Saki Naka brothers Naseem and Amjad Chawdhary, who had rushed Monica More to hospital with her severed arms wrapped in cloth, had an emotional meeting with her on Thursday.Monica More’s wish to personally thank Naseem and Amjad Chawdhary -- the brothers from Saki Naka who rushed her to hospital with her severed arms wrapped in cloth -- was fulfilled on Thursday.It was an emotional meeting at KEM Hospital that lasted nearly an hour, with Monica bursting into tears as soon as she saw the two. “I’m alive only because you helped me. You’re a part of my family, you’re like my brothers. Thank you, bhaijaan,” she said, even as Naseem and Amjad promised to visit her as soon as she was out of hospital.Naseem, 24, and Amjad, 22, did everything possible to save Monica after she slipped and fell on the tracks from the gap between the train’s footboard and the platform at Ghatkopar station last Saturday (Brothers rush girl with severed arms to hospital in auto, Mumbai Mirror, January 12).The two were, in fact, at an adjoining platform when the incident occurred. “A huge crowd had gathered, but no-one bothered to help,” Amjad, a third-year BA student of Jhunjhunwala College in Ghatkopar, said.Monica’s parents –– Ashok and Kavita –– said on Thursday that the two were “angels sent by the gods to save their daughter”. The exemplary bravery shown by the brothers was noted by the doctors too, who said Monica would have died of excessive bleeding had she not been rushed to hospital.On realising that Monica’s left arm had come off entirely, the brothers wrapped it in a piece of cloth they borrowed from a commuter, and tied her right arm, which was barely hanging from the elbow, with a handkerchief.“We had heard that severed limbs can be rejoined,” Naseem, who works for a private firm, said. “There was no emergency medical help, no porters, and no sign of an ambulance. The situation fills me with anger. We found one railway cop, who looked most disinterested, and said an ambulance will be there in 20 minutes. Monica had lost consciousness by then and we feared she would die,” he said.The two carried Monica out of the station, and flagged down an autorickshaw for Rajawadi Hospital. “We told the doctors what had happened, and next day, read in the newspapers that her arms couldn’t be reattached. It was a pathetic feeling… we went to meet her the very next day, but were told that she was in a lot of pain,” Amjad said.The brothers were the ones who contacted Monica’s father Ashok from her college identity card. On Thursday noon, when they went to KEM Hospital, Monica cried out in joy as soon as she saw them. “We had promised that we won’t talk about the incident with her. It was very tough to control the tears but we managed somehow,” Amjad said, adding that a lifelong bond has been formed with Monica.“Today it is Monica, tomorrow it could be someone else. The railway needs to ensure passengers’ safety on a priority basis. It’s shameful that our railway stations have no emergency medical help, no doctors… the least they can do is have at least one ambulance per station,” Naseem said.Monica’s mother Kavita said she has invited the brothers home when Monica is discharged from hospital. “It’s fitting that they are with us when my daughter comes home. She would have bled to death on the railway tracks but for these two. They are like my sons,” she said.Meanwhile, the doctors attending to Monica said that it may take up to a month for her wounds to heal, and the prospects of she getting artificial limbs will be gauged only after that.Dr Pradeep Bhosale, the in-charge of orthopaedic department at KEM, said, “We are administering her with heavy doses of antibiotics to control the infection. We want to make sure that she doesn’t have to undergo further amputation.”On Thursday, several of Monica’s classmaters from SNDT College, Ghatkopar, accompanied by their principal Leena Raje, met with her and gave her a collection of messages from the students.