In a neighborhood in Hyderabad, everyone knew Mr. Poloju Pullaiah Chary. Not because he was rich or famous, but because he was the man who never said no.

The Man Who Fixed Everything for Everyone
When the widow next door couldn't afford to fix her broken door, he fixed it for free. When the school needed benches built, he worked weekends without charging them. When young people in the neighborhood needed carpentry work to start their small businesses, he taught them his skills and charged less than half his usual rate."My father always said, 'If God gave me hands that can build, I should use them to help" - Rajashekar says, his voice breaking. "He built furniture for people getting married who couldn't afford it. He repaired things for elderly people who had no one else."
Mr. Pullaiah always chose kindness over profit.
Today, that kind man lies unconscious in a hospital bed. And his son is desperately trying to save him.

September 4, 2025: When Everything Changed
That morning, Mr. Pullaiah left for work like always. He stopped to help an elderly neighbor carry groceries to her door first - just like he always did.By afternoon, he was fighting for his life.
A car accident. Head trauma. He stopped breathing on his own. Emergency surgery - three operations that night to remove blood from his brain, insert a breathing tube, and drain the deadly pressure building in his skull.
His father survived. But the medical bill is huge!

The Son Who Learned from His Father's Heart
Rajashekar is doing something remarkable. Even while drowning in debt and fear, he's still helping others.Last week, another patient's family in the hospital couldn't afford their medicine. Rajashekar, despite having no money himself, spent two hours helping them apply for emergency medical aid. He taught them how to use fundraising platforms. He shared his own terrible experience to make theirs easier.
"My father taught me that being poor is not an excuse to stop being good," - Rajashekar

He's sold everything—his mother's wedding gold, the family land his father saved ten years to buy, and every piece of jewelry his grandmother left them. He's 23 years old with massive loans and a father who may never wake up. Yet when he sees other families suffering in the hospital, he still stops to help them.
Their father's goodness runs through all of them. That's the kind of people they are.

Why Good People Deserve Good Things
Here's what breaks our heart: Mr. Pullaiah spent decades helping people who couldn't pay him. He gave his skills, his time, his materials. Now he needs more to live. And the people he helped - they're trying. His neighbors pooled ₹50,000. The families whose furniture he built for cheap are donating what they can. The young men he trained for free are contributing their first month's wages.But working-class people can only give so much.
The doctors say he can recover. He can wake up. But only if he gets proper treatment for the next few months—brain monitoring, physical therapy, intensive care.
That costs money this good family doesn't have.

Every Rupee Is a Thank You
If you've ever met someone who helped you for nothing in return - this is your chance to pay it forward.If you believe good people deserve good things - this is how you prove it.
If you want to show a 23-year-old that his father's kindness mattered - this is how you show him.

The carpenter who never said no to helping others is now asking for help. His son, who learned goodness from him and practices it even in his darkest hour, is asking on his behalf.
Please share. Please help prove that goodness is not forgotten.
DONATE NOW!