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When grief becomes grace: Kerala's quiet revolution in organ donation

By Vidya Bhushan Rawat* 
Kerala is an important model for understanding India's diversity precisely because the religious and cultural plurality it has witnessed over centuries brought together traditions and good practices from across the world. Kerala had India's first communist government, was the first state where a duly elected government was dismissed, and remains the first state to achieve near-total literacy. It is also a land where Christianity and Islam took root before they spread to Europe and other parts of the world. Kerala has deep historic rationalist and secular traditions.
The openness to good practices drawn from different religions and ideologies makes Kerala stand apart from any other Indian state. It is not merely "God's Own Country" but equally a home to those who do not believe in God — and yet all live in relative harmony. Of course, exceptions exist, and political violence remains a challenge. I am not saying Kerala is without its problems, but it is demonstrably better than the "Hindi heartland" that has produced prime ministers for India while struggling to build world-class educational institutions or an effective public healthcare system.
Amid a depressive global and national climate, Kerala's ten-month-old Aalin Sherin Abraham and her courageous parents have given humanity a gift that is deeply inspiring and deserves a place in school textbooks everywhere.
Aalin Sherin Abraham was declared brain-dead on Friday, February 13, 2026, after being admitted in critical condition to a private hospital in Kochi following a road accident. Even in the depths of grief over the loss of their child, her parents made the extraordinary decision to donate her organs. Their act demands our deepest appreciation. It takes immense courage and clarity of mind to make such a decision in a moment of unbearable pain — and through that decision, Aalin will now live on through four other human beings.
Aalin was the daughter of Arun Abraham and Sherin Ann John, residents of Mallappally in Pathanamthitta district. She met with the accident on February 5 while travelling to her grandmother's house. On February 12, doctors declared her brain-dead. Arun and Sherin decided to donate her organs. As per media reports, her heart valve was sent to the Sree Chitra Tirunal Institute for Medical Sciences and Technology, Thiruvananthapuram; her liver to KIMS Hospital, Thiruvananthapuram; her kidneys to the Government Medical College, Thiruvananthapuram; and her eyes to an eye bank.
The Kerala government responded with a statement: "The government views with deep respect the decision taken by the parents, who upheld the noble example of organ donation despite their profound grief. The government also expresses its condolences to Aalin Sherin's parents and family."
Aalin's parents deserve our deepest salute. To rise above one's most shattering personal grief and make a decision that serves humanity requires an extraordinary depth of conviction and compassion. Their grief is immeasurable, and yet they transcended it.
This would not have been possible without the effective healthcare system that Kerala provides its citizens — a system that is a role model for the rest of India. And Kerala's healthcare landscape owes much to its Christian community, which has historically contributed some of India's finest medical institutions and caregivers. The Christian ethic of care for the suffering draws directly from the moral and spiritual legacy of Jesus Christ. One may debate the theology as a rationalist or atheist, but even if one approaches it as narrative, it is a profoundly powerful one. The socio-cultural message of Christianity in India, at its best, cares for you without being preachy or making you feel unwanted.
Faith, when it is less performative and more humanist, moves people to act. We have seen Buddhist monks walking silently for peace in the United States — not proclaiming themselves the saviors of the world, but simply showing up with humility. That quiet conviction is what drives people to do extraordinary things.
I think of a Christian family I know, originally from Kerala but living in northern India, whose young son was diagnosed with cancer at a primary stage. He was studying in Australia and was engaged to a friend there. Despite knowing the prognosis, both families went ahead with the wedding. I never once heard the parents complain. They showed remarkable resilience and held on to their faith — not loudly, but steadily. When faith is pragmatic and humanist rather than preachy and exclusionary, it becomes the foundation for extraordinary human action.
Ten-month-old Aalin has now become immortal. Her parents will carry the quiet knowledge that their child gave life to four others. What an incredible life, however brief. The four individuals who received Aalin's organs may come from different communities, different faiths, different walks of life. That, ultimately, is the point: the human cause is the greatest cause of all.
These stories rarely make front-page headlines with banner headlines, but they are precisely the ones that give us hope. They bring us together at a moment when hatred is loud and ubiquitous. Those who claim religious authority while knowing nothing of its spirit — whose only qualification is shouting slogans against other faiths — must understand that the greatest religion in the world is, in the end, service to fellow human beings. Hatred manufactured in the name of faith will not endure. Aalin's brief, luminous life will.
Arun and Sherin have not merely donated their daughter's organs in the middle of devastating personal loss. They have shown us that even in the darkest moments, a human being can make a decision that strengthens our collective faith in humanity itself. India must honour such heroes. We hope this heartwarming and inspiring story from Kerala will help bring the vital issue of organ donation to wider attention, particularly in northern India.
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*Human rights defender 

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