The roof also has two rooms whose wooden doors are around a 100 years old.
In 1915 when he returned to his village Neelah after taking a break from his business activities, he gathered all the villagers and told them: “School education was not in my lot but I do not want my village mates to suffer as I did. Let us start here a first class educational institution which should serve as a beacon for not only Neelah but for also the entire area of Dhanni-Soan (the area of tehsil Chakwal and Soan River).”
The village elders, including Muslims and Hindus, assured Mota Singh of full cooperation and thus the foundation of the S. S. Mota Singh School was laid in 1916.
Eight classrooms, a hall, an office of the headmaster and a room on the roof were built while the school had a spacious lawn.
It must have a hostel as well but there are only its remains.
Its palatial building made it look like a royal mansion. All the budgetary expenses of the school were met by Mota Singh. He also provided free books and stationery to the deserving students.
Due to his extraordinary services in the field of education, the British government conferred the title of Sardar Sahib on Sardar Mota Singh.
Tragedy visited Mota Singh on May 31, 1935, when a powerful earthquake rocked Quetta.
Mota Singh’s eight close family members were in Quetta at that time and only one of them survived.
Then came the trauma of partition. In 1947, Mota Singh was in Iran when he got to know that he would not be able to visit his hometown Neelah and his beloved school.
After getting forced to migrate to India in the wake of partition, Mota Singh relocated to New Delhi where he wanted to build another school but could not do it in his lifetime.
He passed away on May 11, 1967. However, after his death, his sons established S. S. Mota Singh Model School in 1976 in Narang Colony, New Delhi.
“Now we have three schools in Delhi in the name of our beloved father while S. S. Mota Singh Memorial Hockey Tournament started in 1982 is an annual activity which is awaited by all schools in Delhi,” said Gurcharan Singh.
While back in Neelah, the school founded by Mota Singh is grappling with different problems.
“We do not have a science lab and have turned a classroom into the science lab,” said Khalid Saleem, the headmaster of the school.
He said currently the school had 450 students, including those from Rawalpindi and Attock villages.
“Not a single classroom was added to the existing building despite the passage of a century. Only ceilings of the building were changed in 1985,” he said.
“We have to take some classes under the open due to shortage of classrooms,” added a teacher.
Published in Dawn, January 19th, 2020