Sanjit Bunker Roy | |
Birth Name: | Sanjit Roy |
Birth Date: | 1945 6, df=y |
Birth Place: | Burnpur, Bengal Presidency, British India |
Alma Mater: | St. Stephen's College, Delhi |
Occupation: | Social activist & founder of Barefoot College |
Nationality: | Indian |
Sanjit "Bunker" Roy (born 30 June 1945) is an Indian social activist and educator who founded the Barefoot College. He was selected as one of Time 100's 100 most influential personalities in 2010 for his work in educating illiterate and semi literate rural Indians.[1] Roy was awarded the Padma Shri by Giani Zail Singh in 1986.
He attended The Doon School from 1956 to 1962, and St. Stephen's College, Delhi from 1962 to 1967.[2]
He was the Indian National Squash champion in 1965 and also participated in three world squash championships representing India .
Bunker is a founder of what is now called Barefoot College.[3] After conducting a survey of water supplies in 100 drought-prone areas, Roy established the Social Work and Research Centre in 1972. Its mission soon changed from a focus on water and irrigation to empowerment and sustainability. The programs focused on siting water pumps near villages and training the local population to maintain them without dependence on outside mechanics, providing training as paramedics for local medical treatment, and on solar power to decrease dependence and time spent on kerosene lighting.
He was recognized in 2010 in Time for the programs of the college which have trained more than 3 million people in skills including solar engineers, teachers, midwives, weavers, architects, and doctors.
He was married to ex-IAS Aruna Roy in 1970.
Roy was appointed by Rajiv Gandhi to the government's Planning Commission. He recommended that legislation be created that would apply a "code of conduct" for non-governmental organizations. He also proposed that a national council be created that would recommend "legitimate" organizations to the government and monitor their activities. Both of these recommendations were "fiercely" opposed as mechanisms that could be used to promote patronage of favored groups and quell organizations that were not supportive of a particular government or party.[4]
In 1983, he was the plaintiff in Roy v State of Rajasthan in which the Supreme Court struck down an emergency policy which had allowed women famine relief workers to be paid less than male workers.[5]
Roy has spoken at the TED conference,[6] in which he talks about how the Barefoot College "helps rural communities becomes self-sufficient."[7]