Tuesday, February 15, 2022

The Ullannur experiment

 75 years ago my grandfather started a rural school in our small village in Kerala where I studied from 1957 to 1960. It...read about his experiment ...extract from a book by Duance Spencer Hatch(an American who spent a lot of time here with his wife in the thirties) published in 1938 by Oxford University Press.We are trying to revitalise this school.


THE STORY OF OOLLANNORE 


ALONG a country road that follows a small brook in 

the narrow Oollannore Valley, came a barefooted high 

school boy. It was moonlight and after nine o'clock. 

He was on his way home from teaching in a night school 

of depressed class and untouchable children. He was 

a Christian boy. His mother was watching for him 

from the high cliff a little way out along the, road from 

home. She had a complete clean suitshirt and 

mundoo ready for him. 


“Dip yourself in the brook, Keevarchen, and put on 

these clean clothes ', she called. Every night when he 

came from the night school he had to do this because 

he had been with the untouchables. 


She was a good Christian woman and a very good 

mother : she was only training her son in the general 

custom at that time concerning the untouchables. In- 

deed, Keevarchen's father was even more carefuL 

Every time he came from market he dipped in the 

brook ; and the rule was that there must be a man to 

watch so that, if necessary, this man could testify that 

the dipping had been ' all over '. Even when he came 

in from the fields where he directed the working of 

farm labourers, he dipped in the brook before going 

up to his house, for were not these labourers Parayas 

and Pulayas, depressed and untouchable ? 


That was thirty years ago. 


This school boy was M. K. Varghese, the founder 

and living spirit of the new Oollannore Rural 

Reconstruction Institute which has been founded on the 

six acres of the land surrounding the same old home. 

The main school building and the smaller ones are 

grouped around the old house on the bluff high above 

the road. 


Socialization in action is the outstanding character- 

istic of the Oollannore project ; and at every function 

the most striking phenomenon is that men and women, 

boys and girls, of all classes and creeds, including the 

former depressed and untouchables, all the people of 

the Valley are there, moving happily together without 

any sense of contamination. 


I consider this Institute one of the most important 

developments in the field of Rural Reconstruction in 

the past two years. Its aim is so to reorient education 

that the young people of this valley will not have any 

abnormal discontent to make them want to get away 

to the cities ; that the school shall so train them that 

the majority should be able to return to the lands of 

their fathers and live there a happy and successful 

life. It is expected that in ten years time there .will 

have come about in the Valley a complete upward 

change toward a more abundant life, the school being 

the social and educational centre for both old and 

young. This is a new kind of Centre the School 

Centre. All the teachers, who are well above the 

standard of usual rural teachers, act as extension 

workers in their spare time, much as our extension men 

work out from Martandam Centre. This project is 

an activity of the little Oollannore YMCA which works 

under honorary, unpaid leadership as so many YMCAs 

in our area do. 


In addition to the benefits to Oollannore Valley, we 

expect that this project will be an example which may 

be studied and will have an influence throughout 

India and beyond. 


A system of education suited to the needs of rural 

areas is a pressing need in India today. Probably all 

educationists agree that the present system is unsuited 

to such a rural country and that it is producing a grow- 

ing problem of the somewhat-educated unemployed. 

The wrong orientation of the present system has been 

clearly pointed out by several expert committees and 

several educationists. 


The Royal Commission on Agriculture in India said, 

* Unemployment is being accentuated by the present 

system of education . . . agricultural-bias schools are a 

remedy.' The Auxiliary Committee of the Indian 

Statutory Commission supported this view saying that 

the present system based on urban requirements is 

wasteful and harmful. The Travancore t Unemploy- 

ment Inquiry Committee reported that the present 

system of education had neglected the formation and 

training of character, and that its contribution to the 

economic development of the State has been disappoint- 

ing. They recommend that English and Vernacular 

middle schools in rural areas should be converted into 

agricultural-bias schools. The Travancore Educational 

Reforms Committee recommended the establishment of 

vocational-bias schools. 


' After many years of experience and effort in the 

villages of the Punjab/ says Mr F. L. Brayne, Rural 

Reconstruction Commissioner, ' I am convinced that 

there is no better or cheaper agency possible for re- 

making Indian villages than rural uplift schools.' Dr 

Kenyon L. Butterfield reported, in his Christian Mission 

In Rural India, ' The real nucleus of rural uplift is 

the village school. It should give the village boys and 

girls an education that fits them for life in the village. 

