[image: British Broadcasting
Corporation]<http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/blq/mast/home/-/home/d/>
**
*Indian 'boy genius' shares skills*
*By Shalini Joshi*
BBC News, Dehradun, Uttarakhand
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/7820832.stm

   [image: Aman Rehman teaching at Dehradun's College of Interactive
Arts] *It's
not clear whether Aman's teaching skills match his computer skills*

*An eight-year-old boy in India who specialises in animation for films has
begun teaching his skills to adults.*

Aman Rehman, from Dehradun in the north Indian state of Uttarakhand, is also
seeking to win a Guinness Book of World Records *"Young Achiever"* award.

Aman learned computers while his friends played in the fields and has made
more than 1,000 animated movies.

He is known as the *"Little Bill Gates"* - famous all over the state after
learning his trade as a toddler.

*'Fascinated'*

Aman comes from a humble background. His father is an illiterate scooter
mechanic and has to support four children - Aman being the youngest - along
with his wife.

  [image: Aman Rehman] *Aman Rehman is India's latest child prodigy*

When one reaches the clock tower of Dehradun and asks for his address it
seems everybody knows him as *Computerwala Bachha*.

Aman showed interest in computers at the tender age of three.

"His father bought a second-hand computer for our oldest son. We never
imagined that it would be remotely interesting to our youngest son. But he
was fascinated by it and watched his brother's every move on the cursor,"
Aman's mother Shabnam Rehman remembers.

"After his brother went to college Aman used to work on the computer
secretly. I was scared at that time but by Allah's grace he has made all of
us proud."

Aman's father, M Rehman, says that at first he never realised his son's
talent.

"My friends advised me to introduce him to some computer experts but they
did not take him seriously," he said.

But after a week of immense lobbying Mr Rehman convinced the authorities at
Dehradun's College of Interactive Arts to watch his son perform on the
computers.

*Scholarship*

After seeing his skills, the college offered him a place. Within a month he
had written his own programme and had learnt the animation course in less
than three months - it normally takes 15 months to complete.

  [image: Aman Rehman and his parents] *The child's talents have taken even
his parents by surprise*

Aman has now applied for an entry in the in the Young Achiever's category of
the *Guinness Book* of World Records.

"I am the youngest computer animator. No other child of my age can make
animation movies," he says proudly.

"I am sure that I will get an entry into the Guinness book and am waiting
for that big day."

His father claims that an Australian company has made approaches to his son,
but both are adamant that they want to carry on working in India.

In recognising his computer skills, the College of Interactive Arts has now
provided him with a scholarship, the state government has given him a laptop
and 100,000 rupees ($2,073).

"Such is the price of a child prodigy these days," said one member of staff.

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