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Shantaben Prajapati has a unique claim to fame: This 74-year-old resident of Rajpur village in Mehsana, Gujarat, lives with over 1,000 bats in her home. This may seem baffling at a time when fruit bats are being blamed for the outbreak of the deadly Nipah in Kerala, but there’s no reason to fear.
Tests at the National Institute of High Security Animal Diseases in Bhopal claimed fruits bats are not the carrier of virus. However, her compassion for these winged creatures is so strong that she has moved out of her own home, and now cooks her meals and sleeps in the veranda – all because she wants to avoid killing them at any cost. And they sure aren’t moving out by themselves!
Shantaben Prajapati’s home has played host to bats for over five years, since 2013. The bats have literally taken over her two-storey mud home, where they rest during the day and leave at sunset in search of food, only to return the following morning.
Shantaben even goes about cleaning bat droppings everyday, complaining that its smell permeates her home. But she doesn’t want to be unkind to them.
The local villagers who are aware of the 12 deaths in Kerala are quite worried about the bat situation in their village. Shankersinh Nathusinh is a resident of Rajpur and runs a newspaper agency for the surrounding villages .
The Quint spoke with Gira Shah, the managing trustee of Jivdaya Charitable Trust, an animal rescue and welfare organisation about the bat infestation in Shantaben’s home.
For Shantaben though, life continues with the bats, whether a viral epidemic threatens her or not.
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