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It is recess time at the Amar Jyoti school in East Delhi,
India, and the quadrangle is full of children, their happy
voices echoing in every corner of the campus. At one side,
a group of boys is playing cricket, while at the other, a
vigorous game of "catch" is on. From a window overlooking
the quadrangle, young Ritu shouts to her friends below that
she is coming to join them in a game of throw ball. "I
am fixing my calipers", she tells them, and in a few
moments she is happily part of the game. After the short recess,
the children make their way back to the classroom, some on
wheelchairs, others using crutches and some wearing calipers
or hearing aids. There are also a few visually challenged
children, who use the tactile path to find their way to their
classrooms; along the way, their friends lend a helping hand
when needed.
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| All
photos courtesy of Amar Jyoti School |
Having pioneered nearly 25 years ago the concept of integrated
and inclusive education, Amar Jyoti provides an eloquent testimony
to the efficacy of this approach. When I first started the
school with a group of 30 children with and without disabilities,
literally under the shade of a tree near the college where
I used to teach, many thought I was crazy. In fact, they told
me I did not know what I would be up against, but with some
colleagues who volunteered their time I went ahead. We had
decided that we would admit children in equal numbers, with
and without disabilities, to truly practice integration, starting
at the nursery level.
As word spread about the school, we had parents bringing
in their polio-afflicted children who could only crawl. So
we set up a workshop to make calipers and crutches on the
terrace of our house. The "office" was made of wood
taken from packing cases donated by fruit vendors. Soon after,
more children started coming in. To make it easy for the those
who were from the most vulnerable strata of society to travel,
a rickshaw was procured to fetch them free of charge from
neighbouring localities. As the children progressed, a class
was added every year. Social agencies and philanthropists
extended their full support, and three years after the school's
establishment, the Government of India started giving aid
grants.
The Amar Jyoti school, which has over 600 children, from
the nursery to class VIII levels, now has its own building
and, instead of a rickshaw, a bus with a hydraulically operated
ramp.
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| The Amar Jyoti School's new bus |
Rehabilitation services at the school are provided with a
holistic approach by therapists, doctors, orthotists, special
educators, vocational instructors, psychologists and neurologists.
The teachers training and child guidance centre offers much
needed services to schoolchildren, including in-service teachers
in managing the disabled. Equal importance is being given
to sports and cultural activities that inculcate confidence
and self-esteem; vocational training is also part of the curriculum.
The study centres of the National Institute of Open Schooling
and the Indira Gandhi National Open University in the premises
fulfil the needs of children with severe disabilities and
those who cannot attend regular schooling. Capacity-building
courses are also extremely popular. The University of Delhi
has granted recognition for a four-and-a-half-year course
in physiotherapy, while teachers' training in special education
is also given, in collaboration with the Rehabilitation Council
of India and the Madhya Pradesh Bhoj Open University.
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| Lakshmi
at work |
Amar Jyoti's most precious assets are its alumni, who are
engaged in different vocations today. Take Lakshmi, for instance,
who came to the school when she was four years old, literally
crawling. She was soon fitted with braces, given crutches
and provided gait training. She also underwent regular physiotherapy
and within weeks of meticulous attention became independently
mobile. For her family and neighbourhood, this was a miracle.
Other, bigger miracles were to follow.
From a shy, withdrawn and feeble child, Lakshmi gradually
blossomed into a bright, confident girl, lovingly supported
by the staff and students at Amar Jyoti. On completing her
eighth grade, she decided to take up a watch repairing course,
one of several vocational programmes offered at the school.
She also enrolled in the National Open School, with which
Amar Jyoti is affiliated, and completed her 12th grade. Always
keen to learn, Lakshmi decided to take up a hairdressing and
beauty course sponsored by one of Delhi's leading professionals,
and she now trains others at Amar Jyoti (see photo). "One
day, I want to start a parlour of my own and provide free
training to girls with disabilities. I have received so much;
now it is my turn to do something for society", she says
with a bright smile lighting up her face. Along the way, Lakshmi
got married and has a lovely three-year-old daughter.
