Tushar excitedly
led me through the lanes in the direction of his house. By the time we reached
there, I had no sense of direction left.
After
walking for twenty minutes in the rain with an umbrella that barely protected
the two of us and both our bags, we reached the maze. I call it that because
there is no other way to describe it. Scores of homes scattered around, with
dozens of lanes running crisscross in every direction. Like a city made for
dwarfs. Except it’s not dwarfs that live there.
The lanes were
barely wide enough to fit two children, and flanked by houses on both sides. I passed
by naked children running along the lanes, sidestepped women washing clothes
and dishes in front of their homes, tried to avoid stepping into the overflowing
foot-wide gutters, attempted to peek into the barely 8-square-feet houses
without being obvious, and ignored the blatant stares of the residents, all the
while trying to keep up with the child running freely ahead of me, tracing the
way to his home as he has done every single day for several years.
Every 2
minutes we would switch our roles and I would ask the 7-year-old kid leading
the way: “Are we there yet?”
And every
time I would get the response: “A little ahead.”
After 10
minutes of huffing up stairs, squeezing through the maze, and praying I had
lost enough kilos so as not to get stuck between the walls, I finally heard the
beautiful words: “We’re here.”
I looked
around, trying to figure out where here was. We were out of the maze, in a
small courtyard that offered a little more breathing space than its precursor. But
I saw no house. I looked in the direction that he was pointing, and all clichés
aside, felt my mouth drop open for a few seconds.
Now, I have
been to many of my students’ houses. I have been to their chawls, their 8-square-feet
houses placed lower than the surrounding ground or above local shops, and their
vertical staircases that are impossible to descend from. I thought I had seen
them all.
Clearly I
was wrong, I thought, as I gazed up the rickety ladder that he was pointing
towards.
It was a
hole in the wall.
If you’re
picturing a rat hole, think a little bigger; but if you’re picturing a cave,
think a little smaller: it was a hole just enough for a crouching adult to
squeeze through. To enter, you have to push aside the box masquerading as a
door. The door to a home: his home, where his mother greeted him warmly as he
scurried up the slippery ladder with little effort.
From his
doorway, he waved down to me cheerfully, and noticing the lost expression on my
face, came back down. He knew I was lost. So he proceeded to lead me out of the
maze, consequently nulling the point of me dropping him home. I followed him
silently, wondering what on earth would motivate this child to come to school
and attempt addition and subtraction and break his mind on a language that
makes less sense with each passing day.
*****
Sometimes it
scares me, the amount of trust people place on this system known as education.
Every morning on the way to the school, I see parents living under a flyover
get their children into their school uniforms, walk long distances back and
forth to their school, and work endless hours to ensure that their children’s
tuition fees can be paid: all this, so that their children can receive an
education; so that their children have a chance at a better future than their
parents.
It’s scary
because I don’t think our education system is quite there yet.
There was a
time when the government had to work hard to convince everyone to send their
children to school, to convince them of the importance of education.
They’re convinced
now. They are doing their bit to get their children to school. If not all, a
lot of them are.
The question
is, can our system match up to their level of trust and conviction?
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