Khaleej Times

Tribal school dropouts train for foreign jobs

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bundu (jharkhand) — In a country where millions of degree holders struggle for employment, Dayanidhi Pradhan, 23, a Class 8 dropout in Jharkhand, dreams of an overseas job.

And achieving that aspiration is a real possibilit­y — thanks to a multi-trade skill developmen­t institute that has placed hundreds of tribal youths in foreign countries.

Pradhan and over 100 others are currently enrolled for short-term skill training in various trades like electric fitting, plumbing, AC ductman and pipe fitting at the Kalyan Gurukul, housed in a sprawling green campus in this town, some 40km from Ranchi.

“Gurukul in Bundu has a history of placing almost all of its students abroad,” Pradhan said, rememberin­g how his peers — Boodhu Munda, Gopal Munda and Shahnawaz Bhai, who were also skilled at the institute — are now working in the Gulf.

Most of the tribal youth working in the Gulf had not even visited Ranchi, the state capital, he said.

The institute began operations in October 2013 with a batch of 19 with the aim of training tribal youth as well as those from other economical­ly-backward sections of society who had dropped out of schools.

Teachers and students live on the campus which also has a huge vegetable garden maintained by trainees. Every morning starts with yoga, meditation, prayers and a healthy breakfast before classes begin.

The Bundu centre is headed by ex-servicemen Pramod Kumar Pandey, who said “patriotic values” coupled with life skills, including financial and credit literacy, are part of the training programme.

“Students enrolled in Gurukul have to pay a basic fee of Rs18,000 provided through a loan financing scheme with NABARD. Repayment starts once the student gets a placement,” Pandey said.

Many of Gurukul students now work in Dubai, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Qatar, he said.

“We hone skills of the students according to the contempora­ry needs of the market. Since inception, we have placed around 276 students in Dubai, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and Sri Lanka. The latest batch of around 104 students have also been selected by recruiters and are waiting to go to various Gulf countries.” —

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