Adult education should be an important feature of the 

school/ 


As I write the Government of Madras after a survey 

of its whole field of elementary and secondary educa- 

tion have issued a communique which points out ' the 

defects in the present elementary education system and 

its curricula, including the antiquated methods and 

the divorce of teaching from environment. It empha- 

sizes the need for rural bias 


We hope that Oollannore will show the way. If it 

is to do so the curriculum is very important. Obvious- 

ly a school with its pupils taking part in agriculture 

and gardening on these six acres of land, doing poultry- 

keeping, bee-keeping, weaving, other cottage industries, 

and domestic science, cannot do all these things 

adequately and well, and at the same time keep on 

doing all that is required in an ordinary school. 


Mr Vargfrese and his fellow educators have drawn 

up a syllabus which is just now being considered by 

the Education Department of Government. It in- 

cludes rural reconstruction subjects, domestic science, 

enough fundamental subjects, and enough cultural 

subjects to provide a good education for a happy and 

successful life in rural India. The pupils come* to 

Oollannore after four years of study in eight ordinary 

primary schools in the area around. They stay at 

Oollannore the fifth, sixth, and seventh years. If they 

then begin life as farmers, business men, traders, or 

home-makers, they may continue reading with the aid 

of books from the school's circulating library, they will 

have the benefit of the adult education and extension 

programmes, and constantly visit the school as their 

social centre. 


'What about the small percentage of these rural 

youths who really ought to go on to High School and 

College ? ' After finishing the seventh class at Oollan- 

nore, such a pupil may join the Second Form in an 

English school and proceed straight on through High 

School and College. Had he gone to the English 

school in the first place he would have been in the 

Third Form instead of the Second, but from being in 

the Oollannore School, he has gained all the extra 

richness of that fuller training. Even tnough he will 

study a year longer before going to College, he will 

have saved Rs. 24 in total fees, a big amount to poor 

parents, since the fees at Oollannore are only Rs. 18 

for three years, whereas in the First Form of the Eng- 

lish School alone, of which he skips the fee, is Rs. 24 for 

the year. 


It is interesting to note that a larger percentage of 

boys from the Oollannore school passed the regular 

Government Vernacular School Examination than boys 

from nearby vernacular schools. This is in line with 

experience in other countries where pupils who spend part 

time on vocational projects do as well in cultural subjects 

as those who spend full time on cultural subjects. 


The school provides a meeting-place for the officers 

of the Government Agricultural, Industrial, Co-opera- 

tive, and Public Health Departments enabling them 

to come in touch with the rural people. The results 

of the experiments conducted by these departments are 

communicated to the people and translated into action 

through the medium of the school and its teachers in 

their extension teaching. 


It is the remarkable co-operative spirit at Oollannore 

that impresses everybody. When sanction for this 

school was received two days after the state schools 

opened for the year, they were not sure how many pupils 

would come. The first day there was only one pupil 

administered to by two high grade teachers in a room 

in the old Varghese home. In a month there were 

103 pupils. The very urgent need for at least a roof 

to cover the pupils and the teachers was manifest. 

Hindus and Christians of all castes and creeds and 

conditions joined together, and in one day built and 

thatched a very substantial shed, adequate in size to 

house this growing school. 


Then this co-operative spirit began to spread through- 

out the whole Valley. Across the fields stood the 

Jacobite Church without any roof; it had been 

roofless for nearly twenty years. An eye-witness of 

how the co-operative spirit took hold of this situation 

writes : ' Though many people do not believe in 

miracles in the twentieth century, yet a real miracle 

was performed through the Oollannore YMCA. You 

are aware of the great split that cut asunder the Jacobite 

Church of Malabar, about two decades ago. You 

know of the attempts made by Lord Halifax, Bishop 

Gore, Bishop Pakenham-Walsh, and others, to bring 

about peace in the Jacobite Church. The little roof- 

less church which you have seen from the roadside, 

do you know how that little church lost its top ? That 

was due to the great split that took place in this 

Jacobite Church twenty years ago. The parishioners 

of Oollannore were so divided they did not thatch^ the 

roof of the church building. The roof fell down, the 

worship was stopped, and a small jungle grew up in- 

side the church. Thieves could hide behind the 

bushes. All these years there has been no Sunday 

worship, no Sunday School worth the name, no spirit 

of fellowship among the parishioners. Now you must 

come and see what a great change has taken place. The 

parishioners are united. They are one in mind and 

spirit, the jungle has been cleared away, the restoration 

of the church building is taking place in right earnest. 

