MUTINY OR SURRENDER? WHY THE GIRL'S SCHOOL CANNOT BE NAMED AS ZEENAT MAHAL SCHOOL OR MADRASATUL BANAT? WHY VENDE MATARAM AND NOT SARE JAHAN SE ACHHA?
INDIA'S SECULAR GOVERNMENT IS OUT TO FORCE MUSLIMS TO TAKE UP
NON-MUSLIM IDENTITIES. POOR HELPLESS GIRLS ARE NOT RAISING A MUTINY
AGAINST THEIR POWERLESS FAMILIES, BUT ARE MEEKLY SUCCUMBING TO 'SECULAR'
PRESSURES TO ABANDON THEIR MUSLIM IDENTITIES IN THE HOPE OF A MIRAGE OF
A PLURALIST FUTURE THAT WILL SHRINK MUSLIM SPACE INCH BY INCH, FOOT BY
FOOT, YARD BY YARD. THE REAL MUTINY IS YET TO COME AGAINST THE LIKES OF
THE PROXIES OF WALL STREET JOURNAL'S BRAND OF SKEWED AND ZIONIST-TAINTED
JOURNALISM.
Ghulam Muhammed, Mumbai
<ghulammuhammed3@gmail.com>
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http://www.livemint.com/ Leisure/ DChq4nHyaamLa8rAVIybfK/Delhis- Belly--Zeenats-new-mutiny.html
Class XII students Nazreen (right) and Ilma enter the school through Zeenat Mahal’s arched gate. Photo: Priyanka Parashar/Mint.
Ghulam Muhammed, Mumbai
<ghulammuhammed3@gmail.com>
------------------------------
http://www.livemint.com/
Delhi’s
Belly | Zeenat’s new mutiny
A turnaround in the fortunes of a
state-run girls’ school gives hope to the future of its neighbourhood
First Published: Fri, Jan 25 2013.
06 50 PM IST
Class XII students Nazreen (right) and Ilma enter the school through Zeenat Mahal’s arched gate. Photo: Priyanka Parashar/Mint.
Updated: Sat, Jan 26 2013. 03 46 PM IST
A cat’s drawn-out meow cuts through
the squawking of chickens. These sounds, typical of Old Delhi, recede as the
empty yard fills. The morning assembly at Sarvodaya Kanya Vidyalaya (SKV)
school No. 2, Zeenat Mahal, Lal Kuan, begins with a drumbeat.
Earlier this month, the girls-only
school made a fleeting appearance in a leading daily when it was selected for
the annual Times of India Social Impact Award—because it “had gone from being
one of the worst government schools not long ago to achieving 100% pass results
for the last five years”.
All the 1,246 students are Muslim
and come from the Walled City. This Urdu-medium school not only mirrors the
academic merits of its students but is also a portrait of the locality in which
it is situated.
Like a bubble of tranquillity in the
congested Lal Kuan Bazaar, SKV is nestled among kite shops, biryani stalls,
serene mosques and crumbling houses with latticed windows and wrought-iron
balconies. As one of the 719 schools run by the Delhi government, it charges no
fee.
The yard is paved with grey tiles. A
kota stone platform is built on one side, a row of flowerpots arranged
on the other. The principal’s spacious office is reached via a roomy corridor.
The painted portraits of Mughal emperor Bahadur Shah Zafar and his much younger
queen Zeenat Mahal provide a clue to the school’s history. More than a century
old, it moved to its present site in 1950 to occupy the remnants of Zeenat
Mahal’s dilapidated mansion (actually, nothing is left of it except the two
arched gates).
Principal Chitra Gupta. Photo:
Priyanka Parashar/Mint.
Principal Chitra Gupta, 54, commutes
daily by Metro from Old Rajinder Nagar to Chawri Bazaar. She does not give off
the vibe of a tyrant—she uses the intimate beta in her interaction with
students. “When I arrived in 2007,” she says, “the teachers were demotivated
and the girls lacked confidence. That year, only 50% of our students had passed
the 10th standard board exams and 61% cleared the 12th.”
