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Photo Courtesy: Sangram K Das Mohapatra |
BHUBANESWAR: As a
positive change in the city, the rag-pickers have sent their children to
schools to make them educated like other kids instead of engaging them in the
menial job.
During the period of
enrolment campaign of the Government, the slum-level community meetings
persuaded the people to enrol their children in schools. As a result, 118
children have joined different schools during the period of the Prabesha
Utsav-2015 conducted by the School and Mass Education Department as part of the
process under the Right to Education Act.
City-based NGO Centre
for Child and Women Development (CCWD), mobilised the slum-level committees to
make the rag-pickers aware about the value of education and its need in the
lives of their kids.
The NGO with the help
of the Bernard Van Leer foundation formed seven child clubs along with a
State-level federation, the Bhubaneswar Abarjana Gotali Mahasangha, to develop
a platform for the rights of rag-pickers. Through the federation and clubs, the
organisation convinced the waste gathering workers to send their children to
school.
The 118 children
including dropouts, rag-pickers, irregular and newcomers were admitted in the
primary schools at Goutam Nagar, NAC Colony, Textbook Press, Raghunath Nagar
and Budheswari Colony in the city, said CCWD secretary Sadasiv Swain.
According to the CCWD’s
slum mobiliser Debabrata Mahunta, most of the parents didn’t go out on the
enrolment day in order to send their kids in schools. Mahunta expressed
happiness over the school management committees and teachers for encouraging
little children along with parents for the good step.
On enrolment of
children of waste workers’ families, Dumuduma Raghunath Nagar Primary School
Headmistress Sarojini Swain said sensitisation is more essential and parents
should take responsibility to send their children to school regularly.
C Bhabani Reddy, a kid
of a rag-picker from Ashok Nagar, was happy while entering to the school with his
other friends. The boy, whose joy for attending the school knew no bound, said
he would come to school every day.