Mrityu Paridhi aur Kendra
Written by: Jitendra Mittal
This play is dedicated to suffering, afflicted, and helpless humanity. It exposes a bitter truth of society, where on one side there are people who possess wealth, fame, and luxury in abundance, yet are forced to live in unbearable pain due to serious illnesses. Some have failing hearts, some damaged kidneys, and others non-functioning pancreases. They can afford everything the world has to offer, except a solution to their own suffering.
On the other hand, the play brings forth the agony of countless poor people who, along with similar illnesses, also struggle with hunger, deprivation, and utter helplessness. Longing for even a single grain of food, they live every moment under the shadow of death. The play clearly conveys that while the forms of suffering may differ, the root cause remains the same, the irreplaceability of human organs. Human organs can neither be bought nor sold, nor obtained through power or authority.
The play underlines a universal truth: before nature, human beings are extremely vulnerable. Despite immense scientific progress, humanity has still not been able to create replicas of human organs. In such a reality, organ donation emerges as the only humane option that can bring hope and life to another human being.
Presented by Yayaver Rangmandal, this play is not meant for mere entertainment, but is conceived as a powerful medium of social awareness and transformation. It acknowledges that society cannot be changed instantly through a stage performance alone. However, if the play provokes thought, initiates dialogue, and encourages discussion on organ donation, it achieves its true purpose.
By sensitizing the audience and appealing to their conscience, the play calls upon them to stand on the side of humanity and take responsibility toward saving lives.
Performing Artists:
Yogendra Joshi, Sonal Thakur, Ramakant Shukla, Mukesh Shukla, Praveen Chandra, Sanjay Tiwari, Anoop Thakur, Deepak, Chanchala Chatterjee, Manoj Singh, Aman Verma, Atul Verma, Vishal, Anwar, Malay Dutta, Rohit Chaudhary.
This play is dedicated to suffering, afflicted, and helpless humanity. It exposes a bitter truth of society, where on one side there are people who possess wealth, fame, and luxury in abundance, yet are forced to live in unbearable pain due to serious illnesses. Some have failing hearts, some damaged kidneys, and others non-functioning pancreases. They can afford everything the world has to offer, except a solution to their own suffering.
On the other hand, the play brings forth the agony of countless poor people who, along with similar illnesses, also struggle with hunger, deprivation, and utter helplessness. Longing for even a single grain of food, they live every moment under the shadow of death. The play clearly conveys that while the forms of suffering may differ, the root cause remains the same, the irreplaceability of human organs. Human organs can neither be bought nor sold, nor obtained through power or authority.
The play underlines a universal truth: before nature, human beings are extremely vulnerable. Despite immense scientific progress, humanity has still not been able to create replicas of human organs. In such a reality, organ donation emerges as the only humane option that can bring hope and life to another human being.
Presented by Yayaver Rangmandal, this play is not meant for mere entertainment, but is conceived as a powerful medium of social awareness and transformation. It acknowledges that society cannot be changed instantly through a stage performance alone. However, if the play provokes thought, initiates dialogue, and encourages discussion on organ donation, it achieves its true purpose.
By sensitizing the audience and appealing to their conscience, the play calls upon them to stand on the side of humanity and take responsibility toward saving lives.
Performing Artists:
Yogendra Joshi, Sonal Thakur, Ramakant Shukla, Mukesh Shukla, Praveen Chandra, Sanjay Tiwari, Anoop Thakur, Deepak, Chanchala Chatterjee, Manoj Singh, Aman Verma, Atul Verma, Vishal, Anwar, Malay Dutta, Rohit Chaudhary.
