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Return From The Hood

Schools that have opened their doors to children who would have fallen prey to criminals

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Return From The Hood
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The ‘classroom’ is actually a garbage dump amidst a clutch of factories by the railway track near Okhla Phase I. Sophiya and Pushpa, a tribal and a Dalit, have run the Okhla primary extension programme for nearly a year. They cleared it, set up a shack, negotiated with the cops and local politicians, handled the local goons, herded together the children and now teach over 100 of them here. Every Monday morning, the teachers inevitably find the classroom destroyed but they rebuild it and carry on.

The Okhla programme is one of the more recent of ProjectWHY’s efforts. It’s changed the life of the founder and guiding spirit Anuradha Bakshi. "Projectwhy believes in empowering people to take their lives in their own hands," she says, cuddling Utpal in her lap at the Giri Nagar school—a two-bedroom shanty. This was the first school that was set up. Now Anuradha and her volunteers run three schools in all, each operating in two shifts. Children up to class twelve are taught here. Even computers courses are made available.

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Anuradha’s younger daughter Shamika recalls how the project was conceived five years ago. "My mother came across Manu one day. He was living on the street, dirty, soiled and neglected," she says of a mentally challenged 30-year-old. "People in the neighbourhood fed him but almost like he was an animal. Children threw stones at him. Ma hired a place to take care of him. Soon others started bringing their disabled kids."

Shamika, 24, preferred to give up formal schooling and even a normal teenage life to join her mother. "We began with 50 children and a few volunteers, teaching them spoken English. As time went by, other challenges arose and the answer to each new challenge was a new activity. The number of children increased, their demands multiplied, new teachers were discovered within the tiny jhuggis and lanes, ad hoc classrooms had to be found. Parks were cleaned, tents put up, unused pavements cleared, any place would do, but no child was ever sent away," she says pointing out that there are now a total of 500 students in the three schools—including some with special needs—and 35 teachers drawn from within the community.

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Not surprisingly, Projectwhy prefers no institutional or government aid. It depends entirely on individuals and donations from supporters. It launched a funding initiative called Just one rupee a day (JORAD) which aims at creating a wide donor base where everyone is asked to commit Re 1 a day or Rs 360 a year. "A rupee a day is a sum that the poorest in India can contribute and feel included," says Anuradha. "Projectwhy dreams of taking primary education to local communities and have them fund the initiatives themselves," she adds.

The programme has also extended its support to children in need of medical assistance. Take the case of 14-year-old Arun who needed surgery to correct a congenital heart defect. For nine years Arun waited patiently watching his peers go to school or play while the money collected for his surgery was diverted to pay for funeral rites and other social obligations. Finally, this year his surgery was undertaken with the intervention of ProjectWHY. He now joins Raju as the second beneficiary of the programme to get a congenital heart defect corrected.

Projectwhy can be contacted at: C-15, Chiragh Enclave, New Delhi-110 048. Tel: 98114 24877, 98111 13420, Website: www.projectwhy.org

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