Vimla Kaul has not stopped working since she retired as a government school teacher 20 years ago. The 81-year-old educates under-privileged children in India’s capital Delhi. She spoke to the BBC’s Ayeshea Perera.
A group of children shout “good morning” at the top of their voices as Vimla Kaul walks into Guldasta school.
Twelve of them, 11 boys and one girl, are sitting on the floor of a tiny room, where colourful posters bravely attempt to cover the stains and patches on the walls. They immediately begin chanting the English alphabet – “A for Apricot, B for Blackberry” – fruits that many of them are unlikely to have seen, let alone eaten.
Unsung Indians
This is the 14th and final article in a BBC series Unsung Indians, profiling people who are working to improve the lives of others.
More from the series:
The doctor who delivers girls for free
Cancer survivor bringing joy to destitute children
A messiah for India’s abandoned sick
The woman whose daughter’s death led her to save others
The man saving Mumbai water one tap at a time
Nurturing slum children’s passion for cricket
The woman who electrified a village and took on a mafia
Helping villagers ask uncomfortable questions
Bangalore wig-maker weaves a happy story
The woman who hunts the witch hunters
The man who uses his pension fund to fill potholes
The woman who braved Himalayan floods to rescue hundreds
One little boy is wearing a shirt with a large tear in the sleeve, while the youngest member of the class, a three-year-old, is punching his slightly older brother.
All the children are from around the area – their parents mostly work as maids or drivers, servicing the middle class housing colony across the road.
‘Silly mistakes’
Guldasta’s students are taught English, science, maths and environment. It also owns one computer and offers extra-curricular activities like yoga, dance and drill.
Mrs Kaul settles into a classroom where children are sitting and begins checking their work.
“You have to be careful of silly mistakes like this,” she tells a student, circling a sum on a page, before pronouncing the rest of her work as “very good”.
She sets high standards for her students.
“Many government schools do children a disservice. They don’t teach them properly, and then follow a no-detention policy. What you are left with are teenagers who can’t construct a basic sentence in either English or Hindi,” she tells the BBC.
“We don’t turn anyone away, but we hold an entrance test to evaluate the standard of the child, and if they perform poorly at class examinations we hold them back,” she says.
“The main thing is to teach them properly.”
Her own school building is a tiny four-room tenement, of the kind generally used to provide cheap, basic accommodation to labourers.
Huge improvement
To access it, you have to navigate a dusty lane smelling strongly of cowpats, and climb one floor of a narrow, dirty staircase.
But even this decrepit building, overlooking a junk storage yard is a huge improvement – until two years ago, Guldasta operated out of a park belonging to the local municipality.
“It would be too hot for the children in the summers and too cold in the winters, but we didn’t have the funds for anything else,” one of the teachers says.
Established in 1993, Guldasta owes its existence to the sheer tenacity of Mrs Kaul and her husband HM Kaul, who died in 2009.
“My husband and I had both just retired. We decided to do something charitable, but were not quite sure what.”
That question was answered during a visit to the village of Madanpur Khadar, an hour away from Delhi.
A school is born
As the couple sat at the village centre with some elders, discussing their problems, they were continually distracted by the half-naked, boisterous children running around.
“We had brought biscuits for them as part of a Rotary Club drive. But one woman told me, ‘giving them to eat is all very well, but what you should do is teach them how to get their own food.’ That stuck with me.”
And that was when the idea for a school was born.
But idea to implementation turned out to be an uphill task. It took six months for the couple to convince village officials to agree to the school and when it finally opened, they had just five students and one teacher.
Eventually they made the decision to shift the school to her housing colony in Sarita Vihar, where around 150 students immediately enrolled.
Mrs Kaul recalls how she assumed she would get support for her charitable endeavour from other colony residents.
“How wrong I was”, she says, laughing.
She first tried to set up her school in the community centre but was not allowed inside.
‘Selfish classes’
So she moved to a park inside the complex, but was forced out by neighbours who complained that the children were too noisy. She tried talking to them but finally moved to the municipal park after one woman went on a hunger strike.
They operated out of there for nearly 10 years, until an NGO discovered and adopted the school. This enabled them to finally rent the building to house it.
“There is an inherent selfishness among our class that don’t want to see these people rise. Where will their maids come from otherwise?” she says.
The stories of many of her students, she says, are heart-rending.
“I had one very bright young student who was pulled out because her mother wanted her to help clean houses to make more money. That was the end of her education,” she says. Others come without food because their parents don’t have the time, or can’t afford it.
But others have happier stories.
Two of her students are teaching at Guldasta now, one of them with a computer degree. Another has found work as a mechanic. Yet another was working at a Chinese restaurant Mrs Kaul visited, where he proudly insisted that she would not pay for her meal that day.
“If I can lift even one child out of their circumstances, that’s enough for me. But mostly, I want to give them a childhood. Some happy memories that they can look back on later in life.”
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The 81-year-old Indian teacher still transforming lives
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