Steely resolve scores over odds

WEST BENGAL :

Students of Bethune Collegiate School all smiles after the Higher Secondary results were announced on Friday. Picture by Bishwarup Dutta
Students of Bethune Collegiate School all smiles after the Higher Secondary results were announced on Friday. Picture by Bishwarup Dutta

Calcutta:

One fought marriage, another gave up on buddy time and a third doesn’t want to burden his father. All three shone in the Higher Secondary results.

Metro tells their spirited stories

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Rehana Khatoon, 83 per cent

Namkhana Union High School

Rehana Khatoon would have been married off after her Madhyamik had it not been for her headmaster’s intervention.

She has scored 83 per cent in her Higher Secondary aggregate.

Her father, a tailor and a part-time wood-cutter, has had to spend all his savings on getting his two elder daughters married and could ill afford the education of the youngest.

“We convinced the family that Rehana could get Rs 25,000 as assistance if she completed her Higher Secondary and took admission in a college under the state government’s Kanyashree-2 scheme. They relented,” said Alok Maity, the headmaster of Rehana’s school.

Rehana’s father, Taiyab Ali, spends the week working as a tailor in Howrah and goes to Namkhana on weekends to cut wood. “I earn just about Rs 4,000 a month,” he said.

Rehana herself teaches kids to raise money. “I earn Rs 1,000 a month which I use to pay my fees and buy books,” she said.

Rehana is unsure if she can go to college. “I don’t know if my father can bear the expenses. I want to take up nursing and midwifery,” she said.

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Swarupa Dhar, 91.6 per cent

Ghoshpara Nischinda Balika Vidyapith

She did not go out with friends for movies and did not own a smart phone till two days ago. But none of it bothered Swarupa Dhar as she did not want to financially burden her father, who works at a sari shop in Burrabazar and earns about Rs 6,000 a month.

Swarupa’s score of 91.6 per cent in the Higher Secondary exams is a reward for her father Subhas Dhar, who had to drop out of college but wants his daughter to study.

“I do not want or expect things to change drastically from here because if I start getting what I am not used to, my focus might shift. All I want is to complete my studies,” said Swarupa who topped her school and wants to pursue accountancy.

The 17-year-old has always had few demands. “It was only recently that she had wanted a smartphone because she will now go to college,” mother Rita said.

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Souvik Ghorai, 69.6 per cent

Krishnachandrapur High School

Souvik Ghorai was busy working on the field with his parents when his friends went to collect their Higher Secondary mark sheets from school.

The boy who scored 69.6 per cent from Krishnachandrapur High School in South 24-Parganas is certain he cannot go to college.

“We barely make enough to eat and live,” said Souvik, who was dropping out of school after Madhyamik before headmaster Chandan Maiti intervened.

“If we can find someone to sponsor or collect some money to fund his education, Souvik will be able to go to college,” Maiti said, headmaster.

Even when in hostel, Souvik would make it a point to travel to his village Samsara in West Midnapore on weekends because he had to go to Kolaghat to sell flowers at dawn.

“It took me about six hours to travel home by train and bus. Around 3am on Sundays, I would collect flowers and got to Kolaghat to sell them. I would make Rs 300 to 400 in a day,” Souvik said.

source: http://www.telegraphindia.com / The Telegraph,Calcutta,India / Home> Calcutta / by Subhankar Chowdhury and Jhinuk Mazumdar / June 09th, 2018