Haji Public School | |
Postcode: | 182201 |
Schooltype: | Voluntary |
Motto: | Terras Irradient |
Motto Translation: | Let Them Illumine the Earth |
Free Label1: | Motto |
Free Text1: | Terras Irradient - Let Them Illumine the Earth |
Free Label2: | Mission |
Free Text2: | "To make education accessible to the inaccessible" |
Free Label3: | Focus |
Free Text3: | "To provide good quality education in the village." |
Founder: | Mr Nasir Haji |
Category: | School |
Principal: | Tasneem Akhtar Malik |
Headmistress: | Rahida Attu |
Teaching Staff: | 20 |
Grades Label: | to override the default label --> |
Nursery Years Taught: | , |
Primary Years Taught: | , |
Secondary Years Taught: | for additional information --> |
Gender: | Co-education |
Lower Age: | and |
Upper Age: | --> |
Age Range: | --> |
Age Range: | --> |
Enrolment: | 419 |
Enrolment As Of: | 2022 |
Medium Of Language: | English |
Hours In Day: | 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. |
Campus Type: | Rural |
Houses: | GONDOR, Moria, Rivendell, Rohan |
Picture Caption: | Haji Public School during winters |
Lastupdate: | 28 December 2016 |
Haji Public School is a non-profit educational institution established in 2009 by the Haji family in Breswana, their ancestral village located in the Doda district of Jammu and Kashmir, Northern India. [1] [2]
The school primarily serves low-income farming families, constituting the majority of the local population. It is registered as a K-10 institute and is affiliated with the Jammu and Kashmir State Board of School Education (JKBOSE).
Located in a rural setting, the school caters to children from surrounding mountain villages. Funding for the school is sourced privately through contributions from the Haji family, their associates, and online donations.. [3] [4]
In 2008, Sabbah Haji moved back from Bengaluru to her native village Breswana.[5] There, she saw that nearly two generations of villagers had no education due to inaction by the government and militancy. At an elevation of over 7,500 feet, with no motor access to the rest of the state, this mountain region's education had languished in the past few decades. Although government schools existed in the area, Sabbah dismissed them as inefficient, lacking faculties, teachers and turning out degree students who could not read
The school was built on land donated by her family and was initially set up under the '
Since its beginning on May 4th, 2009, the Haji Public School has aimed – "to impart knowledge to those children who cannot avail themselves of the academic facilities being provided to others, in more accessible cities". The village inhabitants petitioned to support the Haji family in starting and building a school. Over the winter of 2008, Sabbah Haji and her mother, Tasneem Haji, trained two boys from the village in order to turn them into teachers. With no initial construction, they worked out of two rooms in their ancestral house. They started at the ground level, teaching only the lower and upper kindergarten students. The first class at the Haji Public School comprised 25 kids.[8]
The school now has its own building, and it is growing every year., the school has over 350 students. The school has expanded its branches further in nearest villages such as Persholla and Shadiwan.[9]
Haji Public School is located in the village Breswana, of Doda district in Jammu and Kashmir.
Due to lack of qualified teachers in and around the village, the proper volunteer program was started in year 2012. Apart from the few regular teaching staff, the school relies heavily on the volunteers coming in from all around the world. The local staff members are only capable of teaching until the second grade. Until December 2016, Haji Public School has had over 62 teaching volunteers from Canada, Singapore, the US, South Africa, France and India. Several of them have returned for multiple long-term stints with Haji Public School.[10] [11]
The campus includes a basketball court, computer lab, library, playground, and wall climbing area. The school charges a monthly tuition. Its books and paper supplies are funded by the Amin Trust.