in what ways are the lives of children better than those of their parents in the story children of India by Ruskin Bond
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Children of India
Explanation:
Children of India written by Ruskin bond.
Summary:
- This chapter is written by very famous writer Ruskin Bond.
- In this lesson the narrator describes the difficulties that the Indian children face while going to school.
- These children belong from different areas like deserts, mountains, plains etc.
- Here he tells about a ten years old boy Ran b i r. He climbs a mountain four miles distant and two thousand feet below the town level.
- He goes to school in all the weathers, wearing the same pair of cheap shoes until they have almost fallen apart.
- For this the narrator gives the example of a girl Bi n d ra who is fourteen years old.
- These children face many difficulties to go to school. Like R an bir and his friends cross deodar forest daily.
- As winter approaches and days grow shorter, those children who live far away must quicken their pace in order to reach home before dark.
- Its dark at six and R an bir likes to be out of the deodar forest.
- Usually, he has company of other boys and they all sing loudly to frighten away the forest demons.
- Not only in hills, but all over the India, children are constantly making their way to and from school, in conditions that range from dust storms in the deserts of Rajasthan to blizzards in Lad akh and Kashmir.
- In the Gan jam district of Orissa, children swim or wade across the Dha nei River every day in order to reach school in the absence of a bridge.
- Holding books or bags aloft in one hand, they do the breaststroke or dog paddle with the other, or form a chain and help each other across.
- In the larger towns and cities, there are school buses, but in the remote areas, it is a big problem.
- The narrator says wherever you go in India you will find children helping out with the family’s source of livelihood.
- Only some fortunate parents can afford to send their children to English medium schools and those children are really fortunate.
- While the great majority children in India still attend schools run by the state or municipality.
- These vary from the good to the bad, depending on how they are run and where they are situated.
Question and Answers
Q1-What does Ranbir do with the money that the narrator gives him?
- Ranbir uses the money to buy books or small things needed at home that the narrator gives him.
Q2- What was the scenario of girls’ education till a few years ago?
- Very few girls in the hills or in the villages were allowed to attend school for a long time. They helped at home until they were old enough to be married.
Q3- What does Bindra’s father work as and how does the narrator know him?
- Bindra’s father is a forest guard. The narrator knows him as he met him on his walk through the deodar forest behind Landour.
Q4- Why does Bindra cut grass with her mother?
- Bindra cuts grass with her mother because the monsoon will end and the grass will dry up soon.
Q5- Why do children need to quicken their pace while returning home?
- Children need to quicken their pace while returning home in order to get home before dark.
Q6- What do Ranbir and his friends do when they go back home in the dark?
- When Ranbir and his friends go back home in the dark they sing loudly most of the way and one of them play flute to frighten the forest demons.
Q7- Who does the narrator see every day?
- The narrator sees the children going from their homes to school everyday.
Q8- Where are they (children) going?
- They were going to school.
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