Sunil Jethwani, a 23-year-old with Down's syndrome and mild
mental retardation, came to Amar Jyoti in 1992 with his mother
Radha. His parents were very motivated and never considered
him disabled. An only child, they gave him all the encouragement
to study and interact with others and did everything to make
him independent. A vibrant, dynamic and very motivated individual,
Sunil completed his studies up to class VII at the National
Institute of Open Schooling, trained in screen printing and
paper bags, and learned to operate a photostat machine. He
also has a flair for writing short poems and articles and
a penchant for photography. He is currently in Rajkot, Gujarat,
with an independent venture of making paper bags, pencil and
pen stands, screen-printed wrapping papers, etc. He is happy
and inspires others to overcome the challenges of disability.
The concept of inclusion and integration is being implemented
as a legal requirement in India, one of a few countries where
the interests and rights of persons with disabilities are
protected through legislation. In 1995, the Persons with Disabilities
(Equal Opportunities, Protection of Rights and Full Participation)
Act was passed by India's Parliament, a landmark for the disability
sector. Shortly thereafter, the Government appointed a Chief
Commissioner for Persons with Disability, who has the responsibility,
among others, to implement the Act in both letter and spirit.
In 2001, I was privileged to be appointed as the first non-bureaucrat
Chief Commissioner, serving for over four years until 2005.
Having worked for more than two decades with a non-governmental
organization (NGO) in the disability sector, the experience
was most rewarding, as it gave me a rare opportunity to use
the vast quasi-judicial powers vested in the Office for the
welfare of the disabled.
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| Awareness about the abilities of the disabled is steadily increasing in regular integrated sports and cultural activities |
As envisaged in the Persons with Disabilities Act, steps
were taken to ensure accessibility, education and employment
opportunities for the disabled. Directives were issued to
concerned departments and state entities to make the necessary
provisions and ensure their implementation. Several institutions
in India are successfully facing up to this challenge. In
the course of my work and extensive interaction with persons
with disabilities, NGOs, the corporate sector and various
government departments, it became clear that the Government
is making genuine efforts to reach out to persons with disabilities
with several new initiatives. In 29 states and 3 union territories
of India that I visited, it was heartening to see the work
of NGOs. The main emphasis is on mainstreaming and creating
opportunities for the disabled to enroll and acquire the necessary
knowledge and skills to seek employment.
When given the opportunity, persons with disabilities are
second to none. This was most eloquently demonstrated in November
2003 when the Sixth International Abilympics-a major competition
in vocational and leisure skills among persons with disabilities-was
held in New Delhi. Inaugurated by then Prime Minister Atal
Bihari Vajpayee, some 1,500 participants from over 30 countries,
including an Indian contingent of 124, took part in 45 events
designed to bring out the best in vocational skills of persons
with disabilities. Underscoring the efforts put in by the
participants was the fact that when given an opportunity,
the disabled had the courage and determination to compete
with the best in the world! And they did so in grand measure.
Awareness about the abilities of the disabled is steadily
increasing in regular integrated sports and cultural activities,
including the Abilympics. There is also great emphasis on
teachers' training in special education and the creation of
necessary infrastructure to promote inclusive education. The
Minister of Education of India announced in the Rajya Sabha
on 21 March 2005 the formulation of a comprehensive action
plan for the inclusive education of children and youth with
disabilities. The need for inclusive education arises because
most children with disabilities can, with motivation and effort
on the part of teaching institutions, become an integral part
of such institutions. The Indian Government is committed to
providing education through mainstream schools for disabled
children, in accordance with the provisions of the Persons
with Disabilities Act. Non-specialist schools, whether at
the elementary, secondary or higher level, with appropriate
support within the educational community can adapt themselves
to work with children with disabilities. Amar Jyoti has been
a trailblazer in implementing inclusive and integrated education
since 1981.
As I look out from the school window at the busy quadrangle
filled with the joyful sounds of children at play, I can only
hope and pray that the time will soon come when all children
with disabilities around the world get an opportunity to show
their "time watch". As what has now become the Amar
Jyoti school slogan, "it is difficult but possible",
I am sure that our dream of an inclusive, barrier-free and
rights-based society will come true.
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