into the water, and sometimes even after that. “I have lost count of how many bodies I have found. But I have saved 114 lives,” he said.

He is now also training his wife to swim so she can help retrieve bodies of women. Inspector B. Dhanalakshmi, who’s posted at the police station near Hussain Sagar lake, acknowledges that Shiva has been “a huge help” to them.

“I can’t confirm how many people he has saved over the years, but I believe it’s more than 100,” she said. Suicide is still a crime in India and many people Shiva saves run away even before he can call the police.

“I have lost a lot of friends over the years — to addictions, to disease, to hunger, to accidents,” he says. The boy who taught him to swim — “my brother Lakshman,” he calls him — accidentally drowned and another close friend died while trying to save someone else.

He says because he couldn’t save them, he’s trying to make up for that by saving others. Saving lives brings him some extra money — sometimes people he saves pay him as a token of their gratitude. And coverage in the local press has turned him into a minor celebrity and fetched him small roles in Telugu films. But Shiva says he doesn’t consider saving lives a job.

(SD-Agencies)

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