It is an inspiring sight to see all working as one, the 

Hindus helping with the carrying of stones and other 

materials. It is a sight on which angels in heaven 

look down and smile. It came from the prayers and 

the work of the YMCA members and the school/ 


The Hindu temple was in a dilapidated condition. 

The Christian leaders called the Hindus together and 

talked with them about this. They were all interested 

in every institution in that section being well looked 

after. The temple, like the church, needed a roof 

The villagers recalled an old form of co-operation 

between Hindus and Christians in connexion with the 

temple tank which in olden days was annually cleaned 

by all people joining together. So now they went to 

work, thatched the temple roof, renovated and cleaned 

up the premises. Out of this grew a successful appeal 

to Government who have now taken over the mainten- 

ance and care of this temple an assurance that it will 

be well maintained in future. 


The account continues : ' Oollannore village was 

notorious for petty thefts. There were a "number of 

young men in the village whose habit was to idle away 

their time. They wasted the day in card play and 

sleep ; night was the time of their activity. They 

earned their daily bread by the nightly stealing of the 

agricultural products of their honest neighbours. 

Honest farmers gave up their cultivation because the 

fruits of their labours were snatched away by these 

nocturnal parasites. Now, a great change has taken 

place in these young men. They frequent the reading 

room and library ; they attend the fanners' classes, 

night school, lantern lectures, moral and devotional 

addresses. Personal contact, wholesome influence, and 

the interesting model cultivation in the school com- 

pound has further helped to bring a great change. 

Stealing abandoned, these fellows get wages for some 

of the work at the school, quite sufficient to maintain 

themselves and to make small savings. With the sav- 

ings they have begun to cultivate their own lands. 

When the thieves took to cultivation, the honest 

farmers began again to cultivate, and with redoubled 

energy. There will be a plentiful harvest this year.' 


Drinking was another curse of the village. ' The 

leader of the half dozen confirmed drunkards was the 

terror of the village ', a correspondent from that section 

writes. * Now you must come and see this leader : he 

is now a perfect gentleman, always doing some useful 

work for the school. Our plan is to give him plenty 

of work to do, to give him good company, and to pay 

his wages in kind. He has now given up the drinking 

habit and become a very useful man. The school has 

created a healthy atmosphere in the villages so as to 

make the wicked people feel ashamed of their wicked- 

ness and gradually depart from it.' 


The folk dances of the villages, which are different 

in form from those in the Martandam area, but vigor- 

ous and excellent ones, are being revived. Since the 

school began to encourage them, those who knew them 

have been going from village to village teaching them. 


There was no hospital or qualified medical aid in all 

that region. The Institute desired to run a dispensary. 

A Canadian delegate to the World Conference visited 

Oollannore and gave a few rupees to start a medical 

fund. Then Dr Howard Somervell, the great mission- 

ary surgeon, he who climbed Everest, accepted an 

invitation to open the dispensary and to give one day 

of his busy life to Oollannore. The usual opening 

function is entirely talk ; this was a working opening. 

He was to come at eight in the morning. The day 

before, the sick began to come in or to be brought in. 

Before the doctor arrived the school had registered 

140 patients. By noon he had examined fifty cases and 

he asked the authorities to send away fifty of those 

registered, as he expected there would not be time for 

so many. With his usual vigour he worked straight 

on, eating a bit of bread and butter which they gave 

him at noon, occasionally jumping out of the window 

of the new building and racing round the compound 

to get a bit of air. The people were deeply impressed 

with his good nature and tireless energy. When the 

teachers were annoyed at the great crowds pushing into 

the place to see the doctor work, he was goodnatured, 

mischievously throwing some water on them when it 

was necessary to push them back. He examined 

patients steadily until 9-30 in the night, and then drove 

over a hundred miles back to his hospital at Neyyoor, 

where more patients would be waiting for him. 


Dr Somervell was so impressed with the needs of 

the sufferers of this area that he has agreed to be a 

regular member of staff, visiting periodically. The 

school is now employing a young doctor and a com- 

pounder. The dispensary administers to an average of 

twenty persons a day. The doctor conducts hygiene 

and first-aid classes in the school. 


