Friday, June 13, 2025
22.2 C
Chitral
spot_img
More

    Primary Education in Urban vs rural areas-2

    Primary Education in Urban vs rural areas-2

    The education in the States of Dir, Swat and Chitral have faced different  attitude from the rulers. In Swat they enjoyed better access to the bigger cities and were more influenced than Chitral or Dir. In Chitral primary schools had been opened in a number of villages at the time of Shujaul Mulk and the teachers were paid in grain. These were not like the present primary schools but a few Persian books were taught, no Urdu, let alone English or Arabic despite the importance of the two. In Dir the approach was quite different and no education was allowed. Those in Chitral were also for elite class children. No middle class or lower class was allowed.

    There was one such school was in function in the ground floor of the Shahi Mosque. Once the Mehtar received a report that the son of a certain para medic  had alos been allowed in the school by the teacher. He made a visit and asked about the students and the families to which they belonged. He had his walking stick in his hand .One boy said that he was the son of the Doctor. Which doctor?  He asked. The boy named his father. The Mehtar was angry and said ‘ he is not a doctor , he is a compounder..understand? The said man had been hired by the Mehtar and called to Chitral to dispense medical services to the royal family as well as the courtiers. Despite his medical services the ruler did not like his son among the students of the school. He ordered the teacher not to give admission to the sons of the common man but keep it restricted to the upper class- the adherents of the Mehtar.

    The primary school system was later extended and after the decline of the ruling family the Assistant Political Agent toured the valleys of Chitral on horse back and was received by the public and in most villages primary school was demanded. They did not ask roads,  projects, health facilities but demanded primary schools and the APA asked them about the availability of a teacher and where teacher or more than one literate men were found , was appointed as teacher but the people of the nearby villages were made bound to build the rooms on self –help basis and it was done voluntarily. The schools thus began to increase and multiplied in the fifties, sixties and seventies.  Under the APA the discrimination of upper class, middle class and lower class was eradicated and egalitarian system was introduced. The name of the APA who opened primary schools for all was  Mir Ajam Khan.

    At present the number of primary schools, Maktab schools etc. is about a thousand or so added by Girls primary schools but the valleys of Chitral are so scattered and difficult to travel that more primary schools for girls are needed as a small girl of  5+ years cannot walk to school in the for flung areas where no transport is available and she has to walk to and walk back from school and gets over tired. There is a great need of girls primary schools in the distant valleys – rural areas – both in lower and upper Chitral. I request the Authorities of Female Education through this article, to take a survey of such villages in all the valleys and priority should be given to distance from schools and the weather conditions of high altitude regions.

    Prof. Rahmat Karim Baig

    spot_img

    Hot Topics

    Related Articles