4 hrs Review of Scorching Love - Letters from Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi to his son Devadas: Of fathers and sons.4 hrs Review of Nandita Haksar’s Forgotten Refugees - Two Iraqi Brothers in India: Not just a number.4 hrs Review of Hemwati Nandan Bahuguna - A Political Crusader: A handbook on UP’s turbulent political history.“They know how to request, how to demand for a story,” she says. In contrast, the kids she addressed in Delhi last week were very receptive. They had no space for a story in their life,” she says. I have worked with over three lakh children but never faced children who did not know what a story was. I said No and a boy bravely said, ‘If it is not the truth, then it is a lie.’ I told him, ‘it is a story’. There was a sense of disquiet among the children and one of them asked if it was a true story. “In Kupwara, I once told a story about a bear who wants to climb on to the moon. He lost his father at a young age and became the caregiver to the family,” Paro recalls.”Īnd then, there are other kids, she continues. But before that, he underwent severe trauma after losing near and dear ones to guns and bombs. One of the kids is now grown up and got married. “ I have organised workshops for kids impacted by militancy in Kashmir and over the years, I have developed a personal bond with some of them. It is in their questions that Paro finds answers to socio-economic and geographical divisions in our society. She tells them stories of clouds and rainbow, bear and moon, and encourages them to ask questions. Paro shares a lot about the joy of shared reading with children. Author Paro Anand at a workshop with children in Delhi recently
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