Wednesday, December 23, 2015

Uttam Teron : Unedited material collected for Effective People by Prof. Tv Rao


Unsung Hero
  Uttam Teron






Abstract: Uttam Teron is a social worker in Guwahati district of Assam, where he has started Parijat Academy, a school  to provide free education to children of his village.

Determination to make an impact on the society is what separates achievers from non-achievers. Constraints shall always be there, but few people take the first and most important step towards contributing to the society.
One such individual is Uttam Teron, who comes from a humble background, but his desire to see everyone in his village literate is starting to create a ripple in the remote and tribal areas of Pamohi: a distant 20 km. village from Guwahati.
Uttam Teron was born in the Karbi dominated village of Pamohi. His father is a train driver,and mother a homemaker who never went to school. This did not stop him from pursuing education and he successfully completed his graduation from a city college. It is here that the first seeds of societal work were planted in his life through working in Guwahati Zilla Moina Parijat ; a local group which worked for the training of children in leadership, music, physical education etc.
Children in his and nearby villages never went to schools. The value of education was very little in this rural area where people were in hands to mouth situation. Parents wanted their children, especially girls to assist them in daily chores of collecting firewood. The men worked in the stone quarry and women sold rice beer. They saw more gains in their children assisting them in their work rather than attend school. The problem was old and perennial but the solution required a simple and sustainable solution to it. The plight of the children roaming dangerously close to the stone quarries when they were not helping their parents was a painful sight to Uttam. The enlightened educated mind of Uttam wanted to do something for these children, and this was what he always dreamt about; teaching.
He had saved eight hundred rupees by giving tuitions. He just wanted to help the children be educated and bring more and more children in the stream of education. Thus in 2003, he used the money he saved to construct classrooms with tin and bamboo and used the rest of the money to buys desks and benches from the village carpenter. This simple act of grit and determination resulted in the humble beginning of Parijat Academy in a cowshed with four students in it. Initially one of the difficulties he faced was to convince the parents to send their children to school. The people from nearby villages were from various tribal clans and each had their own dialect and culture. The culture of child marriage and dowry were also detriment to their progress. Then there were societal issues and infrastructural issues. Assam with its strike culture, called by various parties and poor infrastructural facilities did not make it easy to spread the light of knowledge. Adding to that there were occasional floods.
Uttam Teron was not an individual to be bogged down by these challenges; instead he started the school without considering the chances of success or failure. As he rightly maintains, “if one wants to do something good for the people; one should not expect results quickly”.  He started his work, and it was his passion and interest for teaching and eradicating illiteracy which started to show colours. After his tireless efforts towards children education people started recognising his work. Students enjoyed the learning atmosphere in his school and they were motivated to do better in education. The hard work of this inspiring, and persevering person were starting to bear fruits.  His work had motivated the tribal parents that education was not bad at all, but was necessary in life. As in the words of Uttam Teron, it was the uneducated tribal mothers who took the initiative to send their children to his school. The school that started with four students now has 540 students,from 14 different tribal communities covering nine tribal villages; each provided with free education from nursery to tenth standard. Interestingly there are 256 girls attending the school.  The school boast of a small hostel also. It is his visionary idea that has been the path breaker for the children in Pahomi. He is very happy about the Right to Education Act, 2010 but states “degree alone doesn`t make a good teacher; a teacher needs to have inspiration and passion for the profession to motivate children.” His school doesn’t only focus on education but also character building by ensuring discipline, cleanliness, and Gandhian ways of life. Importance is also given on physical education, computer literacy, and music. Children at his school enjoy this mix of education system. The school is plagued by many problems like regular floods, extreme poverty, lack of funds and basic medical facilities but it is his tireless efforts to connect and understand the needs of the people in the region which has helped him in his endeavour.
The school has been instrumental in bringing these tribal children to mainstream who else might have lagged behind other children twenty years hence; or worse would have joined militant organisations in search of livelihood. Uttam Teron recognises this need to make the students self dependant, students who do not get jobs after passing. He has started collaborating with Industrial Training Institutes to increase the employability of the students. His focus is “Learning for Earning”. This is a giant leap for a place which suffers from extreme poverty. He has also started the Parijat Tailoring and Embroidery Centre. Apart from his primary focus of education, this is directed to all the women to make them self dependant. Indeed such holistic thinking of people empowerment has to be appreciated.
Uttam Teron himself was not computer literate, but he overcame this challenge by educating himself in computer by going to a city cyber café and learning how to use the internet. He has since used Skype to connect to people who are interested in contacting and working for this noble cause. His actions has resonated far and wide and today volunteers, from Czech Republic, USA, Korea  come to Parijat Academy to teach spoken English, arts, craft etc. The school is mainly dependant on donations from various sources, and one such initiative from an non-resident Assamesse has helped in building a library for the school.  Uttam Teron has been successful in mobilising people who are interested in social work to contribute in his cause. He has overcome the barrier of distance through the internet and now he interacts with students from Flinders University, South Australia where twenty post graduate students from various nationalities are getting to know about his work. He has addressed these students over Skype to talk about his journey and about the sustainable tribal practices in day to day life. His networking has helped in creating a platform where this university has started an organisation, called South Australians supporting children and women in Assam. His platforms have not only helped him in getting donations but also a free flow exchange of ideas on how they can grow and sustain.
The school now has twelve classrooms, twenty three teachers. The payment of salary requires a monthly expense of seventy thousand rupees. Funding is one of the biggest challenges for the academy. It is through the donations of volunteers that he is been able to carry out the work.  His work has not only helped his students but  the school drop out rate in adjacent schools has also decreased. His academy has attracted volunteers from foreign countries and across India, who in turn have benefited by seeing the sincere work done by him. They are now acting as his missionaries and they try to get funds for the academy.The children have also benefited from these volunteers by understanding about different culture and respecting them.
Uttam Teron has participated in Gandhi peace walks, alongside notable Gandhian Gavin Brown.He preaches a practice of honesty, sincerity and hard work among his students. He is the recipient of CNN-IBN Real hero award 2011, but he has kept himself grounded and understands that he has a long way to go. His parents sent him to college so that he can get a good job in the city, but Uttam had other plans. His parents are happy that he has been the arbinger of change in his village and adjoining villages. According to Uttam he will be doubly happy than any award if he can produce many more Uttam Terons.
Uttam knows that the future of his academy is full of uncertainty. He stills faces problems about funds but he strides on. He has the vision to start his academy fully fledged in other villages, which now has only up to standard three. He hopes to get good medical facilities for his students and sports infrastructure. The road is uphill but Uttam Teron will persevere, as he has been.
Birth of an idea
One who is empathetic towards the society feels its pain as a fellows-sufferer. Uttam realized the need of the solution when he witnessed, “The poor tribal children of my village, ones which were not going to school and were not interested to attend school used to roam dangerously near by stone quarry aimless. The sight made me think to start a small school at my home.” It did not take a high degree of effort for him to see the gap in the society, an inherent quality of an educated mind and compassionate soul. In fact, his dream aligned with the solution. Uttam, a young man from Pamohi (20 km from Guwahati), had an ambitious dream for 100% literacy in his village. For the same he used his expertise he gained after graduating in 1999 from a city college where he was active member of the Guwahati Zilla Moina Parijat, a local group working with children’ giving them training in leadership, music, physical education etc. He happily concludes, “I was training kids anyway and decided to set up a school at home to take kids around my village under my wings.”
Time for pre-school
How Uttam defied the basic logic of preparing first and then taking the challenge remains a highlight of his initiative. Instead, he scaled his preparation while actively taking up the cause. He exclaims, “Parijat Academy started in 2003 with four students.”
Uttam was born to a train driver father and a homemaker mother who never went to school; he invested the Rs 800 he had earned as a private tutor in constructing a room with a tin roof and bamboo walls. Parijat got its first classes. With the remaining amount, a pair of desks and benches was procured from a village carpenter. Nothing is more motivating than an example of immense human grit, courage, and risk absorption.

