An Exercise in Self-Help: Pakistan’s Garage School Offers Its Students a Way Out of Poverty
by Zubeida Mustafa
- Pakistan -
Anil is now a young man of 19, studying for his high school examinations at Bahria College. He is also working a summer job with a cell phone company to earn a few extra rupees for his family.
Coming from a poor family – his father works as a part-time cleaner – Anil’s chances of improving his life were indeed bleak until his mother sent him to Shabina. In a country that spends barely two percent of its GDP on education, Pakistan has only scarce resources to provide a decent education to 60 million or so children under 15; not all can hope to be educated. According to Pakistan’s 2007-2008 Economic Survey, only 57 percent of children (age 10 years and above) are enrolled in school.
In this context, Anil’s case is a heart-warming story of how well-meaning humanitarian efforts by dedicated individuals can make a world of difference for children who would otherwise be consigned to the depths of poverty, underdevelopment and illiteracy. Without education, the country cannot facilitate the acquisition of skills and training necessary for its people to seize opportunities and employment. Education is the most basic tool for poverty alleviation; its absence adversely affects the economic productivity of the workforce and the country’s overall economic progress. This is the tragedy of Pakistan.
When Shabina first launched her school, she had no idea that she would be able to expand so quickly and reach out to so many children. Initially she started with 15 students from her neighborhood – generally the sons and daughters of domestics working in the homes of the rich, as well as the lower class, poorly paid office workers. Enrollment grew quite rapidly; today there are 115 children studying in The Garage School.
• Many of The Garage School's student receive education that they would otherwise not get from the Pakistani government. •
Holding up her outstretched palm, Shabina also talks about the “five-finger formula” that defines her schooling philosophy. In Urdu it stands for “Tor, Tariqa, Tarbiyat, Taaleem and Taraqqi,” or “Grooming, Approach, Training, Education and Progress,” a well-rounded mission that entails not only teaching her students the alphabet but discipline and culture as well. She talks of the values she instills in her children (honesty, hard work, hygiene and health) as equaling a “human being.”
Another factor has helped The Garage School produce great human beings: its approach to inter-faith relationships. Shabina’s students are of different religious denominations – Muslim, Christian, Hindu and Sikh, but all religious festivals are celebrated with equal zeal. At Christmas they attend a mass at church. The Muslim festivals bring all of them together and for Guru Nanak’s birthday Shabina takes them all to the Sikh gurdwara (temple). What better lesson in tolerance could there be for a country where religious bigotry has emerged as a major evil?
• One of The Garage School's many success stories, Anil is now studying business at the university. •
The Garage School is now in the process of even more expansion. “Now I will start holding classes for the school, [keeping] examinations on my own premises. Instead of sending children all over the city, I will now keep them in my own school in the new building I have acquired. I will also hold classes for adult literacy and vocational skill workshops. But the Garage will remain as the starting point for education in my school,” Shabina says, full of pride.
Shabina’s inspiration to launch this ambitious venture comes from a place close to her heart. Her late husband, an officer in the Pakistan Air Force who was killed in the 1971 war in Bangladesh, always had a dream: “He wanted to educate the children of the poor,” Shabina explains. “This is my tribute to him,” she says as her eyes beam.
- All images courtesy of The Garage School
About the Author
Zubeida Mustafa is a journalist from Pakistan where she works for a daily paper. She obtained a Master’s degree in International Relations from the University of Karachi and has also studied at the London School of Economics and Political Science.
Zubeida began her professional career as a researcher with papers appearing in Pakistan Horizon (Journal of the Pakistan Institute of International Affairs), The World Today (Journal of the Royal Institute of International Affairs, London), The Roundtable, Pacific Community, The International Lawyer (Journal of the American Bar Association), Publications of the Centre for European Studies (University of Karachi), Heartland: Eurasian Review of Geopolitics, International Policy Review and Logo.
Zubeida’s journalism has been published extensively in Pakistan and she has also written for The Washington Post, Financial Mail and Macleans. She is mainly interested in social issues, especially education, health, population, women and children. Zubeida has been awarded the Population Institute’s Global Media Award for Excellence twice.
Email Zubeida at zubeidam@gmail.com

Comments (2)
Dear Zubeida,
Thank you for a very powerful article. It is so clear how one intention and effort alone can lead to mass-change.
Thanks,
Parul Sharma
India/Sweden
Posted by Parul S | July 9, 2008 11:43 AM
I often fantasize what the world would be like if all children were given a good education, a nutritious diet, and preventive health care. How many Garage School's would it take? Thank you Zubeida for this uplifting story of a strong and determined woman.
Posted by Elisa | July 24, 2008 6:08 PM