Babar Ali must be the youngest headmaster in the world. As a teenager, he has been teaching hundreds of students in his family’s backyard, where he runs classes for poor children from his village. The story of this young man from Murshidabad in West Bengal is a remarkable tale of the desire to learn amid the direst poverty. Let us follow him on his typical teenage day.
By Eric Schneider and Tanvir Hassan, Youth-LeadeR
Babar wakes up every morning at six, and starts his day by doing some house hold chores. Then he takes an auto rickshaw first, and later walks five kilometres to the “Cossimbazar Raj Govinda Sundari Vidyapeeth” where he is a class XII student. Babar is the thin and gangly boy who sits in the middle of the front row. Studious, smart and austere in his blue and white uniform, Babar is a model student. He is also the first member of his family to get a proper education.
At school, he is an ideal student, but it is what he does after his school hours that intrigues the entire world.
When every other teenager goes running off to the playground and gets busy with football, cricket and other sports, Babar makes his way to an afternoon school where he is the headmaster of a school of 800 students.
Welcome to Babar Ali’s school!
It is a dilapidated concrete structure covered in half-torn posters. Inside, in a tiny, dark room behind a desk, sits someone that several prime ministers know by name, and so should you!
Behind the office is a gate that opens to Babar’s home. This is where rows of poor, underprivileged kids sit under the open, blue sky and learn what most children in the modern world pay hundreds of dollars for, for free. This is where 800 kids who are deprived from their basic right for education, walk miles to learn, free of cost, the basics and fundamentals of life.
So let’s take a minute over here and think. While we whine about our allowances and fuss about staying out late; this average boy from a small village, is actually helping to make this world a better place. Today, all around a world where millions of children are being deprived from literacy because their families cannot bear the expenses, this one school boy from India is trying to change that. And so, still a teenager, Babar Ali is the world’s youngest headmaster!
Babar happens to be one of the fortunate souls in his village. In the Bhapta neighborhood of Gangapur Village in West Bengal’s Murshidabad, Babar lives with his three siblings and his parents in a thatched house which is the size of an average city kitchen. Yet, ironically, he is still among the privileged ones in his village, because unlike most children there, he went to school and got formal education. He was better off also in being the son of Nasiruddin Sheikh. Nasiruddin is a jute seller and a dropout who believes that education is man’s true religion, and who initially supported his son’s venture with his own income. Coming from a privileged family Babar realized he must do something for the other children in this village.
Even though their community provides free education to children, sending children to school is not entirely free of cost. Although the children are taught for free they still have to pay for uniforms, books etc. That is why a lot of families cannot afford to send their children to school. Thus instead of going to school most of the boys help out their families by working as mechanics, day laborers, grass cutters, live stock herders etc; whereas girls work as maid servants in the village where they cook, clean, wash clothes and dishes for their employers . Babar Ali wanted to change this. That is why he took the initiative of opening his very own school.
“Anand Siksha Niketan” – the “Home of Joyful Learning”.
Babar Ali actually started his school at the mere age of nine, when his friends could not afford to attend school. So he decided to teach them what he had learned at school that mornong. In fact, his school “Anand Siksha Niketan” grew out of a game.
“We used to play school-school, with me as teacher. My friends had never seen the inside of a school, so they enjoyed playing students. They ended up learning arithmetic and enjoying it,” said Babar Ali while trying to explain how he initially started teaching. In 2002, the game got institutionalized, with the strength of eight.
So, gradually word spread and the numbers grew. Help began to come from other quarters: Babar’s own teachers, monks at the local Ramakrishna Mission, sympathetic IAS officers, even local policemen, and of course his family.
“We are very poor. But my parents have always encouraged me to study. My father keeps telling me that there is no substitute for education. My parents encouraged me to set up my school.” Their support did not end with words and space. When their son first thought up a mid-day meal scheme for his flocks of schol children, the rice came from his father’s fields. On top, the family had to fend off opposition in the village.
„The village elders were sceptic about educating their children because they were not educated themselves. They needed the children to lend a helping hand in earning for the family. They had strong reservations about girls attending school. But I ignored all criticism and went ahead with my plans. Today, the school has around 800 students of which 60% comprises girls and boys make up the remaining 40%.”
Since, when the children of the village and the localities nearby are done with their chores and jobs at day time, they run to attend Babar’s afternoon school. They arrive in time for Tulu’s opening bell.
Today, twelve years down the line, the school has 60 regular attendees and over 220 students on roll-call and 800 students in total, with ten volunteer teachers teaching grades 1 through 8. His little afternoon venture gone big is now registered and recognized by the West Bengal State Government, which means students graduating from Babar’s school are eligible to transfer to other local high schools – and also for the distribution of free rice – which makes a tremendous difference.
Meet some pure, good, kind souls…
Clad in widow’s whites, stick in hand, Tulu Rani Hazra is an illiterate fishmonger by morning and a crusading educationalist by afternoon. On fish-selling rounds of nearby villages, her job is to confront erring parents who’ve stopped sending their children to school and to find new students. She has recruited 80 till now.
