Rhitu Chatterjee

Rhitu Chatterjee

Rhitu Chatterjee is a science correspondent for The World.

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Kids Improve Lives in Kolkata Slums

14-year-old Shikha Patra and her friends conduct a water survey to document the lack of clean drinking water in their community.

14-year-old Shikha Patra and her friends conduct a water survey to document the lack of clean drinking water in their community. (Photo: Rhitu Chatterjee)

In the heart of Kolkata, on the edge of the railroad tracks, is a sprawling slum. Hundreds of tiny huts and small brick houses sit on a maze of narrow streets.

Just outside the slum, new roads have been built and modern apartment complexes have sprung up, but here the people have been left behind.

Most homes don’t have toilets. Infectious diseases are common. And residents don’t have access to clean drinking water.

But 14-year-old Shikha Patra is determined to change that.

Patra and some younger kids from this neighborhood have gathered around a public faucet, a simple pipe that sticks out of the ground.

While women wash dishes and clothes and fill their empty buckets, Patra asks them questions.

Patra explains that she and her friends are conducting a community water survey. She asks the women about the quality of the water.

“It’s yellow,” they reply, “and it smells bad. We don’t drink it.”

Patra types their responses, along with the address of the nearest house, into a smartphone.

All of this information is directly uploaded from the phone to a database. It’s how Patra and her friends are documenting the absence of drinkable water in the community.

Patra plans to create a map with that data and use it to demand clean drinking water from the local municipality.

“Our number one priority right now is water,” she says. “It doesn’t matter what it takes, how many years it takes. But we must bring drinking water.”

This is one of many projects Patra and other kids in the neighborhood are working on as part of a child-driven community organization called Prayasam.


Watch this short film based on The Revolutionary Optimists, a feature documentary about Prayasam that will be broadcast on the PBS series Independent Lens in June 2013.

Harnessing Youthful Idealism

Amlan Kusum Ganguly, a lawyer-turned-entrepreneur, started Prayasam in 1996.

Working with children is not what he had envisioned. He intended to work with adults to address public health issues.

Ganguly recalls trying to convince parents to take simple measures, like washing their hands with soap, to prevent the spread of infectious diseases. Time and again he met with the same cynical response.

“They said, ‘We don’t have any time, and we don’t have to listen to this rubbish,’” Ganguly recalls.

“If I’m talking about giving them drinking water, or toilets, or something, they will be interested,” he says, but the adults were unwilling to take responsibility for improving their lives themselves. “I said, ‘No. You have to take onus of your own life.’”

Just as he was about to give up on the project, something unexpected happened.

“Some of the children who were listening to all these conversations for days long, they approached me and said, ‘Can you work with us?’” he recalls. “So I said, ‘Why not?’”

Today, Prayasam works with more than six hundred children, some as young as five or six. They live in slums all over Kolkata.

Ganguly meets regularly with small groups to review and guide the work they’re doing, but it is the children who decide what problems to tackle – and how.

The projects range from ensuring parents vaccinate babies to helping classmates finish school.

The children often use music and art to educate community members. They also engage the media and push government officials to pay attention to the slums’ problems.

Turning a Dump into Playgrounds

One of the group’s initial successes was battling a garbage dump that sat next to people’s homes.

“The smell from the garbage was so strong that it hung in the air, everywhere,” says Shibashish Ghosh, who was among the kids who led that fight. “It killed people’s appetites.”

21-year-old Shibashish Ghosh helped transform this former garbage dump into a playground.

21-year-old Shibashish Ghosh helped transform this former garbage dump into a playground. (Photo: Rhitu Chatterjee)

At first, Ghosh and his friends approached community elders for help. “They said, ‘We’ll think about it.’ Well, they kept thinking,” he says. “In the meantime, more and more garbage from distant places was being dumped there.”

So the children decided to act.

Ghosh and his friends held rallies and performances all over the neighborhood. They invited a famous singer to help their campaign. He’d written a song about the need to clean up Kolkata.

The singer and the kids performed the song in the middle of the garbage dump. That brought media attention.

Local papers featured the kids and their work, the city was shamed into taking action, and the dump was removed.

Today, two playgrounds sit where the garbage dump was.

Ghosh now works for Prayasam, and he tells the younger kids in the organization the story of the playgrounds. He says it demonstrates the power young people can have.

“I want them to know what we have accomplished with hard work,” he says. “Nothing should stop you from trying.” In fact, the word prayasam means to try.

Future Leaders

The organization is also creating young community leaders.

Shikha Patra, the 14-year-old girl conducting the water survey, works with the younger kids in her community. She helps them organize and execute a range of projects.

Patra says working with Prayasam has given her a new sense of who she is.

“Before, my identity was either as my grandfather’s granddaughter or my father’s daughter or as someone who lives in the house by the temple,” she says. “Now, they say, ‘Oh, that’s Shikha.’ Or, ‘That’s the girl who does surveys – or teaches kids to paint – or trains them in sports.’ I feel like they know me for who I am.”

It’s not just people within her community who know her for who she is. Last year. she and a friend traveled to Oxford University to present their work to an international gathering of social entrepreneurs.

