The Changing face of the Indian Slum
Gyan Azhar’s diligent pupils
Girl students who cannot afford books take refuge in this library to pursue studies
This report is the tenth of a 12-part series
on the changing face of the Indian slum, chronicling stories of new social and
economic trends in our impoverished neighbourhoods.
Inside a library in a modest building,
Shabnam, 16, sits engrossed in a mathematics book. Every time she pays a visit,
the library, only for girls, fills her with hope for a future as a teacher.
Three years ago, Shabnam quit studies as her
father fell ill and the family could not afford school. She turned to the Gyan
Azhar Library for help, as many girls in the Tiljala slum do, to pursue
studies. Now Shabnam is back in school and is planning to take her exams next
year to pursue her dream of becoming a teacher.
As names go, the locality has many meaningful
ones. If the slum takes its name after sesame, grown and cultivated here many
years ago, Gyan Azhar means “expression of knowledge”.
The library had a modest beginning in 2008 with
just two members. “Now we have more than 660 members and close to 1,000
textbooks,” says Mohammed Shafkat Alam, joint secretary of Tiljala Shed, the
non-governmental organisation which founded the library.
“I had lost all hopes of becoming a teacher
after my father died of acute diabetes. It was not possible for my mother to
bear the cost of my education with her meagre income from making wallets,”
Shabnam says.
Before resuming studies, she had nothing to
do but sit at home and help her mother with household work. Lacking the
know-how of making wallets, she was of no help to her mother in her job.
“I just wasted my time sitting at home,” she
says.
The library but spelt hope, where she stepped
inside first in December 2015 and keeps coming back.
On the Net
The six computers with Internet connection
and CDs of documentaries are an added attraction. The Italian Association for
Women in Development, a women’s rights organisation, has sponsored the library.
Corporate entities, individuals and shops donate books.
“Most of the textbooks are in Bengali, Hindi
and Urdu as the slum has a large number of Hindi and Urdu speakers,” Mr. Alam
says. The slum is home to more than 30,000 families, a majority of whom are
Muslims, living in shanties.
“It is impossible to study at home with the
entire family in one room and the television on at a high volume most of the
time,” Madhu Shau, 15, says. After failing twice in the secondary examination,
her father, a hawker, told her to quit school. But he relented after she told
him that he would not have to pay for books as she would borrow them from the
library.
Now that odds are not stacked against her,
Madhu is looking forward to realising her dream of becoming a nurse. “My father
died because we had no money for good treatment,” she says before getting back
to her history books. The girls spend five to six hours in the library and do
much of their studies there considering the condition at home.
The slum has three primary schools and one
high school. “Hindi- and Urdu-speaking students here face considerable problems
as there are no Hindi- and Urdu-medium high schools in the locality,” Mohammed
Alamgir, activist and founder of Tiljala Shed, says.
Most of the residents are domestic workers,
vegetable vendors and workers at leather factories. With low-income jobs that
fetch as little as Rs. 200 a day, it is difficult for them to bear the cost of
their children’s education. People say that because of the library, children
are returning to schools. “After the library was set up, enrolment of girls in
schools has increased significantly in the area,” Mr. Alamgir says.
Plan for school
The Tiljala Shed officials are planning to
turn the library into a full-fledged school with academic and extra-curricular
facilities, but funds are a constraint.
The railway line leading to the nearby Park
Circus railway station and bisecting the slum is a looming threat. It is the
main pathway for pedestrians, and accidents causing swift deaths are a frequent
occurrence.
In the shanties that shake when trains rumble
through, the library offers a semblance of stability and hope.
Source | Business Line | 8 June 2016
Regards
Pralhad
Jadhav
Senior
Manager @ Library
Khaitan
& Co
Best
Paper Award | Received the Best Paper Award at TIFR-BOSLA National Conference on
Future Librarianship: Innovation for Excellence (NCFL 2016) on April 23,
2016. The title of the paper is “Removing
Barriers to Literacy: Marrakesh VIP Treaty”
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