The teaching staff of nine is made up of high school student volunteers. They also, are average teenagers, who are helping out Babar in making a difference.
Babar Ali gives lessons just the way he has heard them from his teachers. There is no building or establishment for his school. He teaches his students under the open sky. Some children sit in the mud, others on rickety benches under a rough, homemade shelter. The family chickens scratch around nearby. In every corner of the yard groups of children can be seen studying hard.
It is much easier to enroll kids who are not old enough. So Class I and II have over 200 students. Class VIII has just 20 students. Students study 10 subjects, and text books are free from class I to V, but for the rest money needs to be arranged. On any given day there are close to 400 students physically present in Babar’s front yard.
Sometimes, it is hard to get the children to listen, being so young themselves, and Babar has to call to mind that no one shall disturb everyone else’s learning journey. “The narrow age gap works to our advantage,” says Babar. “We are more like friends. The rod is spared in my school.”
Altogether, the school is a great intergenerational community experience, and people are well aware of its value. Tulu Rani Hazra, the „matriarch“, a bell in her hand, oversees the day’s structure. The teaching staff, all of them women, now includes some former students. One of them is Babar’s younger sister, Amina Khatun, who has also been one of his first students. Having lived the ultimate “Anand Siksha Niketan” experience, she has naturally internalized the ways of managing a school, and is entrusted to run it in Babar’s absence.
Getting to know about a person like him makes me realize how insignificant I am and yet again how lucky. Babar has not only helped out hundreds of children to get enlightened, he has also inspired millions of youths like us. Babar Ali’s tale is a testament to the difference that one person can make in his/her world. In this case, it was a mere child who decided to do something about a situation he felt was unfair.
His story also bears evidence to the fact that if you have a will then there surely is a way. That a nine year old can alone change the world should be enough inspiration for all of us to come out of our closed cocoons and help make a difference.
Coming from a small village in Murshidabad he should be commended just for the audacity of hoping. It is this hope, and the faith that he has upon himself that has helped him come all this way. So, here is to Babar Ali: We salute you for dreaming and making your dreams come true.
Today a Babar Ali; maybe tomorrow it could be someone from among us. So isn’t it high time that we be the change that we want to see in this world? The story does not end here. For India, it has just begun.
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A new chapter is beginning to unfold.
The success story of this joyful little school house has reached many ears and hearts throughout India and the world – and the story of this heart-driven school has been spreading through news articles, books, teaching tools, exhibits, and even cardgames in up to nineteen languages.
As this inspired world in high need for solid education for our children starts reaching out him, asking how to help, a new chapter is opening up for “Anand Siksha Niketan”.
The frameworks are set. At twenty-one years of age, Babar has completed a degree in English Literature at Krishnath College. He says that he has thoroughly enjoyed the experience, indulging in his own love of learning, and the elaborate wielding of words and thoughts. Still, he has not neglected his duties as a principal, nor will he during his Masters studies at Kalyani University. He fulfills his role to continue this rewarding mission, and so do others.
His first generation of students also has reached maturity, and they naturally take their own turn of responsibility at “Anand Siksha Niketan”. All teachers have been students at the school, before, and all of them are women, his own sister one of them.
His precious haven of learning is now securely resting on many able shoulders, Babar starts manifesting his greater vision: the replication of this success model in many places. For him, the next natural step is not far. A town just five kilometers away is lacking a school. Think like Babar for ten seconds – what comes to your mind, and what are you going to do about it?
Building a new school
Over one year, Babar has gathered support, and as I am writing, the foundations are being laid.
These foundations are more than just stone. They are people, in India and abroad. Conference organizers, mediamakers and award sponsors have responded, but more importantly – as his Class X students have been passing a high school board exam with a success rate of 90% – government officials take notice, that this modest village school fulfills the expectations of the standard education system.
Even though Babar has started his school merely out of necessity, visionary stakeholders in education recognize „Anand Siksha Niketan“ not only for its unique inspiration for teachers and students, nationwide, but also as a school model with promising potential for replication. Some of them have joined to trake supportive roles in his school’s board.
In fact, Babar’s venture is part of an important phenomenon of our time. The thriving movement of people- and community-powered education, pioneered by scandinavian free schools, democratic schools like Summerhill and Sands, where students make the rules, like TEKOS, where students learn just among each other, without adults, finish high school by age fifteen, and complete university degrees by age eighteen. Besides, they build and administer their own school, learn fencing, martial arts, traditional dance and bathe in mountain streams.
Other examples are renowned institutions like Wilhelm Schole International, whose students surf with ease through universities, while still volunteering, Escuela Nueva, also homeschooling, and even roadschooling. As you can imagine, these schools convey the standard syllabus, but students also evolve many other skills on-the-go.