The Institute's Co-operative Society is of a new type* 

The Valley is frightened of the very word ' co-opera- 

tive'. The usual Co-operative Credit Societies were 

established there. They were unlimited liability 

banks ; borrowing was easy ; there was not ' all-the- 

way supervision '. Many are in debt there today be- 

cause of the failure of that kind of co-operative society. 

Our Oollannore Co-operative had to start with teacher 

members whose participation would create confidence* 

The principle is that no money loans will be given* 

The teachers receive provisions and other necessaries 

of life the cost of which is charged against their pay. 

Members other than teachers can do all their purchas- 

ing and selling through the Society which supplies 

them with such things as manures, seeds, implements, 

yarn for their looms, beehives. 


Two surveys have been completed but not yet fully 

tabulated. One is the general survey conducted on 

the ' sample ' plan under the direction of Miss L. C. 

M. Ouwerkerk, Professor of Economics, H, H. the 

Maharaja's College of Arts, Trivandrum, with the help- 

of the teachers and other local leaders. They prepared 

a special survey form and surveyed 62 families. These 

62 families Represent under the ' sample ' survey system 

620 families of the area. 


The second is a dietary survey conducted under the 

direction of Dr Akroyd of the Government of India 

Nutrition Institute at Coonoor. For this survey it was. 

necessary for a trusted surveyor to be present in every 

house, of the twenty typical families, before every meal, 

as they had to see the materials for each meal of the 

day before cooking. When these findings are tabulat- 

ed, we shall know somewhat exactly what these rural 

people eat and shall be able to take steps for a more 

nutritious* and better balanced diet. The Oollannore 

surveys will be as useful as the surveys we have done 

in other places and which we need to do wherever we 

work. They have emphasized the fact that while the 

expert surveyor is needed to direct, such surveys can 

never be correctly made by outsiders, however expert, 

without the co-operation of a number of local leaders 

who have plenty of local knowledge and the confidence 

of the people. 


I was a bit anxious when I heard that Sir John 

Russell, who had come to India to advise on Agricul- 

tural Science, was to visit Oollannore, for he is a real 

scientist, and we had not yet been able to do things 

very scientifically at Oollannore. However, after the 

visit Mr Varghese wrote : ' It was a grand visit. Though 

the Director of Agriculture on arrival declared that the 

time allotted at Oollannore was only twenty minutes, 

Sir John and party stayed here for two hours. They 

inspected the library, co-operative store, weaving works, 

poultry, bees, and the demonstration farm. Sir John 

had a long talk with the fanners who had assembled 

here. He went rather minutely through the statistics 

of the economic survey. He was alarmed at the 

condition of the villagers. He said, " The Martandam 

ideal as translated into action at Oollannore is the 

right way and the only way for improving t'ne condition 

of the villages. Though slow, it is a sure way." ' 


After one year of school the big shed was no longer 

sufficient, for 250 pupils were in attendance. During 

the past year, they have put up a very substantial school 

building, and classes are being carried on in both the 

big shed and the new stone building. The clay tiles 

for the roof of the big new building arrived by river 

in the picturesque, hand-poled wallams, but the river 

was two miles from the building, and there was no 

money to hire coolies to carry these tiles. About 150 

Oollannore citizens came forward and carried the tiles 

on their heads from the river boats to the Institute. 


Scarcity of funds is the besetting problem. Mr Var- 

ghese and his teachers say over and over again, ' When 

we seem to be down to the lowest depths financially, 

something providential happens/ I had advised 

Varghese to keep his teaching job in the Government 

School six miles away and to direct this institution in 

his spare time. How could he support this large new 

project without this monthly income? He has been 

going ahead on faith putting all he could possibly spare 

of his personal pay into the school. Yet the school 

had such debts in Varghese's name that a month ago 

he received notice from Government that unless by the 

end of the month he paid off his debtors who had 

made attachments against his pay, he would have to 

leave his government job until his debts were paid. 

Then in that dark moment there came from New York 

a cheque in answer to an appeal I had made on the 

Institute's behalf. This enabled Varghese to clear the 

debts and continue to do his work in the High School. 


The teachers at Oollannore are dedicating the years 

here as a labour of love. They work without assurance 

that there will be money to pay them, and for a small 

amount when they were paid. 


The Spencer Hatch Rural Reconstruction Institute 

and School they have paid me the rare compliment of 

naming the whole project after me with its fourteen 

teachers doing extension service, the people of the 

Valley co-operating, is one of the most promising of 

our developments.

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