Husband donated a lifesaving kidney to his wife on Karwa Chauth

For the long lives of their husbands, married women keep the fast of Karwa Chauth for their entire life, but a husband has given his wife the gift of life in return for this fast.

Muskan Kumawat
Muskan Kumawat Verified Local Voice • 13 Apr, 2026Author
October 20, 2024 • 6:05 PM  0
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Husband donated a lifesaving kidney to his wife on Karwa Chauth
“Husband donated a lifesaving kidney to his wife on Karwa Chauth”
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20 Oct 2024
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Husband donated a lifesaving kidney to his wife on Karwa Chauth
Husband donated a lifesaving kidney to his wife on Karwa Chauth

All married women keep fast for the long lives of their husbands. However, in city a husband gave his wife a lifesaving gift by donating his kidney to her. The wife was suffering from a serious illness. This couple became an example for true love and unbreakable bond. This kind of dedication to keeping the seven vows of the seven rounds is typically observed from the wife's perspective, but in this case, the husband has given his life in order to save his wife.

Gunjan Gupta, a Morichar Bagh residents and wife of Narendra Kumar Jindal, had a long-term illness. Three years ago, it was determined that she had two faulty kidneys. She had treatment for this for almost two years in Jaipur and Bharatpur. Gunjan had been receiving dialysis for a whole year. Gunjan's condition was deteriorating daily even during the course of treatment. Her sugar and blood pressure were also fluctuating. After this, the husband gave his kidney to save his wife's life when Jaipur's Dr. Dhananjay Agarwal recommended that she get a kidney transplant.

According to Narendra Kumar, there was a danger to his wife's life. In Budh Ki Haat, Narendra Kumar Jindal is an e-mitra operator and the spouse of Gunjan Gupta. The house's financial condition wasn't great in this circumstance either. The shop could not operate because of his wife's illness, and the debt was increasing. Of the two girls, Yashika is in 10th class and Dimpy Jindal, the older, is in 11th. In the meanwhile, 40,000 rupees worth of medication was being taken each month. The only option left for my wife when her health declined was a kidney transplant. Kidneys were hard to get by. My spouse's blood type was AB-positive, whereas my own was O-positive. I gave my wife my kidney on this day. I had to be admitted to the Jaipur hospital for treatment three months prior to this.

Muskan Kumawat

Muskan Kumawat Verified Local Voice • 13 Apr, 2026Author

Journalist & Writer

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