Even though “Anand Siksha Niketan” was not designed with such high-flying intentions, I can only imagine what skills its graduates possess. But I am sure that they have had a lot of experience in dialogue, discipline, listening, colaboration, respect, adaptation, improvization, problem-solving and cooperation that are not evident for students enjoying a priviledged education. But these skills are precious – for life, and for professional paths built on cooperation.
We may some day hear from Babar’s graduates, but keep following Babar for a little longer. Things are getting even more exciting, now that he has crossed the paths of other amazing young changemakers like him, and their worlds and ventures are growing together, for novel win-win partnerships – even for you!
Building alliances with young changemakers
In 2014, Babar has attended the Paris NightScience conference, a prestigious gathering of innovators in learning and education for creating the better world we all wish to see. This exceptional gathering has brought about extraordinary encounters, one of them, the youngest school principal in the world, and Adora Svitak, called „the brightest kid, and youngest teacher in the world“.
Several days of exchange and co-creative learning have sparked exciting plans for alliances for friendly international cooperation via internet – enabling students around the globe to explore sustainability solutions, and adapt them for addressing regional challenges, needs and opportunities.
In Malawi, Joseph and Lonjezo are setting up teen-driven sustainability labs, to design affordable 3d-printed protheses, and low-cost windmills for village electricity and irrigation. Pioneered by tinkerers and ordinary teenagers, real-world applications like these have been discovered for student clubs and school projects.
Urban schools organize international partnerships for dialogue, book drives, fundraisers, meet online, and replicate the same solutions at home, surprising their cities with self-built windmills from trash. Can you imagine the headlines? And the ripple effects in other schools? We can. We see it hapening in many places, already.
Inspired by these groundbreaking examples, Babar now intends to turn suboptimal circumstances into exciting opportunity. Rural schools in particular are in a position to turn the theory of sustainable development into practice. Integral part of the new „Home of Joyful Learning“ will be a plot of land, enabling students to grow up experimenting with innovations in sustainable agriculture – so that their findings can serve local farmers. And there is more that they will learn from leading innovators around the globe. These are exciting times, indeed!
That’s why one of our first endeavours is to set up fast internet connection at Babar’s schools, so that we can all meet „live“ in webcasts, share, uplift one another – and take action.

Babar with fellow young changemakers at the NightScience Conference in Paris. Francois, Lonjezo (Malawi), Katrina and “Nellie for Ellies” (Hong Kong), Adora, Joseph (Malawi), Lance Weiler, Babar and Eric
Youth Leadership. The movement of our time
Keystone to this endeavour’s success is Babar’s devotion to making his life a service for the higher good. This is not lightly said. His acts have proven it for more than a decade. It is not ambition that drives him, but genuine empathy. Empathy – the quality that distinguishes the social entrepreneur. And humbleness, in face of what lies ahead, for all of India.
His payback is to see children’s eyes light up with the joy, thirst and determination to learn, acquire skills and never stop.
“Poverty and ignorance go hand in hand. I wanted my friends and the girls and boys of my village and neighbouring villages to break this shackle of poverty and ignorance. I was confident that they would be able to do much better in life with education. I wanted to bring into their lives the light of knowledge that would give them a better future.” These are the words that define him.
Everybody who has met Babar knows that he means it. As a messenger from the beautiful emerging realms of changemaking, I can tell and trust that Babar is in for the long run. This is for life. I am looking forward to see Babar’s path unfold, and join in cooperation and celebration.
His story is a guiding star, for the inner hero/ine dwelling inside everyone of us. But he is not the only one. If you turn your eyes to the many early pioneers in this exciting young generation, dreaming and achieving things like no one before them, you open your vision to a blissful future.
Everywhere in the world, young people are rising, with these pioneers as their hero/ines, friends and mentors. You can meet them. And this, dear co-creator of the future, is an opportunity not to be missed.
By the time that you are reading this, Babar’s path has further evolved. Can you imagine where he is right now? Find out, explore, and get involved. There is so much that you can do to become part of this story. And embark on the great quest of our lifetime: Creating a world of peace and abundance for all. Are you joining?
Website: www.babar.youth-leader.org
Special thanks go to Sanjukta Basu, India, who visited Babar and captured these wonderful, timeless visual impressions.
Authors:
Eric Schneider loves the miracle of life. As director of Youth-LeadeR, he knows that the solutions for creating abundance for all in our lifetime exist. This fuels his passion for inspiring, equipping and supporting this global young generation to learn and implement humanity’s finest sustainability solutions at home and abroad.
Tanvir Hassan wishes to create a world where everybody gets their five basic rights: food, clothing, house, health-care, education.
Photos: Copyright: Sanjukta Basu, India. Website: www.sanjuktaphotography.wordpress.com
Videos: View Babar’s school “live” in action!
India’s Real Heroes: http://bit.ly/1rFs0J0
The Babar Ali School Project: http://bit.ly/1mWf8eV
INK Talk: http://bit.ly/1rFsgHT
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