If the poorest families of Andhra Pradesh State in India did not indenture
their children to serve in the households of landlords, or to harvest
cottonseeds and flowers, or to herd goats for wealthier neighbors--or if they
simply did not send them to work in local factories instead of sending them
to school--would not these poor families be even poorer? Many well-meaning
people think so. But Shantha Sinha, Secretary of the Mamidipudi
Venkatarangaiya (MV) Foundation, disagrees. And in Andhra Pradesh, she is
proving she is right.
As head of an extension program at the University of Hyderabad in 1987,
Sinha organized a three-month-long "camp" to prepare children rescued from
bonded labor to attend school. Later, in 1991, she guided her family's MV
Foundation--established to honor her grandfather--to take up this idea as part
of its overriding mission in Andhra Pradesh. This was to link the total
abolition of child labor to the absolute right of every child to go to
school.
In the poverty-stricken villages of Ranga Reddy District, Sinha and her
foundation team encouraged local people to identify out-of-school and bonded
children and urged their parents and employers to release them. They then
organized transition camps to prepare the children to attend school. In
doing so, they found allies among the youth and among teachers and local
officials and even among one-time employers of child workers. With
assistance from local and international donors, they expanded. By 1999, the
MV Foundation was active in five hundred villages.
By this time, Sinha's original transition camps had grown into full-fledged
residential "bridge schools." Here children accustomed only to the factory
or farm were introduced to a joyous but disciplined haven of learning. Using
familiar songs, riddles, and newspapers, volunteer teachers developed the
children's basic skills and introduced them to the pleasures of reading.
They then exposed them to a formal curriculum, to prepare them to enter a
public school. Either through bridge schools or direct enrolment, some
250,000 former child workers have now done so.
Shantha Sinha believes that poor children belong in normal schools, not
part-time ones. She therefore seeks to improve the public schools where
bridge-school students eventually enroll. Working locally in each school
district, her foundation mobilizes parents, teachers, and elected officials
to insist upon better schools and to support the cost of schoolhouse
improvements and extra teachers.
Sinha's formal organization is relatively small but nearly thirty thousand
volunteers and countless youth clubs, village education committees,
teachers' groups, and other affiliated organizations are carrying its spirit
and work ever farther afield. Through this ripple effect, the foundation is
creating a social climate hostile not only to child labor but also to child
marriage and other practices that deny children the right to a normal
childhood. Today the MV Foundation's bridge schools and programs extend to
4,300 villages. More significantly, Sinha's effective strategies have been
adopted by the state and are now being implemented throughout Andhra
Pradesh.
A self-effacing leader who works at many levels at once, Shantha Sinha is
"constantly networking," she says. She wants people to know: Poor families
who withdraw their children from work and send them to school do not become
poorer. Family productivity rises when children go to school; job
opportunities for adults improve when children no longer work. Ending child
labor and educating children, she says, will lead to less poverty, not more.
In Sinha's bridge schools, children celebrate this hope. "Let us go to
school," they sing. "Let us change our lives."
In electing Shantha Sinha to receive the 2003 Ramon Magsaysay Award for
Community Leadership, the board of trustees recognizes her guiding the
people of Andhra Pradesh to end the scourge of child labor and send all of
their children to school.
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