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A School for Dreamers
But such a school does exist. Here children have their heads in the clouds, but their feet planted firmly on the ground.
Well, not quite planted. The mighty leaps into the air and well-aimed kicks during the 'kalaripayittu' class are the envy of any acrobat. (Kalaripayittu, an ancient martial art of Kerala, is the mother of all martial arts in the world).
The little room in Kodigehalli, a suburb of Bangalore reverberates with laughter as the students of a small experimental school called the Poorna Learning Centre, learn the basics of the art.
The three young teachers of 'kalaripayittu' are students of Kanavu, a school in Wyanad district of Kerala. These 'teachers' range in age from 12 to 18 years. They belong to a group which has collected in Bangalore to learn English, mathematics and other "basic" skills at Poorna. In a regular exchange programme, the students of Kanavu come to Bangalore and teach the skills they know to the children at Poorna.
Kanavu, where the children study, means 'dream,' in Tamil. The person with the dream is KJ Baby, a writer who also believes in action that would change people's lives for the better. Baby won the 1994 Kerala Sahitya Akademi award for his novel 'Mavelimantram' (an ideal habitat).
The commune or common home run by Baby and his wife Shirley, is his experiment in a new way of living and education. He is perhaps trying to create the ideal community that his novel describes.
Most of the children in the school are from the Naikka and Paniya tribes of Wyanad district. Started in 1993 with about 30children, Kanavu now has about 80 children who live in the 'gurukulam' or commune tradition, where students and teachers live and learn together.
The families of the students contribute with grains and a little cash if they are able to. The parents are mostly daily wage labourers on the pepper and cardamom plantations, jobless for abetter part of the year.
Donations from well-wishers have helped. But the members of Kanavu have tried to create their own funds by working in farms and by seeling the craft items they make in school. That's how the dream has been kept alive for so long.
The children are divided into groups according to their age andmental capabilities. Every child spends a few hours in the fields,kitchen and tailoring room. Older students take up a subject oftheir interest, learn it and share it amongst themselves.
Students are also encouraged to prepare for the open-school examination for the class tenth exams, which would equip them to enter the formal education system if they wish to.
But all-round development is stressed over book learning. Eminentpoets, writers, educationists, musicians and experts from variousfields in Kerala and from other parts of the country visit Kanavufrom time to time, stay with the children and teach them hundreds of things.
In addition, elders from the tribes too come and stay with thechildren teaching them traditional skills, tribal rituals, storiesand songs. The children are encouraged to be in close contact with the land, the forests, birds and animals. Certain skills that are passed down from generation to generation in the community, are taught to them. These include making handicrafts, pottery, painting and bamboo work.
A School for Dreamers [Features for kids]
By Laxmi Murthy, Women's Feature Service
 
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