The Ekal Abhiyan Logo | |
Abbreviation | EA |
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Motto | A People's Movement |
Formation | 1988 |
Type | Volunteer organisation |
Purpose | Education, primary health, skills, an integrated village development programme in tribal and rural India |
Headquarters | New Delhi, India. Houston, USA |
Location |
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Region served | India |
Website | www.ekal.org |
Number of schools | 96,000+ as on 31 August 2019 [1] |
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Founder | Ramesh Shah |
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Type | 501(c)(3) |
77-0554248 | |
Focus | Education |
Location |
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Area served | India |
Key people | Ramesh Shah, Ashok Danda, Vinod Jhunjhunwala |
Website | http://www.ekal.org/ |
The Ekal Abhiyan is a non-profit organization involved in education and village development in rural areas and tribal villages of India .[2][3] It is the largest grassroots, non-government education initiative in India with presence in 96,000+ villages providing free education to more than 2.6 million children.[2][4] As the name suggests, the model of operation of the Foundation is a single-teacher based school, with the provision of "Ek Shikshak, Ek Vidyalaya" that means "one teacher for every school."[3][5] The individual schools, known as an Ekal Vidyalaya, have local teachers who teach in the regional language by using different models such as story-telling, folk dramas, and folk songs.[3] The schools also impart moral education, health care education and organic farming techniques.[6][7][8] Pratap Chandra Sarangi, a union minister of India, was the early pioneer of Ekal Vidyalaya in the 1980's in the interior areas of Odisha.
Tata Dhan Academy with Professor Seshadri of the Indian Institute of Management Bangalore recently performed social impact study praised EKAL schools for providing holistic education to children in remote villages.[9] [10]
EVF is actively involved in fund-raising activities in several countries outside India, most notably the United States. The foundation's mission is to open 100,000 schools and eradicate illiteracy from rural and tribal India by 2015.[11][12] A March 2003 report named A Factual Response to the Hate Attack on the India Development and Relief Fund (IDRF) states that several authors, state governments and social organisations have praised EVF's role in bringing literacy and empowerment to millions of children in rural and tribal areas of India.[13][14] EVF is associated with the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh.[15][16]
The Ekal Vidyalaya schools were assisted by the NDA Government from 1999–2000 onwards.[17] This was stopped in 2005 by the UPA Government when one of its committees reported irregularities and pursuit of anti-minority agenda in some schools.[17][18] Critics of EVF have said that the schools pursue a Hindu-nationalist agenda and generate hatred towards minorities.[15][19] According to A Factual Response to the Hate Attack on the India Development and Relief Fund (IDRF), supporters of EVF have stated that the schools do not teach hate, and that they themselves have been the target of a campaign by media and academic networks.[13][20]
The Ekal Vidyalaya Foundation (EVF) was established in 1986 by Rakesh Popli, a US-returned Indian nuclear scientist, and his wife Rama Popli, a child education specialist.[5] The couple established the foundation's first single-teacher school in Gumla in Jharkhand (then a part of Bihar).[5] The movement was successful within two years and, in 1989, 60 single-teacher schools were started simultaneously in Dhanbad. By 1995–1996, the foundation was running 1,200 schools in Jharkhand.[5][21] In the 1990s, global support networks were established. The Ekal Vidyalaya Foundation of India was officially registered in 2000 and the EVF-USA was registered soon after.[22]
As of April 2008, there were more than 23,000 schools run by EVF, including 2,100 schools in the North Eastern states.[5][23] The number of schools grew to 27,000 in 2010, 34,000 in 2011 and 51,717 in 2013.[2][24] EVF's goal is to reach 100,000 villages in the India's tribal belt by 2015.[25]
EVF is associated with the Hindu nationalist organisations Vishva Hindu Parishad, which is in turn a member of the Sangh Parivar, the family of organisations run by the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS).[15][16] A Factual Response to the Hate Attack on the India Development and Relief Fund (IDRF) points out that some who have been on the board of trustees of the foundation include B. K. Modi, the founder of ModiCorp, Justice P. N. Bhagwati, former Chief Justice of India; L. M. Singhvi, former High Commissioner for India in the United Kingdom; Abid Hussain, former Indian ambassador to the United States.[19][26] The foundation was headed in the past by Subhash Chandra, the Chairman of Essel Group and the founder of Zee TV.[25] Hema Malini, Indian actress and danseuse, has served as the global brand ambassador for the Ekal Vidyalaya movement.[27]
