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A School, Killed: Matin Bhosle's Quest to Uplift The Phanse Pardi Tribe

Amid financial and existential uncertainty, one man is on a mission to save his tribe바카라s children from illiteracy and poverty

Photo: Nitin Mankar

When Matin Bhosle insists that the Samruddhi Mahamarg route is the best way to reach his place, the irony is unmissable.

It was during the construction of the Hindu Hrudaysamrat Balasaheb Thackeray Maharashtra Samruddhi Mahamarg, which connects the districts of Vidarbha to Mumbai, that a bulldozer arrived at Matin바카라s Prashanchinnha Pathshala in June 2019. It demolished the library, ten classrooms, staff quarters, and a 65ft deep well, which had taken Matin ten years to build on 10 acres of government land he had encroached.

It바카라s been five years since that fateful day and he is still picking up pieces of what escaped demolition. The school, located in his village Mangrur Chavala, 35 kms from Amravati district in Maharashtra, is reduced to a single-storey building. The classrooms turn into dormitories in the evening where the children sleep. The verandah in front of the classrooms/dormitories serves as the dining hall.

In 2012, Matin Bhosle quit his job as a teacher in a Zilla Parishad school, to set up one of his own, for the Phanse Pardi community to which he belongs. His caste, which is at the 38th number in the list of scheduled tribes, suffers from a stigma that has stuck since the pre-independence era.

바카라The Britishers used our community to steal grains and other equipment from moving trains, to sabotage the freedom movement. When the instances of such robberies would increase, they would round up members of our community and put them in jail,바카라 explains Matin.

As a result, the Phanse Pardis tribe are not welcome inside villages. They live in makeshift homes outside the village periphery and move frequently. 바카라To survive, they hunt, steal from farms, work as scavengers or beg,바카라 he says, not denying that stealing and hunting are traits associated with his tribe.

Stills from Matin바카라s school Prashanchinnha Pathshala in Amravati
Stills from Matin바카라s school Prashanchinnha Pathshala in Amravati Courtesy: Matin Bhosle

Matin바카라s father spent some time in jail. There, he decided his children would have a different life. 바카라Another inmate gave him this wisdom that, unless he educated his children his family바카라s plight will not improve,바카라 says Matin who completed his education with the help of a teacher who got him books, a bag and an uniform.

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Education ensured him a job reserved for the ST category in a school in Melghat. However, the idea that the children of his community continued to suffer haunted Matin. 바카라So many children are begging, scavenging or stealing and getting beaten up by cops,바카라 he says.

Matin travelled across India to identify Phanse Pardi children. 바카라Phanse Pardi tribe are natives of Maharashtra. I could identify the children through their language,바카라 he says.

He went across India to Mumbai, Kolkata, Chennai, Hyderabad, to Nagpur, Amravati andYavatmal. He rescued 148 kids many of whom were living in railway stations, traffic signals and under bridges. They were orphans or had parents in jail. He set up a school on a three-acre land belonging to his uncle, took the help of a medical officer to determine the age of each child and admitted them in the requisite class.

Once he had the students and a school, he raised funds. The children need a school exclusively for them, he insists.

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바카라The stigma of being thieves makes Phanse Pardi social pariahs. And, our dialect is different from Marathi, so it바카라s difficult for our children to understand what is being taught,바카라 Matin says.

Not everyone sympathised with his efforts. In 2013 he was jailed on the charge of making children beg. His wife Seema was full term pregnant. 바카라I went to the police station and told them that they should either free my husband or put me also in jail,바카라 says Seema. The police reciprocated and put her behind bars on a charge of being a nuisance. Their fourth child, a boy aptly named Sangharsh, was born inside a jail cell.

바카라Initially I was upset that Matin quit a job and a secure income. But, I understand that to uplift our tribe from this perpetual state of poverty, education is a must,바카라 she says.

Matin was released on Aug 15 of that year from the solitary confinement in which he was kept. He returned to his village and school with a new determination. 바카라I could raise Rs. 1.5 crore from various sources with which I built the library and classrooms on government land that I encroached for this purpose,바카라 he says. A bulldozer destroyed all of it and left him in a daze and a constant state of struggle. 바카라I am dealing with four court cases lodged against me for trying to interfere with government work and a constant lack of funds to run the school,바카라 he says.