After eight years of rigorous effort and unflinching determination, Uttam now proudly proclaims, “Today at our school there are 508 children studying from Nursery to Class 10 with free education. Out of the total, 256 are girls” What further complements the celebration: “Now the tribal people realize that education is important.”
“Only degree is not enough for a teacher to teach children. He needs to have passion and interest for the profession. Children need more motivation. Teaching should be skill/job oriented in higher class towards learning for earning. If this goes properly it may reduce poverty.” A progressive mind hardly rest on glories; instead, prepares meticulously for the tasks at hand.
Uttam, vindicated and optimistic, has now bigger plans for his academy. He believes employability is the next logical step for education at his academy. He has a plan in place to logically transit kids from basic education to vocational training. He considers, “I am giving more attention on vocational skill development with formal education at Parijat Academy. Without skill, in today’s world, it is tough to sustain. My plan is to provide Vocational Skill Training for the youth between 18-30 years with 90 days training model and plan for placement. Here youth will also hone their communication and computer skills. The students will have a minimum education till Class 8 or class 10 and the program will be focused on Learning for Earning.”
Uttam believes that it does not matter how many people join the cause. Instead, the quality and passion is more important. He says, “Do something for the society. Need not ask what society will give us. It’s our duty what we can do for our society. Parijat Academy work is small but trying to do sincerely for the underprivileged with limited resource. If somebody wants to serve the cause, do from heart.”
Uttam Teron can be contacted at: Parijat Academy, PO. Garchuk, Guwahati, 781035, Assam.
E-mail: parijatacademy03@yahoo.com. Mobile: 098640-41711


