Gulafsha Khan was a young girl when her family was forced to move to Bhalswa. ‘We lived in a slum in Nizammudin in
South Delhi with access to clean water and electricity. We were horrified when
we got to Bhalswa. The area was a desolate jungle swarming with snakes. People
were so despondent that they wanted to run away. When the settlers began
digging the earth to stand their shelters, they found countless bones. It was a
creepy place,’ recalls Gulafsha. Her five siblings and parents struggled to
make ends meet then and it is now very different. Most of the community’s
population is well below the poverty line. Men and women work as daily wage
workers at construction sites while some women find employment as maids in more
affluent areas nearby.
Over time, the settlement degenerated into a slum while the peripheral area developed with the setting up of two primary schools and one secondary school. Gulafsha and her five siblings found their way to school while living in a one-room slum with their parents. In 2011, Gulafsha heard about the NGO Magic Bus from her friends. She went to meet its volunteers, Santosh and Mahadev, and learned that Magic Bus worked to drive change in the areas of education, health and hygiene and reproductive health.
Gulafsha says, ‘I signed for the Community Youth Leader (CYL) programme. After my six-day training, I had to make a group of 25 kids and teach through play. I approached several parents to permit their children to join our activities in the nearby park. Many declined for safety reasons. I had to build their trust in me over time to prove to them that I was a responsible girl.’ The volunteer youth mentor at Magic Bus recognized Gulafsha’s enthusiasm and extraordinary mentoring skills and awarded her CYL of the Month. They consistently encouraged her to pursue her education while gently cajoling her parents to agree.
Gulafsha, 19 wants to live life on her own terms and she does today.
Over time, the settlement degenerated into a slum while the peripheral area developed with the setting up of two primary schools and one secondary school. Gulafsha and her five siblings found their way to school while living in a one-room slum with their parents. In 2011, Gulafsha heard about the NGO Magic Bus from her friends. She went to meet its volunteers, Santosh and Mahadev, and learned that Magic Bus worked to drive change in the areas of education, health and hygiene and reproductive health.
Gulafsha says, ‘I signed for the Community Youth Leader (CYL) programme. After my six-day training, I had to make a group of 25 kids and teach through play. I approached several parents to permit their children to join our activities in the nearby park. Many declined for safety reasons. I had to build their trust in me over time to prove to them that I was a responsible girl.’ The volunteer youth mentor at Magic Bus recognized Gulafsha’s enthusiasm and extraordinary mentoring skills and awarded her CYL of the Month. They consistently encouraged her to pursue her education while gently cajoling her parents to agree.
Subsequently, Gulafsha joined the Connect programme, a special programme which trained the Magic Bus Community
Youth Leaders in Functional English, Computer Literacy, and Interview Readiness
skills. ‘The Connect Programme has helped me a lot. After completing the
course, I feel confident. There’s also a remarkable improvement in my verbal
English,’ said Gulafsha.
‘It has not been easy for me to step out
to work. My community has constantly taunted my parents for letting me work and
in turn my parents have often pressurized me to abandon social work. When I am
with my group of children I feel like a child again. In the time that I spend
with them, I forget my worries about the present and the future entirely.’
Gulafsha realized that her parents could
not afford her college education so she began giving home tuitions to
middle-school children. ‘I now pay my college fees from my earnings,’ says
Gulafsha. ‘I want to study further to qualify for a teacher’s job.’
Gulafsha, 19 wants to live life on her own terms and she does today.
Article source: 'Women of Pure Wonder', Struggle. Survival. Success', Published by Roli Books. An initiative by the Vodafone India Foundation
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