
From swim schools to eye clinics: how families of 7/7 victims used heartbreak to help others
Before the unit was established in 2008, according to its vice-chair, there was no dedicated children's eye care centre in the entire eastern part of India, a country home to 20% of the world's blind children. The clinic now sees about 3,000 children a month and performs 350 eye surgeries – a significant proportion of them at no cost to the often very poor families who need them.
This is one of the legacies of Miriam Hyman, a 31-year-old picture researcher, amateur artist and keen dancer who was murdered in the London bombings of 7 July 2005, alongside 51 other commuters.
Miriam was 'a very visual person', says her older sister Esther, and after her death, her family were determined that good would come from the terrible act of violence that claimed her life. With their compensation money and public donations, they funded the equipment needed to set up the Miriam Hyman Children's Eye Care Centre in Bhubaneswar. Thanks to its work, among other achievements, doctors have made significant steps towards eliminating one form of childhood blindness, retinopathy of prematurity, in the surrounding area.
'It makes our hearts happy to know that she's memorialised in that way,' says Esther Hyman. 'The centre is Miriam's living memorial. It's a place that benefits people, and that's very much the kind of person that Miriam was.'
Twenty years after the attacks, the families of those who died are preparing to gather on Monday to mourn and remember those killed in the four suicide bombings on 7/7, three on London Underground trains and the fourth on a doubledecker bus.
Alongside their profound sadness, however, many family members will also be able to point to acts of great positivity and hopefulness, large and small, that followed their loved ones' deaths.
Among these little rays of light, scattered around the world, is a project in Belize that has taught thousands of children to swim. It was set up after 7/7 by the family of Fiona Stevenson, a solicitor originally from Cheshire who was killed in the explosion at Aldgate.
Described by her family as a whirlwind of positivity and enthusiasm who loved to travel, Stevenson had recently returned from a working trip to the Central American country, where she had proudly gained her diving qualifications, but had also learned that many children in the country died by drowning because few had the chance to learn to swim.
The charity was set up 'to try and find some positivity out of such a horrendous time for us', says her sister Andrea Watson. 'It gave us something to focus on, and we remembered how much Fiona loved Belize when she was there working. Although the break in our hearts will never be mended, it brought some comfort that those that gained a skill for life were gaining it in her name.'
Sign up to First Edition
Our morning email breaks down the key stories of the day, telling you what's happening and why it matters
after newsletter promotion
The scheme has also trained hundreds of young adults as lifeguards and swim instructors. By the side of a swimming pool in Belize City is a plaque and photo explaining more about the life of the woman whose quiet legacy may have been to prevent countless child deaths.
On the other side of the world, meanwhile, a fund set up in memory of Michael Matsushita, who died at Russell Square, distributed funds between five children's orphanages in Cambodia and Vietnam. Matsushita, a New Yorker, was born in Vietnam and had recently moved to London to join his girlfriend, who, like him, worked as a tour guide for the firm Intrepid Travel.
Other memorial projects are closer to home. On the day of the attacks, Great Ormond Street children's hospital treated adult casualties for the first time since the second world war; only later did those at the hospital learn that two of their own staff – Behnaz Mozakka, a biomedical officer, and Mala Trivadi, a radiographer – were among the dead. They are now remembered in a garden at the hospital where staff can find refuge from their busy shifts and long-term patients experience fresh air and tranquility.
A substantial donation from the family and employers of Helen Jones, an accountant originally from Lockerbie, helped fund the opening of a children's unit at the Eden Valley hospice in Cumbria, which has since supported the families of many hundreds of sick babies and children. In memory of Benedetta Ciaccia, an Italian-born business analyst who worked in publishing, Birkbeck, University of London awards annual bursaries to students studying IT, the course from which Ciaccia had recently graduated.
For all the manifest good these memorial projects do, they have not come without cost for family members who have been dealing with intensely personal losses. The first decade after Miriam's death was 'very effortful', says Esther Hyman, in establishing both the eye clinic and an educational resource, called Miriam's Vision, to help teachers explore issues of reconciliation.
'I now realise that in the first 10 years, I wasn't dealing with my emotions, I was suppressing my grief by channelling it into constructive efforts,' she says. After that milestone, she felt burnt out and had to step back for a while, spending several years overseas. 'I couldn't live the rest of my life in light of my sister's death. I had to find other channels, other ways of being that didn't concern Mim's death.'
With the government reviewing the national curriculum, Esther and her mother, Mavis, are focused on campaigning to have the topic of social cohesion explicitly included. 'It's a pity that it falls to those who've been affected by a lack of social cohesion to speak up for social cohesion, but I think it's understandable. We don't want anybody else to go through what we've been through,' she says.
