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 Musahars, too poor to go to school
 Last Updated : 2010-04-26 12:27 AM
 The Himalayan Times - Saved Articles(s)
 
 Rambabau Yadav
 
 SIRAHA: Despite government campaigns to increase enrolment rate in
 schools, children in this Musahar village in Siraha have always been
 deprived of education.
 
 The Musahar village in Siraha-9 is just next to the District Education
 Office, the government mechanism in the district responsible for
 leading the enrolment campaign. But still, nearly 123 children of
 school-going age from 60 families have never been to a school.
 
 According to Chalitar Sadaya, a local, there is no one in the entire
 village that has passed fifth grade. "Everyone who goes to the
 District Education Office can see this Musahar village, but no one has
 shown interest in educating children of this community," he said.
 
 Ten-year-old local Dharmendra Kumar Sadaya said he was never told by
 anyone about the school enrolment campaign. He said, "We spend the
 whole day guarding the house, looking after younger siblings and
 goats."
 
 Bouka Sada, another local, said though many people have asked him why
 he did not send his children to school, no one ever asked him about
 the problems he faces in sending the children to school. He said, "We
 are poor and cannot afford to buy books, copies and other necessary
 materials for school-going children."
 
 The Musahar community in the district headquarters is just an example. The
 
 government mechanism
 
 has also failed to bring
 
 children from other dalit communities in the district to school. In another
 
 Musahar village of Lalpur-1, too, more than 100 children have been
 deprived of education. And so is the case with more than 150 children
 in the Musahar village of
 
 Aurahi-8.
 
 Kapleshwor Sadaya of Rishikul Sadaya Kalyan Samaj said that almost all
 the people from Musahar community were landless and forced to labour
 for very little daily wages so they were
 
 unable to send their children to school.
 
 He said, "The government thinks that constructing a school in the
 local community is an all-time remedy, but it hardly assesses the
 capacity of locals to send their children to school."
 
 He also said that almost all the children from the 358 Musahar villages in the
 
 district are deprived of education. He claimed, "The government should take
 
 responsibility for educating children from the Musahar community, then only
 
 will its enrolment campaign succeed,"
 
 According to a survey of Dalit Janakalyan Yuba Club, Lahan, only four
 per cent of the 75,000 Musahars in the district are literate. Only
 five persons from the Musahar community are college graduates. And,
 above all, 95 per cent of Musahar are landless in the district.
 
 Tularam Tamang, head teacher of Shramik Primary School, Asanpur, said
 that only five per cent of the
 
 children enrolled during
 
 the campaign were from
 
 the Musahar community and most of them quit
 
 before completing primary level.
 
 Amit Bishwokarma, a local dalit rights activist, demanded a new plan
 from the government level to include all dalit children in mainstream
 education.
 
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