Eastern Eye (UK)

Jharkhand’s former child miner wins Diana Award

INDIAN MAN SET UP SCHOOL IN HIS VILLAGE TO SAVE PUPILS FROM MICA INDUSTRY

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A FORMER child miner who set up a school in his village in eastern India to save other children like him from that fate has been named among the winners of an award set up in Princess Diana’s memory.

Neeraj Murmu, 21, started the school four years ago in Jharkhand, one of India’s poorest states, after he was rescued from a life mining mica, the mineral that puts the sparkle in cosmetics and car paint.

He was among 23 young Indians recognised in last week’s Diana Awards, set up to honour young people who have demonstrat­ed their ability to inspire and mobilise new generation­s to serve their communitie­s.

“I used to feel scared working in the mica mine, but there was no option. We had to do work to earn money ... but I tell parents now that children need to study,” said Murmu by phone.

“Convincing parents to send their children to study is challengin­g, but I give them my example,” said Murmu, now a student of political science, who watched the virtual awards ceremony from his village in India.

Indian law forbids children below the age of 18 working in mines and other hazardous industries, but many families living in extreme poverty rely on children to boost household income.

Children as young as five are put to work in India’s mica mines, and a 2016 investigat­ion by the Thomson Reuters Foundation found a series of child deaths had been covered up. Murmu was rescued when he was 11 and enrolled in school. Years later, he rented a room for `500 (£5) and started holding classes himself.

His school has since grown and offers classes up to age nine or 10, with about 100 children enrolled currently. He named it after the founder of the charity that rescued him – Kailash Satyarthi, who won the Nobel Peace Prize. “I owed my learning to him,” he said.

The award has already created a buzz in Murmu’s village and he said he hoped it would help.

“Many officials ignore our requests for repairs or other works. But now I think that will change. My village might develop,” he said.

India is one of the world’s largest producers of mica, which has gained prominence in recent years as an environmen­tallyfrien­dly material, used by major global brands in the car and building sectors, electronic­s and make-up. While the spotlight on the sector has raised awareness of the dangers and led to more children going to school, poverty means many villagers have no choice but to send their children out to work.

Murmu understand­s his dream of more pupils in school is linked to mica in a region where even the mud sparkles with the mineral – without the money it brings, parents are more likely to send their children to work.“It is a livelihood for this region. If there is no mica, parents won’t be able to send their child to study,” he said. (Thomson Reuters Foundation)

 ??  ?? INSPIRATIO­N: Neeraj Murmu (second from left) started the school four years ago in Jharkhand
INSPIRATIO­N: Neeraj Murmu (second from left) started the school four years ago in Jharkhand
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