Once that review ends, and with the clinic well established, they may reluctantly conclude that it is time to wind down the Miriam Hyman Memorial Trust 'with regret, and maybe with some relief', says Esther. 'We've done everything we can within our arms' reach. So there is a sense of satisfaction.'
Other schemes continue, however. The family and employers of Philip Russell, 28, a financial manager who died in the bus bombing, funded a travel bursary in his memory at Kingston University, intended to enable students to make a difference in projects overseas.
Gabriel Oyewole recently used a bursary to travel to Ghana where he worked as a mentor to students and developed his skills as a physiotherapist. The Russell family, he says, 'could have put the money into anything they wanted to, probably easier ventures, but they chose to help students that needed help, career-wise and personally. They probably changed, not just mine, but probably a lot of people's careers and personal life in doing that.'
Philip's father, Grahame, who, with Philip's mother, Veronica, sat on the committee that awarded the grants, died recently. 'He was very proud to serve on that board for 20 years,' says Philip's sister Caroline Steadman. She will now take his place on the panel, continuing to support young people who are looking forward excitedly to their futures, just as her brother was two decades ago.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Telegraph
an hour ago
- Telegraph
Where is the progressive Left's outrage over foreign sex offenders?
In doing so, the Reform member lit a rocket in the room. The broadcaster and even the less progressive co-host visibly flinched before letting rip on him. He was using inflammatory language and such language 'has consequences'. This was very ominous. He was, it was seemingly implied, getting awfully close to being racist. He sounded, they agreed, altogether like a Very Bad Man! I liked this chap though I also saw their point. One has to be careful not to dehumanise whole demographics, because one might lose one's own humanity in the process. And there are complexities. The highest number of foreign sex offenders are from India, followed by Romanians, Poles, Pakistanis, and Afghans. The highest number of rape convictions among foreign perpetrators are Pakistanis, Nigerians and Romanians, followed by Sudanese, Afghans and Indians. Romanians and Poles are not coming in on small boats, and the Nigerians, Sudanese and Pakistanis aren't in the top five nationalities coming over that way either: the top five nationalities arriving by small boat in 2024 were Afghan, Syrian, Iranian, Vietnamese, and Eritrean nationals. You hardly ever hear of problems with the Vietnamese arrivals, yet over a thousand crossed to Britain in the first quarter of 2024 alone, many seeking economic opportunity. But it's also true that small boats and a generally broken immigration system import some people who should not be here and who, in strictly economic and, in some cases social, terms are more trouble than they are worth. It is shameful that so many are in hotels, and then in certain cases prisons, awaiting often overly generous asylum decisions, with little fear of being deported. And those who are seeing increased deportation rates are not those you might expect: it's Romanians, Brazilians and Indians that have seen the biggest jump in returns, according to official statistics. Meanwhile, NHS Business Services has handed out nearly a million 'free passes' to asylum seekers in the last five years. This is 59 per cent of all such passes – well over half – entitling low-income residents to eye tests, free prescriptions, dental care, discounts on spectacles, lenses, and travel to and from appointments. Even wigs are funded by the body. I would dearly wish not to have to worry further about migration, but it is relevant that the three top nationalities arriving on the small boats come from states with cultures and belief systems which might be very different to our own. Back in the studio, as the Reform member stood up for the mothers peacefully protesting alongside the thugs outside the migrant hotel in Epping, the progressive broadcaster did, I think, level another decent point at him. This was that there is surely hypocrisy in on one hand being furious on behalf of women and girls, and on the other supporting Nigel Farage, who has in interviews called the misogynist Andrew Tate an 'important voice' who was giving boys 'perhaps a bit of confidence at school'. Tate is the sort of man no right-minded woman would want to encounter – ever. In a not dissimilar vein, there is Donald Trump, with his unpleasant history of allegedly sexually harassing and insulting women. The Magasphere in general is saturated in atavistic sexism and pound-shop traditionalism, yet its proponents are wasting little time condemning, for instance, the grooming gangs scandal here in Britain. This blew up again in large part because Elon Musk picked up on it. It would clearly be much better if those upset by girls and women being treated as prey by new arrivals into Britain – arrivals who in some cases have no right to be here – also recognised the illiberal misogyny of Andrew Tate. But defending women is defending women, whether it's cynically done or not. Unlike my co-panellist, who is a decent man, for many of these anti-immigration men, it's a mixed picture. This moment of men tussling over who is the real defender of women is not a new one. Using the protection of women as a means of justifying inflammatory or controversial policies was something that Blair and Bush governments were