It was born in a cowshed. The humble beginning notwithstanding, the school, ‘Parijat Academy’ is today a ray of hope for the Karbi tribes of Assam as their children are poised for a better future.
Parijat, which provides free education and focuses on developing qualities of kindness, and compassion in the children, was originally started with the aim of eradicating child labour. “I was saddened to see children of my native village loitering around or working in fields instead of spending their time in school,” says Teron.

Parents did not have the resources to offer their children good education. When their livelihood depended on selling rice beer, cutting wood, cultivating fields and daily labour, quality education for their children was a distant dream. With only one Government school in the vicinity, where the students could not even read and write Assamese, school dropout was high.
At school, the children study subjects like Assamese, Hindi, English, Social Studies, Environmental Studies, Maths and Science. Teron is grateful to his 17 teachers and 3 other staff members who bear with him through thick and thin and the not-too-prompt payments he makes them.

Funds are scarce. Some welfare organizations provide them with textbooks or they collect used books from schools in cities.
A one-time donation of Rs 30000 from the Buddhist Welfare Organization in Thailand helped in providing school uniforms to the children.

Young volunteers sometime chip in to teach the students.

“Everything was impressive and I could clearly see the hard work of so many who worked day and night for the children,” said Bhaswati Bhattacharya, an Economics graduate from LSR College Delhi, who worked at the school as an intern for a month.
Teron wishes to start vocational training centres for the kids. “My future plan entails developing a residential school in Pamohi as villagers from far off places want to educate their kids here,” he said.
Teron’s parents, who had wanted him to have a secure job in a city, are now content to see him become a harbinger of change in the village. Teron was one of the recipients of this year’s CNN-IBN Reliance Real Heroes award. He had also been in the list of India Today’s 35 youth icons of India.

