Mah-e-Muneer: One college's novel programme to teach domestic staff English, Urdu and Maths
Raz Muhammad, a security guard at a private college in Karachi, and Muhammad Rizwan, a domestic staffer at the same institute, share a similar backstory when it comes to education: their families' financial difficulties prevented them from pursuing one.
Muhammad only managed to study till sixth grade, while Rizwan cannot recall when he stopped going to school.
With time, the burdens of life restricted them from gaining a decent education — that is, until the institution they worked for offered them a solution.
“Those who study are the ones who have a bright future,” says Muhammad, who recently graduated as a student from Cedar College's Mah-e-Muneer educational programme.
Mah-e-Muneer — ‘Mah’ meaning ‘light’ and ‘Muneer’ meaning the moon, a symbol of beauty and knowledge — is an adult literacy programme for the domestic staff at Cedar College.
The idea for Mah-e-Muneer took birth in late 2016, when A Levels students at Cedar approached their teacher, Sheheryar Rashid (affectionately known as Sir Sherry), with a proposal to start an adult literacy programme.
Speaking to Dawn.com, Rashid said he insisted the programme first start off at Cedar College itself.
“I told them they had to start with the staff at Cedar because any real change has to initiate from home,” Rashid, who is the patron of Mah-e-Muneer, told Dawn.com.
In the following months, Mah-e-Muneer took shape as the students in charge of running the programme contacted Literate Pakistan for help in developing a curriculum. They were provided a three-month course which would help provide the foundations for subjects like English, Urdu, and basic mathematics.
As an institution, Cedar College assisted the programme by paying for books, bags and events, providing air-conditioned classes and dedicating a section in the school library to books for Mah-e-Muneer.
Though adult illiteracy continues to be a major issue across the world, the situation in Pakistan is far more serious. A United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (Unesco) report reveals that more than 40pc of Pakistani adults (ages 15 and over) are illiterate. The statistics for adult women are even worse, with nearly 60pc categorised as illiterate.
“We’re grateful to the school not just for providing us with the chance to restart our education, but for providing decent facilities as well,” Rizwan said as his colleagues next to him nodded in agreement.
When the first batch started off in January, the teenagers organising Mah-e-Muneer ran a tight ship, even assigning a ‘head auditor’ tasked with recording weekly updates on syllabus coverage.
Realising the social complexities they would have to navigate, the organisers made flexible arrangements for those in need.
“For female staff members who cannot stay back after school, we have one-on-one classes during school timings,” said Minha Khan, the head of curriculum at Mah-e-Muneer.