Hello
Pasting a message, which did not get on the list.
Harish Kotian
Quoting:


The Hindu Sunday Magazine


Making our skies inclusive
JO CHOPRA



The Jeeja Ghosh episode makes the strongest case yet for inclusive education in 
our schools. JO CHOPRA

Jeeja Ghosh being forced to disembark from a SpiceJet flight for which she had 
paid and on which she was already seated is the most brilliant evidence yet for 
why India's schools should be inclusive.
Jeeja has Cerebral Palsy. Her speech can be difficult to understand and she 
requires assistance with baggage. She also heads the Advocacy unit at one of 
India's finest institutions - the Indian Institute for Cerebral Palsy (IICP) in 
Kolkata. She is highly educated, with advanced degrees in Social Work, one from 
Leeds University in the UK, and has travelled widely for work and pleasure.
But on Sunday, Jeeja came up against deep-seated ignorance and fear in the form 
of a pilot named Utprabh Tiwari. Captain Tiwari, who clearly never attended an 
inclusive school and has no experience with the wide range of abilities and 
limitations present in the human race, saw a passenger he couldn't make sense 
of.
In his world - and you can't blame him because he is a victim of limitation 
himself - Jeeja Ghosh was an unknown quantity and a potential hazard for the 
safety of his flight. He behaved as he thought best, given his 
responsibilities, and one can only feel pity for him. He may have known how to 
fly a jet plane, but he lacked the most basic understanding of human 
development, diversity, ways of moving, adaptation, determination and courage.
No space for difference
Unfortunately for all of us, Captain Tiwari got the same education most 
children in India receive: it was, judging by the results, narrow, myopic and 
highly conventional. It was an education which teaches children that everyone 
should look and act the same.
Because Indian education is exclusive. Children with disabilities are welcome 
only on paper. Ask any parent of a child with special needs. Ask any adult who 
has survived the system. Ask Jeeja Ghosh.
Including children with special needs in mainstream classrooms is not only 
their constitutional right, it is the only possible way to create the kind of 
world we all want to live in.
Typical children who grow up in inclusive classrooms learn - at the very least 
- that disability is nothing to be afraid of. They learn that people may look 
different, yet can still be their friends. That a person who can't speak can 
still communicate. That you can't judge a book by its cover and that everyone 
has both strengths and weaknesses.
Special needs kids who grow up in inclusive classrooms learn to have higher 
expectations for their lives. They stop apologising for their difficulties and 
begin to allow themselves to dream about their futures rather than dread them. 
They start to see their classmates as friends and allies rather than potential 
tormentors. They discover that the world is not a cold and hostile place but a 
place where people support and help one another.
Let's replay the Jeeja Ghosh story, this time with a pilot who had attended an 
inclusive school - right from the age of three. There was a girl in his class 
who had Down Syndrome and a boy in the class ahead of him who had Cerebral 
Palsy. There was also a boy who was smarter than any of them and who could tell 
you anything you needed to know about dinosaurs. It turned out later he had 
Autism, but no one knew or cared then.
So there's the pilot standing just outside the cockpit, greeting the passengers 
as they board. He sees Jeeja walking down the boarding ramp and he recognises 
the distinctive CP gait. His heart lifts a little remembering the first friend 
he ever had with CP - Roshan, Class One - and he gives Jeeja an extra broad 
smile as he welcomes her to Flight 803 to Goa.
"Welcome aboard!" he says. "Any help we can offer you?" He checks her boarding 
pass and sees that she is seated way back in Aisle 35. Though as the pilot, 
seating arrangements aren't part of his job, he asks the head stewardess to see 
if she can find a seat closer to the front so Jeeja doesn't have to walk so 
far. "In Business Class if need be," he adds quietly.
Unforgettable
Sound unlikely? I will never forget the Irish steward on a British Airways 
flight from Delhi to London who helped me board with my daughter Moy Moy who 
has severe special needs - as he was leading us to our seats in Economy, he 
noticed she was drooling and without a moment's hesitation, he wiped her chin 
for her. As he settled us in our seats, he said, "I don't think you'll be 
comfortable enough here. Let me see what I can do." A few moments later, he 
returned and moved us into Business Class.
The man sitting next to us there, who had paid good money for his fancy seat, 
could have objected or at least made us feel awkward and unwelcome but instead 
he did everything possible to help us, including looking after Moy whenever I 
went to the bathroom.
The steward, I found out later, had a younger sister with special needs. My 
co-passenger had attended an inclusive school.
Captain Utprabh Tiwari wasn't born wanting to discriminate against Jeeja Ghosh. 
He was taught to.
Want to change the world? Start with teaching the children.
The author is the Executive Director of the Dehradun-based Latika Roy 
Foundation working with people with special needs. Email: [email protected].
Captain Utprabh Tiwari wasn't born wanting to discriminate against Jeeja Ghosh. 
He was taught to.

With thanks and regards



                                (Rajesh Asudani)
Assistant General Manager
Reserve Bank of India
Nagpur
Cell: 9420397185
o: +91 712 2806846
R: 2591349

(In youth you want things, and then in middle-age you want to want them.)


________________________________
Notice: This email and any files transmitted with it are confidential and 
intended solely for the use of the individual or entity to whom they are 
addressed. If you are not the intended recipient, any dissemination, use, 
review, distribution, printing or copying of the information contained in this 
e-mail message and/or attachments to it are strictly prohibited. If you have 
received this email by error, please notify us by return e-mail or telephone 
and immediately and permanently delete the message and any attachments. The 
recipient should check this email and any attachments for the presence of 
viruses. The Reserve Bank of India accepts no liability for any damage caused 
by any virus transmitted by this email.

Search for old postings at:
http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/

To unsubscribe send a message to
[email protected]
with the subject unsubscribe.

To change your subscription to digest mode or make any other changes, please 
visit the list home page at
http://accessindia.org.in/mailman/listinfo/accessindia_accessindia.org.in

Reply via email to