Field Notes: A Week in Barmer with the Scholarship Awardees
We arrived at 6am on a Tuesday to find the students already in the library. They had been there since 4:30. In Barmer, the heat decides the timetable: the only hours fit for concentration are the ones before the sun takes the day, so the serious students claim them.
A language does not die when the last speaker does. It dies when no one writes to carry it forward.
Home visits are the part of this work that no spreadsheet captures. You sit on the floor of a one-room house, drink tea you cannot refuse, and listen to a mother explain - without a trace of self-pity - the arithmetic of sending a daughter to school. The numbers are always tight. The resolve is always enormous.
What strikes you, visit after visit, is how little is wasted. A scholarship here is not spent on comfort; it is spent on the next sibling, the next term, the next small margin of safety. Families treat the money as a trust, and they account for it more carefully than most institutions we have worked with.
We left Barmer with full notebooks and a familiar feeling - that the foundation's job is smaller and harder than it sounds. Not to inspire these students, who need no inspiring, but simply to stay out of their way and remove, one by one, the obstacles between them and a classroom.
