F
or the last 40 years, the long-term mission of the Barefoot College, located in the small village of Tilonia in Rajasthan, India, has been to work with the marginalized, the exploited, and the impoverished. Our goal is to help them lift themselves, with dignity and self-respect, over the poverty line. It is the first and only rural college in India built by the poor and exclusively for the poor. The “barefoot” approach reflects Mahatma Gandhi’s central beliefs that the knowledge, skills, and wisdom found in the villages should be used for their own development; that technology should be demystified and decentralized into the hands of the rural poor; and that marginalized women should be given equal opportunities to learn. The idea is to apply the knowledge and skills that the rural poor already possess for their own development. Living conditions at the college are simple so that the poor feel comfortable. Everyone sits, eats, and works on the floor. Everyone earns a living wage rather than a market wage. The spiritual atmosphere at the college reflects a working relationship that is totally dependent on mutual trust, religious harmony, patience, compassion, equality, and generosity. The college believes that the very poor have every right to access, control, manage, and own the most sophisticated of technologies to improve their own lives. Just because they cannot read and write is no reason why very poor and illiterate men and women cannot be water and solar engineers, designers, communicators, healthcare providers, architects, and rural social entrepreneurs. To date, several thousand trainees have accomplished extraordinary things, confirming the wisdom of Mark Twain’s proverb that we should never let school interfere with education.
26 PRISM Magazine