German-Indian friendship: Maheer and his lifesaver › DKMS Media Center Skip to content

11. Mai 2021, News in Spender & Patienten

German-Indian friendship: Maheer and his lifesaver

How a stem cell donation kindled a wonderful connection

A stem cell donation by Dr Sita Arjuna, a medical from Cologne, saved the life of Maheer, a blood cancer patient in India. Four years later, the two met face to face. They’ve since developed a friendship that spans the continents. Sita had planned to return Maheers visit by going to see him in India last year – but then the Covid-19 pandemic came along, and she had to postpone her trip.

  • Friendship for life

    DKMS Pressefoto

    Friendship for life

    Sita and Maheer

    JPG, 8,7 MB

  • Deutsch-indische Freundschaft

    DKMS Pressefoto

    Deutsch-indische Freundschaft

    Sita und Maheer

    JPG, 7,2 MB

  • This ist Maheer

    DKMS Pressefoto

    This ist Maheer

    A Teenager, nine years after his live saving stam cell transplantation

    JPG, 140,4 KB

  • Maheer 9 years after transplantation

    DKMS Pressefoto

    Maheer 9 years after transplantation

    The boy has become a teenager

    JPG, 67,4 KB

  • Maheer from India

    DKMS Pressefoto

    Maheer from India

    Nine years after his stem cell transplantation

    JPG, 93,5 KB

  • Beim ersten Treffen in Berlin

    DKMS Pressefoto

    Beim ersten Treffen in Berlin

    Sita mit ihrem Freund (l.) sowie Maheer und seiner Familie

    JPG, 8,9 MB

  • Maheer in Indien

    DKMS Pressefoto

    Maheer in Indien

    Mittlerweile ist er 14 Jahre alt

    JPG, 128,6 KB

“We’ve put the trip on hold for the moment, but it’s definitely going to happen. I’m really looking forward to seeing Maheer’s home and meeting him and his family again,” says the 33-year-old medical, who remains committed to supporting the work of DKMS. She had registered as a donor in 2010. “A friend of mine had blood cancer too, but sadly they couldn’t find a donor for him, so he died. He was only in his early twenties. So I decided to request a donor kit so I could register from home.”

At the time Sita would hardly have imagined that less than two years later, she would be giving someone a second chance at life. “It was a wonderful surprise, and as soon as I found out, I knew I wanted to help,” Sita recalls. “Suddenly there was someone I could give hope to through my donation. Hope is something we all deserve.”

First of all, Sita underwent the various preliminary examinations and a comprehensive health check. She actually made her donation in Cologne in November 2012, by a process known as peripheral stem cell donation. This method is used in 80 percent of cases and is an outpatient procedure in which stem cells are taken from the bloodstream. To increase the number of stem cells in the blood, the donor has to take a drug for five days in the run-up to their donation.

“Making the donation seemed completely natural to me and everything went really well. I’d do it again anytime if someone needed my help,” says Sita.

What Sita didn’t know at the time was that her stem cells would be couriered straight to India, to six-year-old Maheer, from Ahmedabad. Maheer had acute leukemia and his life depended on her donation. Nine years later he describes his transplant: “At that time I was very young, so I didn’t know what was happening, or why. There was so much anxiety, and my parents were so worried.  Everyone was tense, worrying constantly and crying. I didn’t understand the situation at that time, but I knew something was wrong, as my father kept on motivating me. He said there was an issue with my blood but that it would all be sorted.  After the transplant, everyone felt much happier.”

There were even more happy faces about four years later, when donor and recipient first got to meet face to face. They met in Café Moskau, in Berlin, at an event to mark the 25th anniversary of DKMS. Maheer, his parents, and his sister had all traveled from India specially for the occasion. “He was still a bit shy at first, but he soon started to open up,” Sita recalls, “It felt a bit like having another little brother.”

The Indian family immediately took her into their heart. “Thanks to Sita’s donation, Maheer can live. That’s a huge gift, and to this day we can hardly believe it. We’re incredibly grateful,” says Maheer’s father, Chirag. “Sita and our family now have the most wonderful connection. She’s just such a kind person.”

Sita and the family have been in contact for five years now. “We regularly write letters to each other, so I always know how Maheer is doing – at school, for instance. But they have Covid there too,” she reports.

Maheer is now 14 years old. He has managed to beat his leukemia and now has the gift of a bright future to look forward to. “I like to listen to music, play with my friends, and travel. But my favorite hobby is research, especially in the field of medicine. I mean, I have this story, right? The idea that research can help people to beat their illnesses is exciting,” the teenager tells us.

Maheer also has a very important message for people: “The only reason I am here breathing, living, speaking, is my transplant. This donation gave me my life. What could be more beautiful than that? By donating stem cells, you could give someone a life. So please, sign up and save a life!”

Find out more about Maheer and Chirag Ghadiyali by reading the interview.

 

Das könnte Sie auch interessieren

0