Sunday, September 22, 2013

Rutha's article on Mukti Mission

Rutha wrote this for her school newsletter. 



Girl Power: My Trip to the Mukti Mission
By: Rutha Chivate
               Mukti means freedom, a prospect still unthinkable for countless women and girls across the world. As a global community, we have advanced so far, but the restraint on our women is still a pressing problem. The Mukti Mission, headquartered in Kedgaon, India, is the result of the hard work and dedication of one marvelous woman.
               Pandita Ramabai, born in 1858, was an extremely intelligent woman, a trait noticeable from a young age. At age 12, she had memorized eighteen thousand Hindi shlokas (poems). A vertically challenged woman just barely five feet tall, she liked her furniture to be low to the ground and easily accessible. She came from a higher caste Brahmin family, but married into a lower caste family, showing that these labels of society had no influence on her. Pandita Ramabai (the prefix Pandit/Pandita is given to a highly educated person) began the Mukti Mission in 1889. In 1899 she was the architect and engineer of the project of building a church on the grounds with wood imported from Burma that is still operational today. Pandita Ramabai also translated the Bible from its original Hebrew to Marathi, the language of Maharashtra-the first woman in the world to do so. Other doings she was accredited to include being the first woman in India to receive the Kaiser-e-Hind award, a huge honor, the first woman to encourage the education of women doctors in India, and the first woman to invent Marathi/Braille typeset. Today, Mukti Mission has planted seventeen projects in seven states and has offices all over the world, including New Jersey. A couple more recent projects were a girl’s junior college (11th and 12th grade) and two new daycares. Many of their projects focus on educating kids that are still victims of child labor, so that they can grow up with knowledge and get better jobs to support their families. They have rescued thousands of children from the horrors of child labor and put them in preparatory schools, which can then bridge them to enroll in regular schools. The Mukti Mission has many volunteers from around the world, a couple of which we were able to meet. Calvin and Darren, from Canada, had come to India for a month to help teach the children in the schools. When asked what their inspiration for coming was, Calvin said, “I’ve just wanted to go on a mission trip to a poor country for two years, and when my church told us about this, I knew I had to come.” Darren, who found out through his school, replied by saying, “I’ve wanted to come to India for eight years to help stop the sex-slave industry, and when I heard about this, I figured helping these young girls would be a good place to start.”
               The Kedgaon Mukti Mission has seven schools: kindergarten, primary school, high school, junior college, an English medium school, blind school, and a special needs school-all the schools are only for girls. We were able to visit a few of these schools and hand out plenty of cookies to bring smiles to lots of faces. Before we visited the blind school, however, we were able to watch the blind women. Every afternoon they sit and weave baskets to sell. They sang a lovely song all together like a choir, their voices in perfect unison. These women are taught to weave baskets, sew, and even cook (fires and all), without the use of their vision. At the blind school, right next door, we saw the blind girls being taught by blind teachers. There were only one or two girls per grade, and they each sat across from their teacher on the floor, in their respective classrooms. All their books were in Braille; we saw one girl writing in Braille with the use of an interesting tool with slots, and a poker to create the raised dots. We also saw young blind children, about three to five years old, having nap time under their beds (so they wouldn’t fall off), we didn’t get to meet them, but we left them lots of cookies!
               Afterwards, we visited the hospital, a fair-sized, fully functional medical facility servicing many women. My aunt, the manager of the hospital, gave my cousins and me a thorough tour of the place. I got to see the bench where many years ago my great-grandfather would sit and hand out spectacles, right next to the dentist’s office. Further inside, there was a pharmacy, an operation theater, a delivery room, an x-ray/E.C.G. room, an injection room, and several wards for patients. In the back there was a home for older women whose families couldn’t take care of them anymore. In one of the wards, we got to see the most adorable baby with the saddest story. Baby Joseph was born with a cleft lip and cleft palette; his mother, thinking this to be bad luck and not wanting to be ridiculed by neighbors and family, brought him to Mukti Mission when he was just two days old. He was also found to have several neurological issues that would require numerous surgeries until he is twelve years old. His caretaker was feeding him formula milk, and we could see that he was in very good hands. When we moved on, we saw a woman who couldn’t speak; she performed an ‘action song’ for us and a very entertaining patient who sang two songs for us. It was truly a fantastic place!
               In conclusion, I’d just like to say that amazing things are happening at this mission for freedom, and anyone can take an initiative to make a difference, just as Pandita Ramabai did. These girls are learning so much and will grow up and be able to help support their family. Best of all, they can pass on the candle of education to the next generation, for it is only through this light that our world is run.
 



No comments:

Post a Comment