I woke up on the roof of Kunwar’s house to the yell of Samir
and a flurry of sparrows buzzing just above my face at high speeds.
“What the fuck?! That sparrow literally just flew into my
back!” yelled Samir. The sun was still just peeping over the mountains.
“Nah uh”, I sleepily responded.
In an hour or so, the boys and I would pack up all of our
gear and creep back into the house the rest of the group was nesting in. They were
all still sleeping and we merrily began getting ready for our big day. The kids
usually walk up a kilometer or so to the bus stop and then get driven to
school. That was our game plan.
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| Jessica taking pictures of the kids. They loved our cameras. |
I walked with Samir, Rohan, and Jessica with a group of 10
or so girls of the village. Zach and Nick had left earlier with all of the
boys. It’s funny how the girls all stick with their gender and the boys do the
same; very little social contact is exchanged between the two. It was also made
known by the fact that all these girls surrounded Jessica while Samir, Rohan,
and I were largely ostracized. The hike up to the bus stop was short but I was
sweating bullets from the ascension. It was a solid 500 feet up, maybe more.
When the bus arrived, it was packed to the brim, so Rohan,
Samir, and I elected to walk the remaining mile or so to school, which was extravagant.
It was really nice to slowly take in the surroundings from a walk as opposed to
the wildness of a bus ride where I probably wouldn’t even be able to think.
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| Samir at the front with Rohan following behind. |
We arrived at the school just as the students were beginning
their early morning activities. They all met in the center, outside the school
and recited the Indian national anthem. They also went through some rather
militaristic drills where students facing the crowd of children, would yell
something, and the kids would repeat. Once the other students of Pitt from the
village arrived via bus, we had breakfast and got assigned classes to teach.
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| Morning drills. |
I was assigned to Kindergarten along with Annie, and we
quickly started planning our day… albeit poorly so. We each chose two books and
went to meet our students. Immediately upon entering the class, the kids
absolutely beamed at us with shy, sly grins. The class of 16 was separated into
two groups and Annie and I took them outside for the reading.
I had chosen the story “Wacky Wednesday”, which upon reading
out loud, it quickly became evident it was a little too “high-level” for the
kids. However, the fun of the book was the fact that the students had to locate
things on each page that were wacky or out of place. It started with 2 things,
then 3, then 6, 10, 12, 16, and 20. It worked out perfectly with the kids. They
were nearly climbing onto my head, eager to locate the strange things in the
pictures. We counted, smiled, and laughed. Afterwards, for the next 3 hours,
Annie and I played games with them. It was funny; we totally ran out of ideas
for games to play and even games like “Ring Around the Rosie” had the kids
smiling like it was Christmas morning. I was terrified before the day began
that the kids would hate me or something but in their eyes, there was literally
nothing we could do wrong.
Worthy of noting is the how much touch is involved with
these kids. At all moments of the day, the children almost always have their
arms around a buddy or are just touching other individuals. Now, this is
incredibly cute but also problematic. There’s been an outbreak of mumps at the
school (it might also describe why I’m sick today) and Lori had a clever way to
look for it: She had the kids walk by her this morning giving high fives but
she was really looking for anyone who might have the mumps. One student did.
When our teaching escapade was finally over, we waited for
lunch and talked with the kids who had recess. I made some friends (Anush and
two others) who taught me some Hindi words. Ugh, I was terrible at recalling
them but some of it did stick and I was impressed with their patience. I could
tell they also really enjoyed teaching me.
After lunch, we were told that the kids had prepared yet another gift
for us. This time, it was a traditional dance that was gorgeous. About ten
kids, dressed head to toe in vividly colorful garments, danced amongst their
gender in groups of five. At times, the Hindi music would have a little
“breakdown”, in which one boy and girl would come to the middle of the circle
and dance with each other. Everyone else would begin clapping at this moment.
Afterward, they performed one more dance. Midway through this dance, each of
them grabbed our hand and lured us onto the dance field. My worst apprehensions
had come true. I was on display dancing like a goon amongst these kids. However,
that became the fun of it, and the dance became so foreign to me that I was
totally just swaying with the rhythm, mimicking the curious hand gestures of
the other dancers. Pretty soon, I didn’t really care how silly I looked. Not
long after we joined the dance, all of the GEM school students joined the dance
floor and chaos ensued. Dancing gave way to moshing and once one of the
children got hurt, it was over.
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| Traditional dance. |
We sang a couple camp songs that a handful of us knew from
the states before it was time for the kids to go home. The one bus takes three
groups of students home, coming from a bunch of different villages in the area.
As we waited, the one child with the mumps played games with me until the bus
was done. Despite being sick, he was really sweet and showed me the most
popular game amongst the children; the rock game. I didn’t quite grasp it but
he absolutely killed me. The kid was a pro. It finally came time for us to
leave the GEMS school. I was touched by the whole experience.




Intriguing...great that you had this experience!
ReplyDeleteFrank