SANGLI, JUNE 14 : "I know I am going
to die soon but before I breathe my last I want to enter a classroom and sit
with boys and girls of my age. I want to feel how it is to sit in a classroom."
These are the words of 12-year-old
Geeta (name changed), who has HIV/AIDS and is not allowed to enter her school
here. She is one of the 40 children at Bhagini Nivedita, a special hostel for
HIV-affected children in Sangli city in southern Maharashtra, who are being
denied schooling.?
There are four schools in the area - two zilla parishad schools, one high school and one municipal school - where
these children can go. But they are not let in. Authorities at all these schools
refused to comment when The Indian Express contacted them.?
Out of the 40 children, 10 are just
four years old and need admission to kindergarten. Many of them have in fact
been given admission as per school records, but none is allowed to enter the
premises and sit in their classrooms.?
The main reason given by the schools
is: parents' objection.
Geeta, who was orphaned a few years
ago when her parents died of HIV-related illnesses, and other children of
school-going age at the hostel have been learning their letters and numbers
within the walls of Bhagini Nivedita. They are shepherded once a year to
isolated examination halls in their respective schools to sit for the annual
exams.?
"We impart informal education to
these kids, teaching them to read and write," said Neeta Damle, who works with
Bhagini Nivedita.?
The local school authorities do not
talk about this issue. But a teacher told The Indian Express that "parents of
other children won't allow HIV-affected students to share the same room as their
own kids".
"They have put immense pressure on
the school managements to keep them out," he said.
Maharashtra's Minister of State for
School Education, Hassan Mushrif, said: "This is a serious matter and I will
personally take it up with local officials."
Damle had asked the zilla parishad to
appoint a teacher for the hostel kids but the primary education officer at
Sangli, N B Patil, said: "We can't appoint a teacher who will go and teach these
children separately."
RADHESHYAM
JADHAV/Indian Express