The Ekal Vidyalayas provide five years of free, non-formal education to children from the age group 6–14 years. A typical school has 30–40 students taught by a local youth who has passed grades 8 or 9 and has been specifically trained. A local organizer looks after a unit of 10 schools, called a "subcluster". Local people are also involved in higher organization levels like a "cluster" (unit of 30 schools), subarea (unit of 90 schools), and area (unit of 270 schools). The classes take place under a tree or in a hut and use informal modes like storytelling, folk dramas, folk songs, and religious discourses.[3][28] In A Factual Response to the Hate Attack on the India Development and Relief Fund (IDRF) this non-didactic approach has been described by Dr. Ramesh Rao and others as "assimilative and respectful of local cultural norms and belief systems".[29] Around half of the students and teachers are females, and about a fifth of the students go on to pursue higher education, some of which return to serve the foundation.[3]
EVF's philosophy is to take a holistic approach to social and economic development, providing primary school education for children, as well as healthcare, livelihoods and empowerment education for the entire village.[30] The schools are primarily organized in small villages among India's tribal groups. The local youth who are trained to operate the schools are social workers and teachers, teaching sanitation and health care, literacy, and self-sufficiency.[31] Each school is run on an annual budget of around 20,000 Indian rupees. At the national level, the schools are organized by Ekal Vidyalaya Foundation of India. Regionally, Ekal Vidyalayas are run by the Friends of Tribals Society (FTS) and Bharat Lok Shiksha Parishad (BLSP) NGOs and by state-level groups such as Janahitha in Andhra Pradesh and Bharatiya Janseva Sansthan in Gujarat.[32][33][34] In addition to teaching children, the schools hold weekly sessions for the village populace to discuss issues like rural development, health and awakening.[32]
Along with literacy, Ekal Vidyalaya schools also impart moral education.[6][7] EVF works in tribal areas on health care education with the emphasis on hygiene, treatment of general diseases, maternal and child care. The foundation operates 11,450 health centers in India for people living in rural and tribal India.[8] The foundation distributes medicines to children for the treatment of various diseases.[7] The schools also run a rural development scheme under which use of organic fertilizers is promoted in place of chemical fertilizers.[7] Professional training in agriculture and vermiculture is provided.[28] In May 2011, EVF launched the Vermicompost Project, a pilot project with an aim to introduce self-sustaining practices in 100 poor villages of Orissa and Maharashtra.[35] In December 2011, the Ekal Vidyalaya staff resolved to raise voice against addiction in rural areas.[36]
The Ekal Vidyalaya Foundation of USA (EVF USA) is active in fundraising. In June 2008, the Atlanta chapter entertained guests with a music program at a fundraising event.[37] In May 2009, the Southern California chapter launched its annual fundraising drive.[38] A benefit concert in Chicago in July 2009 raised $160,000.[39] In September 2009, the San Diego chapter raised about $14,000 at a cultural event featuring music and dance.[40] The organisation announced that a similar event in Dallas in November 2009 had been very successful.[41] In May 2010, a fundraising concert in Chicago was attended by over 600 people and raised pledges of $82,525.[42] The same month, Ekal Vidyalaya raised almost $500,000 from five charity shows in the mid-Atlantic region.[24] As of 2010, EVF USA had 34 active chapters and supported 9,500 out of the 34,343 Ekal Vidyalayas in India. The foundation raised US$3.5 million in 2010. EVF USA organises fundraising programs in 45 cities in the United States, which feature Indian singers or marathons.[14]
EVF Australia was set up in 2004.[43] It received the Tax exemption for donation in 2007. As of June 2015 EVF Australia has sponsored 850 Ekal schools.[citation needed] In 2006, the National Hindu Students' Forum (UK) selected Ekal Vidyalaya as the main recipient of fundraising during its annual Sewa Week drive.[44] EVF has around 1,000 donors in Hong Kong.[28]