Through her work, Patra says she has learned a lot about how to mobilize a community.

“People should feel, This neighborhood is mine – any developments, any improvements, will affect me, too,” she says. “We don’t need our group to grow in numbers. But we do want this kind of thinking, this sense of ownership, to spread both within the group and in the rest of the community.”

She says a sense of ownership creates a sense of responsibility, and that is what drives a community to change for the better.

Discussion

10 comments for “Kids Improve Lives in Kolkata Slums”

  • http://twitter.com/Freecatholic808 Dawn Morais Webster

    What an inspiring story of empowerment and change from the bottom up.  http://freecatholic808.com/2013/01/27/faith-a-personal-act/

  • http://www.facebook.com/rick.rutledge Rick Rutledge

    In some cases, it’s not just the local children, but children reaching around
    the world:

    http://www.boulderweekly.com/article-10330-saving-lives-one-net-at-a-time.html

    And you can help:

    http://www.facebook.com/MalariaDefenseProjectNetsInAction

  • http://www.facebook.com/makana.agcaoili Makana Agcaoili

    These children are a symbol worldwide of the fact that any barrier can be overcome as long as people are focused on overcoming those challenges.  Some people give up because they believe they don’t have the right resources, they don’t believe they can make a difference, or are just not motivated.  However, these children are able to bring a basic yet huge change to their community through the use of will, a smart phone, and communication.  Any challenge can be overcome as long as their are people who are able to see and use what they have to the greatest ability, and this creativity and ingenuity will be important in the future.  

  • Rohit Gupta

    Brilliant…..!!!….. we need more fundings n awareness to solve such problems…..!!

  • http://www.facebook.com/shankarchatt Shankar Chatterjee

    Being one from this state, it is tremendously encouraging to me to live !

  • http://www.facebook.com/andrea.unzueta.50 Andrea Unzueta

    This is a beautiful and heart warming story. It is inspiring to see that there is always hope, even when it comes from places we least expect it. This article should be a lesson to everyone that help can always come from where we least anticipate it. We must be flexible and accept all the help available in order to make the world a better place.  

  • http://www.facebook.com/erin.lau1 Erin Lau

    Amazingly moving and inspiring! This proves that the collaboration and will power of many can be a powerful tool for change, no matter one’s religious/ethnic background, economic status or age. When a community stands together and works towards a common goal, amazing results can come out of the effort as long as they stay true and persevere. Prayasam’s projects and accomplishments are hard proof that children are much more aware and insightful than we often realize and that maybe it takes the innocent minds of the young to recognize that they need to speak up if they hope to improve their communities and ensure a better future for themselves than their parents may have experienced. Also, it’s amazing how equipped a person can be with the use of modern technology, such as the examples here with the smart phones. Even Western educational systems could learn from this amazing story and system.

  • http://www.facebook.com/alyssa.marie.kau Alyssa-Marie Kau

    This article truly illustrates the power of positivity and how the great the initiative of change is  in each human being. As human beings, most are content with obsessing at what they don’t have and at seeking success through superficial means. However, this article truly demonstrates the power that each human being possesses. People in Koltaka lack having clean water, a necessity that we each take for granted daily. By seeking to make a change in their community with extremely restricted resources, the children have taken pride in their community and their identity, two crucial elements in become effective leaders of society. With cooperation, communication, and willpower, it is possible to overcome obstacles, regardless of differences. It is amazing to see that with the power of just one smart phone and personal initiative amongst these children, such tremendous change can occur. This article should also make leaders reexamine the role and power of children. Though deemed naive and unknowing of the world around them, sometimes it is children that are the most insightful and have the creativity behind plausible solutions in fulfilling their moral responsibility to create a better future for themselves and future generations. Western society can take back this story and lesson of hope and build a sense of pride in community and identity. Children need adults and leaders who are willing to listen and guide them, and this is a prime example demonstrated in Prayasam’s project It warms my heart and makes me hopeful of the change and future leaders of our global society, and inspires me to advocate for positive change, to leave a better legacy for the leaders of tomorrow.

  • Courtney Kubanek

    It is truly incredible how the open minds of children can accept and create important life changes that adults set in their ways may spurn. Their actions will create a better community for their future families to live in, even if they aren’t doing it for that purpose.

    I believe that we shouldn’t only take from this that children can impact their community, but take it one step further and be inspired to take ownership of not only our community, but also enable others to take ownership of their communities as well, to create a better over all habitat.
    I hope the adults in the community are able to see how much of an impact their children are able to have and can begin to help make improvements as well.

  • Courtney Kubanek

    It is truly incredible how the open minds of children can accept and create important life changes that adults set in their ways may spurn. Their actions will create a better community for their future families to live in, even if they aren’t doing it for that purpose.

    I believe that we shouldn’t only take from this that children can impact their community, but take it one step further and be inspired to take ownership of not only our community, but also enable others to take ownership of their communities as well, to create a better over all habitat.
    I hope the adults in the community are able to see how much of an impact their children are able to have and can begin to help make improvements as well.