A SCHOOL UNDER A METRO BRIDGE IN DELHI
Rajesh
Kumar Sharma teaches underprivileged children under a Metro bridge
A torn rug to sit on,
a metro bridge for a roof, a patch of wall painted black for a blackboard and a
shopkeeper for a teacher. This may look like a scene out of a Hindi movie but
is the everyday reality of 39 children from villages near the Yamuna bank.
Rajesh Kumar Sharma
(40), started this makeshift school a year ago. Five days a week, he takes out
two hours to teach when his younger brother replaces him at his general store
in Shakarpur. His students are children of laborers, rickshaw-pullers and farm
workers. His three children go to regular schools in Mayur Vihar.
Compelled to quit
college in the third year of his BSc due to financial constraints, Sharma says
he does not want anyone to meet the same fate. “Whenever I passed by this area,
I would notice that children were spending all their time in the fields or
playing around,” he says. Parents wanted their children to work instead of
going to school as they would add to the family income. He argued with the
parents and persuaded many of them.
Sharma, who came to
Delhi from Aligarh 20 years ago, has been teaching underprivileged children in
other parts of the city too. “I mostly taught laborers’ children. As they moved
from site to site, it got difficult to follow them everywhere,” he says.
Sharma starts at the
basics and goes on to prepare the children for admission to government schools.
He started with approximately 140 students, and 70 of them are in government
schools now. “They still come here every day. I manage to keep them ahead of
the school curriculum,” Sharma says with pride.
Sharma’s students are just as proud of him.
“Our teacher has told us that when poverty strikes, you should open your mind,
and that can be done only through education,” says 15-year-old Abhishek who
studies at the local Rajkiya Pratibha Vikas Vidyalaya. He enjoys studying
English and aspires to become an engineer. He spends two hours in Sharma’s
class under the bridge and then goes to school at 1 pm. Sharma says once
Abhishek even corrected his teacher at school who had not solved a sum
correctly.

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