A group of expats in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) have created a total of 517 pairs of knitted and crocheted prostheses for breast cancer survivors in India, a media report said.
According to a Gulf News report published on Thursday, the items are distributed free of cost to survivors who have undergone mastectomies or other cancer treatment procedures in India.
The latest despatch of prostheses was headed to India with Geetha Krishnan, a support group member of the group, Saaisha India.
"At Saaisha, we craft these knockers and give them to survivors. We purchase the yarn, we knit the knockers and hope it will give hope and strength," Krishnan, 49, a special educator, told Gulf News.
Each knocker, made of locally available cotton yarn, takes about four hours to craft. Worn under regular undergarments, they are comfortable and provide the look and feel of regular breasts.
In 1991, a breast cancer survivor sent out pink colored ribbons to raise awareness about breast cancer. Pixabay
The patterns are specified by Knitted Knockers of the USA, which first developed the concept of the cotton breast prostheses.
This was then taken up by Saaisha India, a registered charitable trust since April 2018.
"Many of the ladies who lend their time and effort to us learned crocheting from scratch. We are enthused and encouraged by the response of our beneficiaries, and are in the process of scaling up in terms of operations, identifying beneficiaries and adding to our volunteer base," the Gulf News report quoted Akhila Devi, a freelance trainer who works with the group, as saying.
The knockers crafted by Saaisha's UAE-based volunteers have so far been given to 1,000 beneficiaries, either through hospitals in Chennai, Mumbai, Coimbatore, and other cities or via individual contact. (IANS)