[Assam] Roi Na Xorkei?

Chan Mahanta cmahanta at gmail.com
Sun May 30 06:08:58 PDT 2010


That is a very poignant story, told so well with understated  empathy  
and subtle humor.

The problem with Indian education, then as is now, is about how to  
deal with all those who did not excel
with 1st. divs,, stars, letters and all those other academic  
accolades. That would be about 90% of the
student population. And they will grow up to be the work force,  
politicians, contractors, pillars of society
and the people on whose hands the future of the nation lies.

Question is, how the educational system  prepares them for such  
important roles?




On May 30, 2010, at 7:13 AM, uttam borthakur wrote:

> I am in illustrious company. All my nieces, nephews (mostly wards of  
> my friends) and a sister (an uncle's daughter) doing their parents  
> proud by shining in the exams and in life.
> But my spouse has no such thing to brag about.
> Her sole aunt from her father's side is her age. Her grand father  
> remarried after his first wife's death. That is why.
> So, this Pehi has a daughter, who had appeared in Class X exams  
> under SEBA in Assamese medium. At study time, she would like to  
> cook, sew, and do the household chores.
> When we ask Pehi as to how my young sister-in-law was doing, she  
> used to say: "Roi na Xorkei!"
> The day the results were announced, that is Friday, there was no  
> call from Pehi, and my wife was wondering how her young sister had  
> fared. When the waiting became intolerable, she called her aunt to  
> know about her daughter's results.
> "Pehi, ko?", it was obvious what she left to hang in the air.
> "Xorkil", the reply was also to the point.
> "Mane?"
> " Third Division"
> "Xorkil je, hobo de"
> My group, which is generally used to exemplary results, would find  
> it baffling that my aunt-in-law was jubilant about her daughter's  
> 'cattle class' results.
> She confided that there were thirty students from the school. Six of  
> them got star marks, in all sixteen got First Division, Twelve  
> passed in Second Division, and her daughter and another girl passed  
> in the Third Division to make it 100 % for the school.
> She was happy that her daughter did not tarnish the image of the  
> school by turning out to be  the black sheep, and making the score  
> less than 100% for the School!
>
> It would have been a slur on the family image, she said, heaving a  
> sigh of relief.
>
> Uttam Kumar Borthakur
>
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