Parijat Academy is a school for underprivileged children in Pamohi Village near Guwahati,Assam. There are also currently nine smaller satellite schools of the same name other remote tribal villages.  Established in 2003 bu Uttam Teron,Parijat began with just 4 children in a small room with a pair of desks and benches.  Uttam felt the essential need for education among children of his community,who were mostly engaged by their parents in labor from a very young age. (Read more about Uttam’s story here…).
From small beginnings Parijat Academy has now proudly grown to a school of over 500 students. It is a non religious and non profitable school providing free education where children are encouraged to develop the positive qualities of loving kindness,compassion and universal responsibility.
Parijat (meaning “heavenly flower”) Academy is a school for children of families with low income,living in Pamohi and the school covers nine tribal villages namely Pamohi,Mahguapra,Deosutal,Garchuk,Mainakhorong,Dhalbama,Nowagaon,Garoghuli and Garbhanga. The Founder,Uttam Teron believes that education is the birth right of every child and no child –rich or poor –should be left behind.
The school,Parijat Academy,is located in an area comprising of about ten tribal villages and where access to schools is very limited. Uttam Teron has been successful in starting a small scale school to imbibe the value of education among the children. Uttam sees educating the underprivileged children in the neighborhood as a first step in helping the community. He also hopes to start a weaving program for women and some vocational training activities.
Uttam Teron,who graduated in 1999 from a city college,was already an active member of the Guwahati Zilla Moina Parijat,a local group working with children,giving them training in leadership,music,physical education etc. “I was training kids anyway and decided to set up a school at home to take kids,around my village,under my wings.” In 2003,the Parijat Academy was born. The four-room school had a tin roof and bamboo walls. Uttam had saved Rs 800 from the fees he received after giving tuition to a few students outside his village. With this amount he got a pair of desks and benches made by a village carpenter. The school was ready to enroll students from nursery to Class III. Today,Parijat Academy has 41 students between three to seven years of age. Initially,the parents were reluctant to send their children. They would ask:“What would they gain by attending school?” Our persistence paid off and now,“We have no seat to enroll more than what we have,” says Uttam.. If that sounds exclusionary,consider this:only three of the 41 students at his school pay the fixed monthly fee of Rs 80. The parents of the rest just can not manage to pay. “We are too poor,” says the guardian Ratneswar Bora.
So,how does Uttam run such a school and pay his five teachers? He says:“Sometimes,if we are lucky,we get small donations from individuals. A few organizations have helped us in a small way.” Once,during a visit to Bodh Gaya,Uttam learnt of a Buddhist organization in Thailand that renders assistance to underprivileged children. He sent an e-mail and,within a month,the Supreme Master Ching,who has an office in Mumbai,sent him a draft of Rs 30,000 towards uniforms for the kids. The blue-and-white uniform that his students wear are more than a year old now and have lost their sheen. A welfare group in Guwahati donated textbooks and a small amount of money with which Uttam purchased three ceiling fans to beat the summer heat. “I pay my teachers whenever I have money. The rest of the time,they bear with me. I don’t know how to thank them,” he said.
What does Uttam need the most? “We need furniture,funds to pay salaries to the teachers,school uniforms,textbooks and bags,milk for the undernourished students,medical check- ups and treatment for kids suffering from various diseases.” Tuberculosis,skin diseases and jaundice,he says,are the common illnesses which the kids suffer from. “Teron sir is working very hard,but unless we receive support,it would be extremely difficult for us to achieve our goal of educating the poor children in this area,”says Baijayanti Teron Handique,the headmistress. Uttam feels that if he can go ahead in educating the underprivileged children in the neighborhood,the lot of the people in the hamlets can be improved in 15 to 20 years’ time.

http://parijatacademy.com/about-us


Excerpts of the interviews as conducted by Debangshu Bhattacherjee over the internet:

1.      What has been your inspiration in making a difference to the lives of others? What are the sources of inspiration?  (If you like you may mention any one or two instances that changed your life and made you start something new or something different that laid the foundation for your work).

_ The children of my area  who are not interested of going to school and school dropout makes me feel to start a  small school for underprivileged children with joyful learning. The school started with four children in a small room with a tin roof and a bamboo wall with my Rs800/-


2.      What are the challenges that you faced while starting your initiative and what are the current challenges that you are facing now?
-          When I started the school. I went to the children houses telling to their parents to send their children to Parijat Academy. Some of the parents said what to do with education. They thought instead of sending to school they can help them in their parents work, children can look after the cattle. Later slowly people in our area realise that education is important. Now there are 540 children studying from Nursery to class 10. Providing free education. We have now lack of classroom. We cannot pay teachers monthly honorarium timely. If we lucky we get small donation from well wisher. Maintaining teachers with meagre honorarium is challenge. Our monthly teachers honorarium currently for 23 teachers is Rs70000/-. If somebody interested to sponsor a child we take Rs 300/- per month.


3.      What is your opinion on getting inspiration and using your talent for doing simple things that eventually become great and make a difference in the lives of others?

-          I think  in this world those who had  done or doing great work or any work sincerely/ perseverance  has comes from their inner understanding for others  and sees positively for all and these people not looking back what will happen success or failure side. Some People who are success and achieved by doing difference in this world doing from their heart/ passion without expecting any result quickly. But we get inspire when we sees success person/ when we sees person making a difference.

4.      What do you consider as your own strong points that helped you to accomplish whatever you have been able to? When did you discover them? How? How did you cultivate them?

-          In my case. What I have chosen the path children education for the village tribal children in my area it took 3-4 years to motivate the village tribal parents. When the children enjoyed learning at school. This message spread slowly from village to village and later socially recognise that our work is not bad.

5.      What in your opinion are some of the qualities that people need to cultivate to make a difference to others?
-          Sincerity, honesty, loving kindness, compassion, accountability, activeness, skill. These qualities are need.
-           

6.      What in your opinion prevents successful people from making a contribution to the society?


7.      What future scope do you have in mind for your work?
-          I personally think that the future is also uncertainty. Lot of things are half done in my work at Parijat Academy.

8.      What messages would you like to give for others to be or to become an effective person?
I am not expert



 Reference: The following resources have been used for the secondary research on Uttam Teron
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