EVF's single-teacher school concept and their contribution towards literacy and empowerment in the rural and tribal areas have been praised by several state governments and social organisations in India.[14] Avinash Kaushik, American entrepreneur and author, wrote that foundations like the Smile Train, Doctors Without Borders and Ekal Vidyalaya have done "incredible work" and "they make the world a better place".[45] Digital Learning, a magazine on education, described the non-formal education experiment by EVF in Jharkhand from 1986 to 1995–96 as "extraordinary", noting that literacy rate in Jharkhand doubled in this period, and diseases caused by unhygienic practices, witchcraft and alcoholism declined sharply.[28] The National Rural Health Mission (NRHM), a program for health care in rural India run by the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, approached EVF for imparting healthcare training to women. EVF developed the women-centric "Asha" programme for NRHM in response.[28]
According to A Factual Response to the Hate Attack on the India Development and Relief Fund (IDRF), Yvette Rosser, American author and scholar, wrote that the Ekal Vidyalaya program has done "incredible work" and "brought literacy to millions of India's children who otherwise would not know how to read and write".[13] Raman Singh, the Chief Minister of Chhattisgarh, praised the work done by Ekal Vidyalayas run by the FTS in 2500 tribal villages of the state in spreading education.[46] In 2009, Yoga guru Swami Ramdev said at the Ekal International Conference in Delhi that the Ekal Vidyalayas are a medium for definite service to God.[47]
In 2005, a report prepared by an inquiry committee of the Indian Ministry of Human Resource Development found that in some Ekal Vidyalaya schools the names of enrolled students had been copied from registers of government-run schools. The schools did not provide reading and learning material, and used funds to "generate hatred toward minorities, and condition the minds of children". The report said the FTS was "misusing these funds, and using the grants for creating disharmony amongst religious groups and creating a political cadre". In May 2005 the Indian government stopped grants to the schools based on this report.[18] Quoting from the report in The Milli Gazette, Mukundan C. Menon noted that the English booklet used to teach second year students in Jharkhand omitted six letters of the alphabet. Menon said the reason was names of Hindu Gods beginning with these letters are not common.[52]
In 2002, Sabrang Communications and South Asia Citizens Web published a report named The Foreign Exchange of Hate – IDRF and the American Funding of Hindutva on utilisation of funds by India Development and Relief Fund. The report alleged the VHP-run Ekal Vidyalaya schools had the goal of "Hinduizing" tribals and spreading hatred against Indian minorities.[53][54] In 2005 John Dayal, then president of the All India Catholic Union (AICU) and a member of the National Integration Council expressed concern that the schools were spreading hatred towards members of the Christian minority, in order to "prevent conversions of tribals to Christianity by missionaries."[19] In a 2008 article Angana Chatterji, associate professor of anthropology at California Institute of Integral Studies, identified Ekal Vidyalaya Foundation of USA as one of the charities in the US that had allocated money "disproportionately directed to Hindutva-affiliated groups".[55] In an article in the Daily Times of Pakistan , Khalid Hasan described the Ekal Vidyalayas as having a "curriculum steeped in instilling hatred against non-Hindu religious minorities".[56] Rights activists have claimed that the schools pursue a Hindu-nationalist agenda and generate hatred towards non-Hindu minorities such as Christians.[15]
In response to the 2002 report published by Sabrang Communications, in March 2003 Ramesh Rao, professor of Communication at Truman State University, and others wrote a report named A Factual Response to the Hate Attack on the India Development and Relief Fund (IDRF). In this report, they wrote that "there has been a concerted campaign against the Ekal Vidyalayas by a combination of media and academic networks ... try as they might, they really cannot find anything wrong with the schools".[20] According to Prakash Sharma, media convener of the Vishwa Hindu Parishad, "The Ekal Vidyalayas are our effort to reach the most deprived areas of the country. Christian missionaries get funds from all over the world: the entire Christian empire backs them. Ours is a completely indigenous effort".[15] François Gautier, French author and journalist, described the Ekal Vidyalayas as "a harmless programme doing wonderful job for tribal children", and questioned why organisations raising funds for them were attacked.[57] A Factual Response to the Hate Attack on the India Development and Relief Fund (IDRF) quotes Yvette Rosser as saying that "the ladies and gentlemen in the villages who teach in Ekal Vidyalaya schools are not teaching hate".[13] A Factual Response to the Hate Attack on the India Development and Relief Fund (IDRF) notes that several other authors have praised the schools' role in providing literacy to millions of children, and stated that the schools do not teach hate but have themselves been the target of a campaign by media and academic networks.[13][20]