EDUCATION: A SCHOOL IN THE MOUNTAINS
Travelling first by Daewoo from Lahore to Rawalpindi, then by air to Gilgit and finally in a jeep over 40 kilometres of a road somewhat half metalled, followed by a daredevil last few kilometres over a boulder and rocky river bed, to the final hour-long lap of sprinting up steep hills and down inclining dales, Tehseen Sufi could only stare wide-eyed at the scene in front of her. “Here I was, expecting some sort of a ramshackle spread of bedraggled kids rote learning the alphabets but what do I see?” she says.
Sufi, with 40 years of experience in the field of education and now academic consultant to the project, was witness not just to a school, but the microcosm of an entire valley, changed all over by the sheer devotion and determination of a husband and wife team.
Each year, Zahid and Shahnur Farooq spend nine months away from family and friends, subsisting on little else but potatoes for food, like the poeple of the valley. “But this is home,” says Shahnur, the de facto principal, teacher-trainer, class mentor and social motivator and psychological evaluator at Parha Likha Pakistan School. Her husband, Zahid, chips in, “Four years down the road, our family works like a behind-the-lines armour brigade mustering material and support for the project.”
Devoted and determinded, a husband-and-wife team has built a remarkable primary school in Naltar valley
Neither of them formally trained for the job, Shahnur and Zahid (now retired from the Pakistan Air Force) run a state-of-the-art primary school for the children of the community living within a distance of 40 kilometres around Naltar Bala — a tiny settlement nestled in the middle of nowhere around the mountains north of Gilgit. In just three years of formal operation, the school has 300-plus children between the ages of four to 15 years lined up for morning assemblies, squatting on rush matting in two brick-built and tent classrooms, learning lessons and craft, or playing in the open. Shahnur’s pet project is to prepare a group of 14-year-old girls from the first enrolment to sit for the seventh grade public examinations this year.