The road was overpopulated with vehicles; it
was a hard ordeal to maneuver my bicycle between autos and cars amidst angry
honking, as I hurried to catch up with Sabreesh.
“You can write about today in your blog” he
mentioned.
“I intend to” I replied and had already made up
my mind that I would, as we hurried back into the campus to attend our
humanities class.
It was my second visit along with the members
of the Notebook Drive (NBD) to a school nearby to teach kids. I was very proud of what my fellow students
did as a part of NBD and I felt this practical interest in educating the
children of our country should be one of the elementary obligations that
devolve on every thinking man in India.
Once, inside the classroom, I could not help
thinking about the new little friends I made today, the buzzing activity, their
excited voices, the pleading innocent eyes that wanted us to stay for some more
time, the hesitant goodbyes and the silent promise to meet them again the next
week.
In retrospect, I was reminded of my own
childhood and it made me wonder, have they got dreams like us? Do they tell
their mothers that one day they want to make rockets or a time machine? How
would their mother respond? Does she smile and nod her head in agreement? Or
does she kiss her little child and reassure him saying “I am sure you will”? Or
was she so busy with her chores or doing some odd jobs to raise a little more
money for her family that her children lay neglected. What about the Father? Would he be a kind and an understanding man? Was
he a man who could look beyond the misery of the present day towards a better
future for the prodigy? Does he understand the value of education? Or is he a
hated man who maltreats the family in a fit of drunken rage?
How was the ambience at home? Was there a
possibility of learning any lessons at home or was it just restricted to what
little the young citizen learns to read and write at school? How was the
influence of the teacher, how were they perceived at the child’s home? Were they
highly spoken of or were they being denigrated so much so that the child is
more inclined to insult the teacher and disregard respect for the human
surroundings?
And in this process what happens to their
dream? Was fate so cruel, that it tiptoes in, at first unheeded and wearing a
prosaic scabbard from which, later, emerges a fiery sword that cuts the last
thin thread that holds their small dreams above the ground. Was there any hope
to escape the clutches of the goddess of fate that firmly held them in her hands
and threatened to crush them any minute now? Whatever happens to our next Dr.
Abdul Kalam and his wings of fire? That is when one starts to look out for something
to reprimand and that is when you tag them as the victims of a system, and the
natural scape goat happen to be a politician.
Politicians had promised to fight, fight
illiteracy, fight poverty, but of course, they cannot fight, because you fight
for something you love, for loving something you must respect and in order to
respect, you must have knowledge of it. And this knowledge cannot be attained
from the heaps of folders jam-packed with mathematical figures and diagrams
dumped on the desk of a man too busy fighting for his own survival. Nor could
it be gained by ”visits”, for which so much hype is created about. Such conventions
lead only to superficial talk and sentimental delusions. The former never
ventures into the root of the problem while the latter simply evades it. Both
meaningless and unnecessary and therefore would serve no better purpose than
for a heart touching campaign speech to move voters with a meticulously
stitched glitter of words.
Were we politicians, we would have probably
left the kids to their own fate or would have made them the instruments to
highlight the inefficiency of the Government to propagate our own cause for the
elections. Fortunately we aren’t. We are the ones who have realized not to rely
on the men with power to act, for they are too busy trying hard to stay in
power and in this course have marred their own sensitivity towards the others.
Our actions may go unnoticed; our actions may
not bring about a grand change; our actions may have little significance on a
longer scale but atleast we ACT!
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