Photo Stories

Exploring religion and mysticism in rural India using digital media skills

Arbani, a student in our 9th grade class at Nalgonda has been working on an illustrated story all semester. He wanted to demonstrate the first installment. Arbani attends an all Muslim boys school on the extreme outskirts of Hyderabad in a small town called Nalgonda. He wanted to explore issues of religion and mysticism in rural India.

In this short story, notice how the student uses nature as a setting for the crossover between Christian and Muslim faiths to occur. Reading Ralph Waldo Emerson’s ‘On Nature’ may provide the reader with a poetic introduction: “in the woods is perpetual youth.” Arbani sees nature as the proper setting for religions to renew themselves and to mix together through mischief and economic need.  His story lives in the rural woodlands. It emphasizes what Emerson implied but never stated, that in the woods is perpetual wonder. I hope you enjoy this short piece. You will notice a marked difference in their ability to write with an individual voice and produce original ideas. This student has done so with success and many more are to follow. The enchanted wood of childhood not yet reduced to lumber.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZGLOn08r5o0]

Below is a copy of the script.

Once upon a time there was a village. In olden days there was a forest in the village.

In the village there was living a magician. One day the magician was going to the forest. Suddenly he saw two devils by the church. He took a bottle and caught the two devils. He was a very brave man. He caught the devil, who is not one man but two, and put him in the bottle. The devil said please open the bottle cap. The magician said I don’t open bottle caps…you would escape. The magician said I need so much money, I need spirit, I need a show. I’ll put on a magic show.

The magician made the devils his assistant and performed a show in the church. After, the magician took them and went to the devil’s home safely.

The devils are very powerful. The devils broke the bottle and escaped. The devils will is the magician’s will. The devils are happy. The magician is sad. Hear him cry at the mosque, at the muezzin, *his call to prayer.

*Note: Arbani also considered this for his last line:

“Hear him cry at the mosque, at the meuzzin, being alone is also his call to prayer.”


Measuring Student Progress

One student recently asked me if he would be receiving a certificate at the end of the TMS class in March. We haven’t yet talked to Remy & Piya about any end of the year logistics, so my response was ‘Sure, I’ll give you a certificate.’ His next follow up question was ‘Whose signature will be on the certificate?’ to which I said ‘Hmmm…I’ll sign it!’ I’m constantly asked, by students, teachers, and my own family members, why I am in India and what I stand to gain from teaching The Modern Story curriculum. I truly believe in what we are doing, but I wonder how we can effectively assess how students have grown in the past couple of months through the course. As a teacher, it’s easy for me to say what I’ve learned, but it becomes more difficult when I think about this issue from the students’ perspective. I definitely sense their excitement for the class, but wonder how much that has to do with the new friendships that they have made. For now though it seems easiest to understand their progress by reviewing the photographs that they have taken and the stories that they have written.

For their most recent assignment, students at the Railway school were asked to identify a family member or someone in their community to interview. After interviewing them, they took images related to a story about that individual that they would then combine in a Power Point presentation. While many students chose younger brothers and sisters or other immediate family members, I was impressed by Hajera’s choice of a nearby bake shop owner. She asked him why, in addition, to breads and pastries, he also sold soaps, shampoos, and other miscellaneous items. Many other students didn’t push the limits with similarly challenging questions, asking instead what people’s favorite foods were or what their biggest secret was. Her questions were thought provoking, resulting in the creation of a unique story about one of her community members.

Here are a couple of Hajera’s photos for this project:

28
Oct

Islam and India: Student writings on world faiths and recent floods

Mosque

The boys pose in front of their mosque nearest their boarding school

I asked the students to write about a special memory they had. Munna, a student whose group project was on religion, misinterpreted the assignment and wrote to me: Religion is like memory (for) anyone who cannot see with his eyes, he sees with his mind.

Temple

A temple near The Modern Story's fellows' apartment in Abids

When asked, ‘If there was one thing you would change about the world,’ Krrish responded: I would convert the whole world to Islam. I asked him what he would do if he met someone who believed in a different religion and did not want to be converted. He said, ‘I would respect him. But I would tell him how he was living was wrong.’ In response, Krrish will be exploring how the diversity of religions in India relates to him by working on fictional conversations, a dialogue, that he would imagine to take place between himself and people of different faiths that he meets. His responses reminded me a lot of the delicate discussions I took part in with World Faith in Lebanon following the 2006 war. Arbani, an energetic small 9th grader, will be exploring religion through a graphic novel he is working on. He is a visually oriented student who cannot wait to draw and is always sketching something in his notebook. He will be exploring religious tensions in his community, Hyderabad, and India through a series of illustrated stories that I hope to be posting soon.

Near APRS Boys boarding school in Nalgonda outside Hyderabad, India

A Hindu temple near the Muslim APRS Boys school

Another student, Khasim, wrote a poem about the afternoon sunlight near the mosque where he prays:

Afternoon comes
it goes
to the river to ride on buffaloes
to the big animals
and enjoys them all
This way the afternoon, like a crow, enjoys the whole day.

Both religion and issues related to health including dengue, malaria and the recent floods seem to be issues that concern the students on a daily basis. Nadeem, for example, wrote about those Indians that have had to deal with the heavy rains this summer:

Mud in our homes
Mud in our beds
Mud in our bones
Where do we eat.
Where do we sleep.

Sajjid, a student that has a lot of experience with cameras and has been patiently waiting his turn to show his skills, wrote the following about the floods in Andhra Pasha.

There is a man
in the water
in the (midst) of his poverty
floating on the flood
There is a man
by the water
eating all the money.

Osmania Hospital in Hyderabad, India

One theme students will be exploring this semester is health. This is a photo of one of Hyderabad's most famous hospitals: Osmania

Arshan had one of the most poignant insights into the crossroads between religion and the floods in Andhra Pasha in his letter to the Chief Minister:

“Look at how the people are before the flood. Look at how they collect money to help. People go to the Mosque, the Temple, the Church and they all come away with money to give to people of the flood.”


New Photo Stories!

Finally we are able to share with you some of the work done by the students.  These are photo stories made about each school using the photographs taken on their photo scavenger hunts.  Hopefully we will have some complete digital stories for you by the end of this week. 

 

[slideshare id=541079&doc=schoolpresentationboys-1217856959853792-8&w=425]

[slideshare id=541035&doc=girls-school-1217855387130488-9&w=425]


Photo Stories by the Boys

To View the Photo Stories Full Screen, click on the slideshare Link, and then click “full” in the lower right-hand corner.

Group 1:

[slideshare id=290439&doc=group-1-about-school-1204567028609533-2&w=425]

Group 2:

[slideshare id=290438&doc=group-2-about-school-1204567028629939-3&w=425]

Group 3:

[slideshare id=290441&doc=group-3-about-school-1204567036127183-2&w=425]