lambasted for after 9/11 when they invaded Afghanistan. Whatever the virtues and demerits of this invasion, it is indisputable that women fared better under US rule in Afghanistan. Before America's calamitous withdrawal, women could freely get education and jobs. Now they can't even show their eyes and hands, or become midwives. And on many other issues, the real culprits, when it comes to promoting harm to women and girls – at least in the last few decades – have been the new, hard Left. This devious Left always seems to favour those who mean women harm. It accuses those who question or God forbid protest the arrival of hundreds of thousands of young men of racism and bigotry but refuses to properly condemn any of the sexual crimes committed by them. To do so, they seem to feel, might start them on the slippery slope to racism, xenophobia, and horror of horrors, Brexitism. You never seem to hear a thing from the Left about the sex crimes visited on the Israeli women who were tortured, killed or kidnapped by Hamas. You only hear about how evil Israel – where women actually have full rights – is. When Salman Abedi set off a bomb at the Manchester Arena, killing 22 and injuring over a thousand, his history – and that of his family – was barely acknowledged by the progressive Left. This outrage was similarly difficult to discern when Abdul Ezedi, who came from Afghanistan in 2016, threw acid at a mother and two children in Clapham, and then killed himself. What was much louder was fury at the 'Islamophobia' said to follow such attacks. On the trans rights issues that have arisen in recent years, the progressive position hasn't just been on the side of the trans cause, it has been, in places, virulently against women. People who swear by their enlightened worldview hurled, and still hurl misogynistic abuse at JK Rowling. They demand that people who are biologically male compete against women in sports competitions. This is all a shame as the Left has a proud pedigree, in and beyond feminism, of championing women. But in its contemporary guise it seems more interested in empowering those who mean women and girls harm. This is hypocritical, unjust and, increasingly, scary.


BBC News
14 hours ago
- BBC News
Bihar: The witchcraft murders that shook an Indian village
Warning: This story contains details that some may find weeks after five members of a family in India were brutally killed and allegedly burned alive amid accusations of the practice of witchcraft, the survivors are still trying to come to terms with the tragedy. For Manisha Devi (name changed) of Tetgama village in Bihar state, the night of 6 July has been the darkest in her around 10pm, a belligerent mob gathered outside their relatives' home - by dawn, five people, including a 71-year-old widow Kato Oraon, were incident in Bihar is not an isolated one. According to the National Crime Records Bureau, more than 2,500 people, mostly women, were killed in India on suspicion of witchcraft between 2000 and 2016. But the Tetgama murders stand out, as five members of a family were killed say superstition and belief in witchcraft remain widespread among many of India's disadvantaged tribal communities, including those involved in the recent Bihar alleged murderers and victims all belong to the Oraon tribe and have lived together for generations. But what transpired on the night of 6 July has opened a chasm that is unlikely to be bridged anytime streets now echo with silence - all the residents, except four of Kato Devi's sons and their families, have fled the village. Some homes are locked, while others appear to have been abandoned in a BBC spoke to the victims' relatives, police and officials to piece together what happened on the night of the killings. Manisha Devi says she heard a commotion and found a large crowd outside the home of Babulal Oraon, the eldest of Kato's five sons who lived Oraon, his wife Sita Devi, the couple's son Manjit and daughter-in-law Rani Devi were among those killed. His youngest son, a teenager, is the only in their first information report (FIR), which is available online, have named a villager - Ramdev Oraon - as the main accused. They said Ramdev's son had died about 10 days back after falling sick, but he had allegedly accused Kato Devi and her family of killing his child through witchcraft. It's not clear what the belief was based on. Police say Ramdev is absconding and that they are looking for the night of the killings, Ramdev had allegedly brought his nephew, who appeared seriously unwell, to the victims' house. Manisha Devi said she saw the teenager lying on the ground and the village exorcist performing some rituals and reciting mantras. Manisha Devi, another relative and the survivor in his police complaint have alleged that the exorcist "pronounced Kato Devi and Babulal's wife Sita Devi as witches, blaming them for the death and illness in Ramdev's family". "Kato was dragged out and given half-an-hour to heal the sick teenager. Sita Devi, who was away visiting her mother in a neighbouring village, was called and asked to return if she wanted to see her family alive," she second relative who also witnessed the alleged murders says Kato pleaded with the villagers to see reason, but the mob kept getting angrier. "When Babulal and Manjit tried to intervene, the mob attacked them too. Rani Devi was also assaulted when she attempted to shield her husband," she adds. "When Sita Devi returned with her son, the survivor, they too were assaulted." The teenager later told the police that he somehow managed to run away, hide in the darkness and watch as his family was lynched