Construction is expected to be completed in June on Rising Star's new complex near Chennai, India, which will include two boarding hostels for a total of about 300 boys and girls and a school that ultimately will enroll about 800.
Rising Star's work is the subject of an hourlong documentary titled "Breaking the Curse," produced by former CNN senior producer Brian Kosisky and narrated by former CNN anchor Daryn Kagan. It is set to air on WPBA in June and will be made available to PBS affiliate stations nationwide.
• Artwork by leprosy patients at Rising Star-supported colonies was shown at a highly successful exhibit last year at a major gallery in Vienna, Austria, and a similar exhibit will be mounted later this summer in Atlanta.
• The agency has subsidized more than 3,000 micro-loans (typically ranging from $25 to $100 to poor people, for the purpose of starting small businesses) to about 1,000 residents of more than 40 leprosy colonies, helping former beggars to move toward self-sufficiency.
• It funds a mobile medical clinic for treatment of both the people in the colonies, as well as their children, and another is scheduled to be added this year. A permanent clinic also is being built.
"These are miracles that just keep happening," she said. "Every time our back is against the wall, something happens and the problem is solved. It's just amazing how this has continued to keep growing."
Rising Star's works are primarily aimed at families affected by leprosy, or Hansen's Disease. Although there is a cure for the disease, leprosy patients and their children and grandchildren still frequently live in isolated colonies and are rejected by most of society. Venkataraman advised Douglas that the best way to have an impact would be to form her own agency. And so, Rising Star was born.
Douglas has traveled to India four or more times each year since then and has devoted much of the rest of her time to raising money for Rising Star. he agency now has more volunteers than it can assign to its projects in India.
In India, Rising Star's first children's home and boarding school opened in 2004. After an Atlanta Journal-Constitution article that year and subsequent publicity elsewhere, the support for Rising Star began rising exponentially.
"I can't think of a more worthwhile organization to be involved with," Harrison said. She said Douglas' organization "is run so well, no money is wasted and she is saving these children and giving back a life of dignity to their leprosy-affected parents."
Harrison said she became interested in Rising Star after a student at her daughter's school in Washington raised $90,000 for tsunami aid administered by Rising Star. One of her sons has served as a Rising Star volunteer, and the Marriott Foundation, of which she is a board member, has provided primary funding for Kosisky's documentary.
In "Breaking the Curse," Kosisky said he tried to capture the "profound" ways leprosy-affected people have been transformed by the works of Rising Star.
He recalled a despondent leprosy sufferer who had attempted to commit suicide by drinking pesticide. But after receiving a micro-loan to buy a cow, the man sold the cow's milk, saved his money and eventually the single cow became a small herd. The man is now respected by people who once shunned him, Kosisky said.
"These stories tell us that hope is possible even under horrible conditions," Kosisky said. "And if one person can make a difference like that, anything is possible."
The Rising Star art project was started primarily as an exercise in art as therapy, when Austrian artist Werner Dornik visited India and coaxed some elderly leprosy patients into taking art classes. Although the patients were hesitant at first, their works progressed from dark-themed to vibrant. Rising Star has helped establish a permanent art school, the Bindu School of Art, at the same leprosy colony.
At the exhibit last November at Vienna's Kunsthalle Gallery, the works were proclaimed artistic successes by the local press. The attention and respect was also transforming for the artists, one of whom told Douglas, "I have almost forgotten I have leprosy."
"This work doesn't need the background story to justify it as art," said Mark Karelson, director of the Mason Murer gallery in Midtown Atlanta. However, the art becomes even more impressive when the artists' physical limitations are considered, he added.
The centerpiece of the Rising Star projects is the children's school and hostel being built on a 12-acre tract of former orchard land near Chennai. The children of families living in the leprosy colonies come to live and study at the center. They are taught in their native language and they learn English, the second language of much of India. Douglas said the curriculum is comparable to the best public schools.
Like most of Rising Star's projects, the construction of the school and hostels has been beset by the challenges of Indian bureaucracy and cultural traditions. The work is done mostly by traditional Indian labor methods; for example, women carry loads of bricks to the worksite by balancing them on their heads.
At one point when the prospect of getting an important permit appeared especially bleak, the school's director asked the children to fast and pray. The next day, the bureaucratic blockade suddenly disintegrated. Douglas said she saw it as another Rising Star miracle.
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