Yes, I had higher salary offers from schools in bigger towns, but for me, the 169 Rs I was offered at my school village meant everything.
I was hungry for teaching the students from my town who needed a good teacher the most.
I taught at my school for 39 years and only retired because I’d hit my ‘retirement age’– 60; what a ridiculous concept!
Afterwards, I expected to spend years drinking sugary tea and wasting my time on the charpoy!
But I was restless; I didn’t want to retire and kept asking myself, ‘What shall I do now?’ Finally, a few days later, I got the answer.
One morning, around 6:30 AM, I saw 3 young girls enter my house. I was shocked when they told me they’d cycled for over 23 km to see the Master who’d retired! They were young tribal girls who were desperate to learn; with folded hands, they asked, ‘Masterji, will you teach us?’
I immediately agreed and said, ‘I can teach you, but you will have to pay my school fees for the whole year–are you ready to pay?’
They said, ‘Yes, Masterji, we will manage the money somehow.’
So I said, ‘Yes, my fees are Rupee 1 for the whole year!’
They were so happy, they hugged me and said, ‘We will pay you 1 Rupee and 4 chocolates also!
I was elated. So, after they left, I put on my dhoti and went straight back to my school and requested them to give me a classroom to teach…they refused.
But I wasn’t going to stop– I had years of teaching left, so I went back home, cleaned my verandah and decided to start teaching there.
In 2004, my Pathshala started with those 3 girls, and today we have over 3000 students per year, most of whom are young tribal girls.
My day begins at 6 AM with a walk around the village, and then I open my doors to students from all over– some of the girls walk for 20-plus kilometres; I have so much to learn from them.
Over the years, my students have gone on to become professors, heads of departments and IT professionals– they always call me and give me the good news, and as always, I ask them to please give me some chocolates!
And last year, when I won the Padma Shri, my phone didn’t stop ringing; the whole village celebrated with me–it was a happy day, but I still didn’t allow my students to bunk class.
And my doors are open to all– come visit me and my Pathshala anytime; our village is beautiful, and all my students are bright–I am sure you can learn something from them.
I am a simple teacher from Bengal who enjoys his tea and evening naps on his charpoy.
The highlight of my life is being called Master Moshai–I want to teach until my last breath; it’s what I was put on this planet to do."
Sujit Chattopadhyay is the Padma Shri winner in 2021 for Literature and Education.
A 78-year-old retired school teacher from Purba Bardhaman, West Bengal. He is recognised for his free coaching centre named Sadai Fakirer Pathsala."
#NRIDay
“No one thought I could make a name for myself in the arts. I grew up in a time when academics was more important," says #NRI Harminder Boparai from #Punjab, who has gained worldwide acclaim for #sculpting artwork from #scrap pieces of wood and metal.
Harminder was not academically sound, which invited the wrath of his family and teachers and was looked upon as a sign of non-competency. He was often referred to as “trash” and faced undue pressure to excel in #academics.
“For all the hardships I encountered, my life now is filled with contentment.”
India has a rich legacy of folk art that has been passed down through generations. And many of them are still alive thanks to these pioneering #artists who've toiled tirelessly for their preservation >>>
#SurendranKPattel, an Indian-origin attorney in Texas, was born to daily wagers in #Kerala's Kasaragod and worked as a labourer through school and college to help them.
While in his teens, he and his sister dropped out of school and rolled beedis to earn money.
But that tough period changed his view, and he decided to resume studying after a year-long break.
He enrolled himself at a college but still had to continue working. His attendance suffered, and professors refused to let him sit for exams.
But by this time, Pattel was aspiring to be a lawyer and pleaded with his teachers to give him a chance.
"I told them that if I do not score well, I will discontinue," Pattel told The Week. "But when the results came, I was a topper. The teachers cooperated after that.
When you look back at things, they become clearer than when they actually happened. Irrfan always said, "You have a tendency to support the underdog, and hence we are together."
#BirthAnniversary#Legend#Tribute#Memory
But now when the fog has cleared, and I can see everything without conditioning, I know it was destiny. We were meant to be together.
It was a hot summer afternoon in Delhi when I saw him for the first time.
A lanky, bespeckled young man in a black terry-cotton bellbottom and a light green printed shirt, with a leather sling bag from Rajasthan, walking towards the NSD lobby.
He was definitely not my type.
#HeroesOfHumanity
"We perform last rites, cremate bodies abandoned by families & provide other ambulance services to people who cannot afford them. We sometimes felt frustrated as we could not lead normal lives.
#SupriyaPathak is, without a doubt, one of the most gifted actors we've been fortunate to see on screen, who, from 'Khichdi' to 'Ram Leela', has never failed to wow us.
#History#Cinema#HappyBirthday
Not many know, but in the French movie, 'La Nuit Bengali', back in 1988, Supriya co-starred opposite Hugh Grant. The film also featured Soumitra Chatterjee and Shabana Azmi.
Ask her about the experience, and she says, “My daughter gets very excited about the fact that I once starred opposite Hugh Grant, but I have to keep reminding her he wasn’t ‘the’ Hugh Grant in 1988.” However, she admits, “He was just as charming even back then.”