Ranjit sir who became the favorite of students by teaching with 'Minko Drishti'

Jestha 29, 2082

Shiv Puri

Ranjit sir who became the favorite of students by teaching with 'Minko Drishti'

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30-year-old Ranjit Mahato, who is teaching students in black pants, juwarikot and dark glasses, doesn't look blind at first glance. He is a teacher of Subalal Mavi in ​​Chandrapur-8 Santapur, a resident of Lauka, Madhavnarayan Municipality-7. Mahato was teaching Nepali subjects to class 10 students with the help of braille on Tuesday.

He is also a student of Sublal Mavi. He enrolled in class 1 in Sublal and studied till 12th. Then he graduated from Janjyoti Multipurpose Campus in Chandrapur in 2078. Passed the Teachers Service Commission exam in February 2080. Being visually impaired, students studying in class 9 can be hired as helpers for the exam, he did just that. The assistant would read the questions, he would answer, the assistant would write. Also passed the commission exam. On 30 Chait 2080, Subalal appeared as a permanent teacher in Mavi.

At first, the students were amazed at how a blind teacher would teach. He took the first period on the first day in class 6. Flipped the braille. Hand taught Chamer social subjects. If the students are happy, he is teaching well. After that, he started teaching Nepali and social subjects to students up to class 10. 

Meena Ghimire, a class 10 student, says that 'Mahto sir's teaching is clearly understandable'. "He teaches one word with the help of braille," she says. One year's experience has made it clear which way to go. 

He carries a large braille book and heads to the classroom. After finishing school, he reaches the nearby hostel, where he lives. They eat in the school canteen in the evening and in the morning. 4,000 per month for that. Ranjith got married to Pramila Kumari from Ganjbhawanipur in Bara on 17th February. He says that when the marriage was going on, the villagers from the girl's side initially tried to provoke him by telling him various things. "Why did you try to insult those who don't have eyes to the point of giving them a daughter," he says, "Even though I don't have the sight of the eyes, I have won over everyone with the sight of the mind." 

He has two brothers. Milo Sanjay and younger Raju have been in Malaysia for two years for foreign employment. Mother Laxmania Devi is happy that her son got a government job. Ranjith goes home every Friday. They stay for two days and come to attend school on Sunday. He easily finds out whose call has come on the mobile. Facebook, WhatsApp, Messenger are used with pleasure. He said that he got great support from other teachers and students in the school. 

When he was two years old, he had a tumor in his eye. Then Father Ramijot showed Jhankri. For a month, Jhankri was shown. But instead of healing, the wound got worse. At last he went to the doctor, by which time the eye was untreatable. "I was young, I don't remember anything, but now my father tells me about the incident where I lost my eye due to relying on a stiletto," he said, "If I had been treated on time, maybe I wouldn't have lost my sight." 

He has become a source of inspiration for others. As a successful teacher, Ranjith started teaching in the school and everyone praised him, said Principal Devanand Chaudhary. "He has the guts to do something even if he loses both eyes," he said, "It is a matter of great courage and effort for a blind person to pass the commission's exam and become a permanent teacher."

Shiv

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