India

Foundation for Freedom currently has 10 schools in India.

India

About India

India One third the size of the United States, India is home to over one billion people. The diversity and complexity of this country provide incredible challenges to its leaders:

  • Complexity of language - 30% of Indians speak Hindi while 18 other languages have official status, and English is the official government and business language.
  • Complexity of religions - the birthplace of Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, and Sikhism, at this point approximately 80% of Indians are Hindu, 12% Muslim, and 2% Sikh.
  • Complexity of social status - social castes still determine the future of many Indians and amplify the serious gap between the urban wealthy and the three hundred and fifty million poor in the country.

For nearly twenty years, Mahatma Gandhi led a nationalist movement to win India's independence from Great Britain, and eventually succeeded in 1947. Although Indians embrace Gandhi's legacy of spirituality and leadership, many lament the absence of those values in recent governments who have not adequately addressed areas of sanitation, health care, education, and housing for all citizens.

India is primarily an agricultural economy, half of the country is under cultivation, with growing economies in textiles, tourism, and high technology. Although urban roads are developed, rural roads are often impassable in heavy rains.

The tsunami of 2004 that killed thousands of people and displaced 150,000 more, was only one of numerous natural disasters that plague the country including floods, droughts, and earthquakes. The challenges to developing a sustainable social infrastructure are vast.

Educational Challenges

"Education is the basic tool for the development of consciousness and the reconstitution of society." - Mahatma Gandhi

Of all the world's illiterate people, 35% live in India1. Despite recent economic growth, India still faces an incredible lack of basic resources for many of its people.

Although schooling is free and compulsory from 6-14 years of age, facilities are inadequate and often totally lacking. Approximately 40% of students, mostly girls, drop out by secondary school1.

Without a dramatic shift in addressing this situation, it is estimated that by the year 2020 over 50% of the illiterate population will live in India.

Although The 93rd Constitutional Amendment establishes free and compulsory elementary education as a fundamental right of all citizens of India, certain endemic problems obstruct this effort, including:

  • Low public sector spending on education
  • Low enrollments and continued high drop-out rates
  • Low levels of educational achievement
  • Gender and caste disparities
  • Poor quality of education and inappropriate curriculum
  • Lack of motivation among teachers and their recruitment
  • Poor management of school system2
    (Human Development Project 2004)

In addition to the great intra-state inequalities in the system, a high rate of dropping out hampers the effective educating of children. The two main reasons for students to drop out are at the direction of their parents for various reasons and by the school system that eliminates certain kinds of students.

In "Tryst with Destiny", India's 1947 independence commitment, the new government determined to eliminate ignorance. Yet in the intervening sixty years, the hurdles to overcoming this effort have stymied progress. In 2005, it is estimated that 35 million primary school aged children were not enrolled3.

This is where Foundation for Freedom comes in.


(1) UNESCO Institute for Statistics 
(2) Human Development Report - India (2001)
(3) World Vision India (2006)

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