Like many others, my family suffered from partition—on the eastern side. My father and his family migrated from East Pakistan (Bangladesh) to what was then undivided Assam. At the time, my father was 23 years old, having completed his A from the University of Dhaka. He always wanted to do a master's, but couldn't because the dislocation meant he couldn't get a migration certificate that was essential to study in some other university. Consequently, he placed a premium on education. Since he couldn't apply this to his own life, he extended the aspiration to his son's. He enrolled me in a "Western missionary" school. I now realize that, given his financial situation, this is something he could ill afford. Then, somewhere around the age of nine, scholarships took over and financed the rest of my education. I wonder what would have happened had those scholarships not been there. How would my father have managed my education?
I don't think my parents were exceptional. In the 1950s and 60s, many families saved and scrimped for the sake of children's education. At the time, it was more boys than girls. Pre- and post-independence, there was always a relatively elite section that managed to get their offspring educated. That was different. Here, I am flagging a generation that may broadly be called the lower middle class. In search of a better life for their children, they went beyond their means and succeeded.
This story is from the November 02, 2024 edition of The New Indian Express.
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This story is from the November 02, 2024 edition of The New Indian Express.
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