Kumar Bahuelyan, 81, did not wear his pair of shoes until he went to medical school but earned so much that his lavish life-style included five Mercedes Benzes and one aeroplane.
"I was born with nothing, I was educated by people of that village and this is what I owe to them," he told the Buffalo News. The life for him has come full circle, the paper said, adding that from dire poverty in India to the life style of rich in America and back to his native village where he has traded his Mercedes with a bicycle.
"I'm in a state of nirvana, eternal nirvana," he said, "I have nothing else to achieve in life. This was my goal, to help my people. I can die any time, as a happy man."
Another Indian native, Pearay Ogra, the former chief of infectious diseases at Women and Children's Hospital and the president of the Bahuleyan Charitable Foundation, said he understands why Bahuleyan donated his fortune. "He grew up in a traditional Hindu culture, with a deep sense of universal giving," Mr Ogra said. "You can afford it, give it back to the people who brought you up."
Others too are moved by Bahuleyan's spirit and energy, the paper said, adding Bill Zimmermann, executive director of a Buffalo sailing school is helping Bahuleyan set up a sailing and boat-building school in Chemmanakary. The venture is designed to teach sailing and boat-building skills and use its profits to help fund medical treat ment.
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