This is a way of showing the path.


*The all disabled school in Jharkhand village*

*Ranchi:* It is a boarding school in Jharkhand where almost every student,
teacher and staff member there is a disabled person, but all the students
dream of becoming a doctor, teacher or engineer.

The Rajrappa Handicapped School in Sukrigada village of Ramgarh district,
with its 150 students in Classes 1 to 10, has become a source of inspiration
to physically and mentally challenged people.

Every morning, the school is abuzz with the chorus of students, some of whom
are paralysed in their hands and legs or have lost their limbs in accidents.

All the staff members are physically challenged. But that doesn't stop them
from doing anything. Buying cereals and vegetables, cooking the food and
everything else required to keep the school running is done by the disabled
themselves.

The school management charges no fees, and the food and lodging are free.

The Rajrappa school, located 50 km from state capital Ranchi, was started
way back in 1997 by a group of four disabled people with just eight
students. Students from Bokaro, Ranchi, Hazaribagh, Jamshedpur and other
districts come to study there.

It is the brainchild of Bhuneshwar Mahto and Deodhar Karmali. Mahto was
working with a private security firm in Ranchi. In 1983 when he was
travelling in an auto-rickshaw, it collided with an ambulance. In the
accident his right leg was badly damaged. Doctors had to amputate it to save
his life and Mahto was bedridden for three months.

"Life had become difficult for me. I could feel the burden on my family
members. I had to depend on others for everything and used to be depressed,"
Mahto said.

But things changed when he met another disabled person, Deodhar Karmali, who
too had lost his legs in an accident.

In 1987, they approached government officials for handicapped certificates
that are helpful in getting admission in schools, colleges, hospitals and
for jobs. But the officials said no handicapped person lives in the area.

Karmali and Mahto started surveying the disabled in the area. Around 30
handicapped people were brought under one banner and then they met
government officials. After struggling for two years, the government
officials issued handicapped certificates in 1989 to several of them. But
even then no government support reached them.

In 1996, Govind Prasad Verma, a vetenary doctor, donated land in Sukrigada
village, which was then part of Hazaribagh district. Now the village is part
of Ramgarh district.

The same year, the school was started there with one room and eight disabled
students. Now the school has 16 rooms and 13 staff members, including 10
teachers.

The school provides clothes, books and other things to students and it
manages everything on the money donated by individuals and NGOs. In the last
11 years, the Jharkhand government has given Rs 2.4 lakh in assistance to
the school.

"Someone has to take the lead to fight for handicapped people. We cannot
depend on the government for education and jobs," Karmali, president of the
school, said.

"Our effort is to produce good human beings at our school. Only a good human
being can serve society and the country. We are also trying to make our
students capable of rubbing shoulders with general students."


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-- 
Dr.V.N.Sharma
http://canvas.nowpos.com/vnsharma

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