and police complaint names 23 men and women from the village and "150 to 200 unnamed people who made up the mob"."The mob was armed with sticks, rods and sharp weapons. They tied all the five victims with a rope and dragged them to the village pond, assaulting and abusing them all the way," it complaint adds that the victims were "half-dead" when they were doused with petrol and set on fire, their bodies were packed in sacks and taken away on a tractor.A senior police official told reporters the next day that the victims were burned alive and their charred bodies had been recovered from a pond near the Magistrate Anshul Kumar also initially said the five were burned alive. But he recently told the BBC that the post-mortem report was inconclusive on the issue."The report indicates evidence of burn injuries and assault; however, it does not clearly articulate the precise cause of death, whether it was due to burning or whether that occurred post-murder."Shockingly, the night-long violence occurred not very far from the Mufassil police station, located just 7km (4.5 miles) away. Mr Kumar said the police heard about the incident 11 hours after the mob gathered, and acknowledged that it showed "there were shortcomings somewhere" and that "this was our failure". But the delay, he added, was "since the entire community was involved".In the aftermath, the officer-in-charge was suspended. His replacement Sudin Ram told the BBC that four people, including the exorcist, have been arrested. The others are absconding, he said."We have invoked laws related to unlawful assembly, rioting, causing grievous hurt by dangerous weapons, wrongful restrain, mob lynching and disappearance of evidence of offence," Mr Ram said, adding that the guilty could face life imprisonment or the death penalty. The BBC has not been able to speak to the exorcist, who is in custody, or to Ramdev, whose whereabouts are unknown. The survivor is in protective custody at a safe location and receiving counselling, police official Mr Kumar said, adding that he is "gradually recovering."His brothers, who were away working when the attack occurred, are receiving free food and support, he added. They're currently staying with relatives in a nearby village.A special investigation team is probing the lynchings, but Mr Kumar said superstition-fuelled hysteria drove the crowd to commit the say this is the area's first such incident, with no prior witchcraft cases ever Mira Devi, a local social worker, told the BBC that tribal villages lack education and rely more on exorcists than on doctors or council head Santosh Singh says most children skip school to work at nearby brick kilns with their parents. A local teacher, Indranand Chaudhary, confirmed only three are enrolled - and none attend. Tetgama, a tribal village 11km from Purnea town, is home to 22 paddy fields, a villager points to burnt maize stalks - the site of the 6 July mud paths lead to the victims' homes. At Babulal Oraon's two-room hut, built from corn stalks, bamboo, and mud, time feels the room where Manjit and his newlywed wife Rani Devi slept, the bed is neatly made, with a clean sheet and the mosquito net tucked Devi sits outside her home, haunted by the senseless murders she and others witnessed that night."We stood helplessly, watching the victims desperately trying to save themselves. That scene still haunts us," one man said.


BreakingNews.ie
a day ago
- BreakingNews.ie
Court steps in to protect finances of farmer who has given thousands in cash to homeless people
The High Court has stepped in to protect the interests of a farmer who has already given €350,000 cash to homeless and poor people on the basis God has promised him a seat in heaven. On Friday Mr Justice Michael Twomey appointed a guardian ad litem to represent the best interests of the farmer, aged in his 40s, who, the court heard, only last week gave €1,000 cash to a homeless woman he met. Advertisement A guardian ad litem is a person appointed by the court to represent the interests of someone in legal proceedings, particularly in child care cases. Solicitor Katherine Kelleher, appearing for the Health Service Executive, told Judge Twomey that the man had recently sold his farm for around €600,000 and by May last had been left with just €288,000 in two bank accounts. Ms Kelleher, of Comyn Kelleher Tobin Solicitors, said that since May 6th the man's bank balances of €288,000 had been reduced to €250,000. A medical report was handed into court. 'The situation is that in a short number of weeks he has again given away added sums in the region of €38,000,' Ms Kelleher added. 'His bank accounts are literally haemorrhaging cash. I have received a phone call just this morning revealing that in one of the accounts there is now an overdraft of €65,000.' Advertisement She told Judge Twomey that the man claimed he had been told by God to give away all of his money and if he did so he would get to heaven. Ms Kellleher said she was applying to the court on behalf of the HSE for the appointment of a guardian ad litem to look after the best interests of the man. His total funds now stood at €250,000. Judge Twomey said he would appoint a guardian ad litem in light of the evidence that had been presented to the court. He said he would also make an order in the extended terms sought by the HSE directing that the two banks concerned be directed to permit all inquiries to be made regarding the man's accounts and allowing the guardian ad litem take all steps considered necessary. The proceedings were returned into early September. The man concerned cannot be identified by order of the court.