Region’s first school for visually-impaired children still going strong in Rawalpindi
With humble beginnings as a makeshift school for a few children in Rawalpindi, the Government Qandeel Secondary School has been operating in the largest temple in the downtown area for 61 years.
The school was the first institution for visually-impaired children in the region. It received a permanent location in 1958 at the Mandir Kalyan Das in Kohati Bazaar, where it still runs today on land adjacent to the main temple building.
When it opened, the school was run by Saeeda Habib Farooqi, but it was nationalised in 1972 and brought under the ambit of the Punjab education department.
Mandir Kalyan Das is one of the largest temples in the garrison city. It was built in 1880 by a wealthy Rawalpindi resident, Kalyan Das, from the Suri family. The building of the temple came under the government’s administrative control following partition, when it was handed over to the Evacuee Trust Property Board.
The board in turn permitted schools to operate in places of worship to maintain the dignity of these buildings, and made it mandatory that schools would not change the structure of these sites.