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The situation is bad, says Matin. 바카라A minimum of three and a half lakhs is required monthly for groceries and vegetables. I depend on donations, which fluctuate between a lakh and a half to sometimes three lakhs,바카라 he adds. Matin has accumulated a debt with the local grocery stores of about 18 lakhs, he says. 바카라I can바카라t help it as the children have to be fed,바카라 he adds.

The children 바카라are coming from traumatic backgrounds and have been subjected to substance abuse and sexual exploitation.바카라

In 2020 an application to recognise his school was approved by government officials, and the school now gets a grant for 300 students. 바카라They give Rs 1500 per student per month but the cost of keeping a child is around Rs 3,300,바카라 he says. He adds that there is a waiting list of around 300 stuents but he doesn바카라t have space or the money to take them in.

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A staff of 27 for 490 students is insufficient. 바카라What makes it even more difficult is the quality of students,바카라 says Omkar Pawar, Headmaster of Prashanchinnha Pathshala, who also belongs to the Phanse Pardi tribe. He notes that the children 바카라are mentally weak and have a poor memory since they are coming from traumatic backgrounds and have been subjected to substance abuse and sexual exploitation.바카라

Speaking to the future, Pawar says, 바카라It is not easy to reform these children, and it will take generations of this effort to drain out the criminality that has become the DNA of my tribe.바카라

The children spend summer holidays in the hostel too. 바카라Sending them to relatives바카라 homes would push them back into the same rigmarole of begging and scavenging and they will not return,바카라 says the headmaster.

A building for the girls바카라 hostel is uppermost in Matin바카라s mind. 바카라I need six crores to build one,바카라 he says. The girls are boarded on the first floor while boys live on the ground floor, presently. 바카라Fights often break out between the boys as they have no qualms in beating up those they are upset with,바카라 Alkesh Shelke says.

Shelke is a Maratha who was inspired by the work being done by Matin, and joined him in 2013 after he heard the man speak at an event in Jalana. He has scouted for these children, and now takes care of them as best he can.

바카라We start with a prayer in the morning, and I tell them to control their temper and be more tolerant,바카라 he says.

But, there are times when the fights get out of hand. 바카라This boy was bitten so severely by another that we had to get his arm stitched,바카라 he says showing the wound on the forearm of one student.

Girls are comparatively docile but hygiene is an issue, says Sangeeta Pawar, their warden. 바카라Bathing and maintaining hygiene has not been a part of their growing up. I have to insist and train them to use sanitary napkins, and we have a vending machine for those here. I tell them that a clean body houses a clean and good mind,바카라 she says.

Matin has begun construction work on land which is not yet in his institution바카라s name. 바카라I got Rs 51 lakhs from the CSR funds of the company which was constructing Samruddhi. I won 25 lakhs in a television game show. All of it has gone into this construction,바카라 he says. In 2019, Amravati바카라s then-District Collector had sent a proposal to transfer eight acres of land to Matin for a school for abandoned and orphaned children. This was in 2019, but it has not yet happened.

바카라I am still waiting for it to be passed,바카라 he says.

바카라If the land is transferred in the name of my institution, then it will be eligible to get aid from the tribal department also,바카라 he says, adding that he has 바카라been assured this by the CM and Deputy CM.바카라

Due to lack of education, the Phanse Pardi tribe has not been able to come at par even with other backward sections. 바카라There are around seven lakh Phanse Pardi and two lakh households but we have no representation. How can any of us become sarpanch, corporators, MLA or MPs when we are not educated, have no permanent address or identification papers,바카라 says Matin.

He has proposed a Pardi package for his tribe wherein special schools should be set up across districts to teach students in their dialect. 바카라The only other skill that we know is hunting but the Wildlife Protection Act has put an end to it,바카라 he says.

Over the last ten years, 150 students have passed out from Matin바카라s school. This year 40 students appeared for the 10th Board exams and all of them passed, with one girl got 95 per cent. Matin tries to support those who pursue higher studies. 바카라There have been a few who are post-graduates,바카라 he says.

Matin바카라s struggle and future aspirations are hanging on a thin string of hope. An eternal optimist he says, filled with a desperate wish, 바카라Near Samruddhi Mahamarg is a good address. So many prosperous people travel on this highway. They will notice this school and maybe they will help.바카라

Then, he adds, 바카라I named this school Prashanchinnah as its future has remained a big question mark. I am still waiting hoping that the land is transferred to me and also know that if it is not, all that I am constructing can get demolished once again.바카라

Barkha Mathur is a Nagpur-based journalist and author

(This appeared in the print as 'A School, Killed')

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