The Asian Age

Singhu border: School started by farmers’ group resumes

- — PTI

New Delhi, Feb. 8: A makeshift “informal’’ school at Delhi’s Singhu border, where farmers have been protesting the new agri laws, has resumed after a two-week break with less children owing to the tense situation following the tractor parade violence on Republic Day.

A group of farmers from Punjab’s Anandpur Sahib had in December started the school in a makeshift tent for school going children who had accompanie­d their parents to the Singhu border protest site and those living in the slums nearby.

Pioneered by writer Bir Singh and advocate Dinesh Chaddha, the temporary school is part of the multiple ‘’sewa’’ practices being offered at the protest site.

Sukhwinder Singh Barwa, a resident of Roop Nagar district in Punjab,

◗ A GROUP of farmers from Punjab’s Anandpur Sahib had in December started the school in a makeshift tent for school going children who had accompanie­d their parents to the Singhu border protest site and those living in the slums nearby

said they resumed the classes on February 5.

“We started the school in the first week of December. There were over 170 students studying here. Due to the tense situation on Republic Day, we closed it on January 24. It was later resumed on Friday,” Barwa said.

He said there were 30 local students who have never been to school before. “As the schools have opened and the internet was suspended here, most of the students who came here from Punjab and other states have gone back to attend their classes and to prepare for their upcoming exams. Now around 60 students come here. They are from class 1 to 7,” he said.

“During morning hours from 8 am to 11 am, there is library time where people read books whatever they want according to the availabili­ty. Earlier, we used to get almost every newspaper, however, after the restrictio­ns were imposed, we only get few Hindi and Punjabi papers,” Barwa said.

“We are teaching students general subjects, including morale science and languages. We also have the history books of different religions and those who are interested can read them. There are eight to nine teachers who teach students in a group of 10 according to their class,” he added.

 ?? — PTI ?? Farmers during the ongoing protest against the new farm laws at Ghazipur Border in New Delhi on Monday.
— PTI Farmers during the ongoing protest against the new farm laws at Ghazipur Border in New Delhi on Monday.

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