“Don’t cry, he is in a happy place now,” the parents of Harish Rana, the first person in India to be permitted passive euthanasia, said on Wednesday as they bade farewell to their son one last time.Harish’s last rites were conducted at the Green Park cremation ground in South Delhi on Wednesday morning, marking a quiet end to his 13-year ordeal. In a final act of generosity, Harish’s family consented to donate five of his organs.The 31-year-old man passed away on Tuesday after slipping into a coma in 2013, following a fall from a fourth-floor balcony while he was a B.Tech student at Panjab University.During the last rites, Harish’s mother bade an emotional farewell to her son with folded hands and met those present, while his father Ashok Rana urged mourners not to cry, a neighbour said.Residents who attended the cremation described the atmosphere as deeply emotional. Tejas Chaturvedi, a resident of the Raj Empire Society, noted that many attendees were moved to tears during the ceremony. However, Ashok Rana continued to console others and encouraged them to remain strong in their moment of grief.Harish’s body was transported to the cremation ground in an ambulance, and the platform was covered in rose petals. Ashish Rana, Harish’s younger brother, lit the pyre, accompanied by his sister, Bhavna.


