West Bengal Archives ⋆ The Teenager Today https://theteenagertoday.com/tag/west-bengal/ Loved by youth since 1963 Sat, 16 Mar 2024 04:20:29 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 https://theteenagertoday.com/wp/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/cropped-the-teenager-today-favicon-32x32.png West Bengal Archives ⋆ The Teenager Today https://theteenagertoday.com/tag/west-bengal/ 32 32 Babar Ali: The World’s Youngest Headmaster https://theteenagertoday.com/babar-ali-the-worlds-youngest-headmaster/ Sat, 16 Mar 2024 04:20:28 +0000 https://theteenagertoday.com/?p=27747 What Babar Ali began as a game with eight children in 2002, he continues till today. But now he has more than a thousand students.

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Babar Ali with a group of his students

“We shall play school,” the third-grade boy gathered the village children at the backyard of his house. “I am the teacher. And you are all students,” he began.

What Babar Ali began as a game with eight children in 2002, he continues till today. But now he has more than a thousand students. “It began as a game. But we got very serious about it very soon,” says Babar, who was born on 18 March 1993. In his Beldanga village of Murshidabad district, West Bengal, there was no school then. Since many children, including his sister, were unable to go to school, he began to teach them after his school.

While Babar went to school in the mornings, he taught in his “school” from 3 pm to 7 pm in the evenings. After his matriculation, he attended Behrampore Krishnath College, 15 kms away. He obtained a degree in English (Honours) and an M.A. in English and History, while continuing to teach in his school.

His middle-class parents, Mohamad Nasiruddin and Banuara Bibi, encouraged his teaching of the village kids. His father, a jute trader, also offered him money to purchase books and other materials for the students.

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A fluke of nature https://theteenagertoday.com/a-fluke-of-nature/ Fri, 16 Jun 2017 05:04:51 +0000 http://theteenagertoday.com/?p=8019 The dolphin’s fluke serves a very vital function of propelling these marine mammals forward. No one yet knows however, what function humans perform per se?

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Photo: © Soumyajit Nandy / Sanctuary Photolibrary

An Irrawady dolphin vanishes into the food-rich, mud-brown waters of the Sundarbans Tiger Reserve and a whole world of opportunity, hidden from human eyes, opens up a micro-moment later. Using sophisticated sonography, the aquatic mammal sweeps its head expertly left to right to stitch together an image of its underwater larder, principally shoals of fish.

The number of these rare dolphins was once presumed to hover around 500 in the Sundarbans. Recently a massive, hitherto unknown, population of 6,000 dolphins was discovered in Bangladesh! Who knows what other secrets lie hidden in this mangrove Horn of Cornucopia, which has nurtured life forms, large and small, for countless eons.

One way or the other, over 30 million humans living in Bangladesh and West Bengal’s 24 Parganas South are dependent on the same larder. But, unlike dolphins, sharks, crocodiles, turtles and tigers, humans seem determined to damage, exhaust or otherwise extinguish this food source. It is this ability to lay waste to nature’s once inexhaustible resources that differentiates us from every other living creature on planet Earth… not our remarkable ability to compute or abstract or articulate using poetry, science or art.

We know, of course, that the dolphin’s fluke serves the very vital function of propelling these marine mammals forward (they all once lived on land and then returned to the sea!). No one yet knows however, what function humans perform per se? We will probably go to our graves wondering what fluke of nature gifted Homo sapiens the power of life and death over the rest of nature… a power we are exercising in the most irresponsible way possible.

First appeared in Sanctuary Asia, Vol. XXXV No. 12, April 2016.

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