The very next year, the success rate
at both levels increased to 100%. In 2010, this SKV became No. 1 among the
city’s government-run schools in terms of the quality index, the average marks
obtained by each student.
“The magical turnaround happened,”
says Gupta, “after we looked into the root cause of the problem.”
That was the touristy Old Delhi
itself. Blinded by Jama Masjid, Karim restaurant, Ghalib’s haveli, and a
kaleidoscopic street life, visitors to this part of the Capital fail to notice
its underbelly, the daily lives of its residents. Almost all the girls at SKV,
according to the principal, come from conservative families, many of whom put
little premium on education, especially for the girl child. The fathers are
daily wagers, patri (footpath) vendors, Zardozi workers and kite makers.
The mothers are housewives. Most homes consist of just a single room. The
residents sleep in shifts. Tuberculosis is rampant.
Gupta got strict about attendance
and teachers too were asked to take classes regularly. “The school suffered
from a regular pattern of absenteeism,” says Gupta. “One girl, for instance,
constantly stayed away on Mondays. I discovered that she had TB and was
visiting a distant government health centre every Monday to get her DOTS (the
World Health Organization-recommended tuberculosis control programme) pill.”
After a number of students disclosed similar stories to her, Gupta persuaded a
health centre very close to the school to take charge of her student-patients.
For the girls, the assembly ground
and the window-lined classes are an oasis of air and sky, something that is in
short supply in Old Delhi. “In the recess, I sit in the yard and enjoy the
winter sun,” says the soft-spoken Sofia, a class XII student who lives with her
parents and five siblings in a one-room house in Farash Khana, a neighbourhood
that derives its name from the masons who were brought to Delhi to lay tiles on
the farsh (floors) of Shahjahan’s Red Fort. Squinting at the sun, Sofia,
her hair braided with a red ribbon, says, “It is impossible to study in my
overcrowded and airless home.”
The morning assembly prayer. Photo:
Priyanka Parashar/Mint
The students preparing for Board
exams are encouraged to use the empty classrooms during school holidays.
Otherwise, since the Vidyalaya has two shifts and the classrooms remain
occupied through the day, those wishing to study extra hours do so in the
principal’s office.
But there is a world beyond Zeenat
Mahal, beyond Turkman Gate, beyond Dilli Gate. Gupta faced stiff resistance
when she tried to send girls to inter-school competitions, for which they would
have to commute to schools in Karol Bagh and Rohini. Nevertheless, as more and
more students won prizes, including cash rewards, parental opposition subsided
to a point where they even let their daughters go on outstation tours. “Our
class went to Amritsar and Dalhousie in 2011,” says Nazreen, a class XII
student who lives in Lal Kuan. “It was the first time that I left Dilli-6 (Old
Delhi’s postal code) without my parents.” Her classmate Ilma adds in a
mischievous tone, “Nazreen always scored good marks but rarely uttered a word;
now she is a chatterbox.”
Singing Vande Mataram is part
of the assembly tradition at all state-run schools in Delhi but, owing to the
reservations of some Muslims, the SKV in Zeenat Mahal had always shied away
from it. Gupta delicately explained to the girls—and their parents—that the
national song is about performing an adaab (salute) to the ammi (mother).
The objections to yoga—some parents said it was a thing Hindus do—were tackled
by explaining the health benefits of deep breathing.
“It’s not about Hindus and Muslims,”
says Nahid Aslam, a teacher known for her extreme kindness and nicknamed Hamdard
Dawakhana, a popular dispensary in the area that once housed the bottling
factory of Rooh Afza. “A child should be informed about the wider world, of
which she is a part,” she says.
The story of Zeenat Mahal, on the
other hand, lacks detail in our schoolbooks. The wife of the last Mughal
emperor of India, who became the figurehead of the country’s first revolt for
independence, the uprising of 1857, she is charged with secretly corresponding
with the British and has since been dismissed with an unflattering footnote in
history. However, the new uprising taking place in her former residence could
redeem her reputation more convincingly than any sympathetic historian.
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