Tribute: The miracle of sight
It’s sad to see The Henry Holland Christian Eye Hospital, more commonly known as Mission Eye Hospital (MEH), in Shikarpur, once one of the city’s well-known hospitals and a historical landmark, deteriorating. Etched in my memory are the four or five days I spent at MEH taking care of a friend’s aged father who had undergone cataract surgery in early 1953.
The hospital floors were always busy teeming with medical teams and patients; I remember seeing both Dr Henry Holland and his son Dr Ronald Holland making rounds and performing surgeries. And there were hundreds of eye patients; most of them accompanied by their relatives or friends.
Dr Henry, his sons, and several other people — both local and foreign — worked long and hard to alleviate the pain and suffering of hundreds of thousands of people in Balochistan and Sindh for decades.
Shikarpur’s Mission Eye Hospital was once famous and everyone was treated there; from sardars and the Khan of Kalat to ordinary villagers
Dr Henry came to the Quetta Mission Hospital (established in 1886) in 1900 when he was barely 25 years old. He soon found himself performing eye surgeries in Quetta, Sibi and Jacobabad. As word spread, patients from Sindh started to make the long trip to the eye camps in Sibi and Jacobabad. Seth Hiranand, a prominent banker in Shikarpur, used to provide financial support to many people who needed financial help for the trip to these eye camps.
In 1909, he visited Dr Henry, probably in Sibi, and asked him to start a clinic in Shikarpur, for which Hiranand promised to give land, material for building structure, and money (for food, lodging, etc) for the patients and those accompanying them.
Dr Henry agreed to the generous proposal, provided the local community, particularly the city’s elite and those holding municipal power, agreed to the project and that he would be allowed to pray and preach outside of his professional setting (he had originally come to Quetta as part of a missionary group).