Mathew Moothasseril
unread,Mar 25, 2019, 10:18:01 PM3/25/19Sign in to reply to author
Sign in to forward
You do not have permission to delete messages in this group
Either email addresses are anonymous for this group or you need the view member email addresses permission to view the original message
to santhome, mstgeneralate, syromalaba...@googlegroups.com
Franciscan monk named world’s best teacher
March 25, 2019 Matters India
Tabichi holding up the trophy for the Global Teacher Prize as he
celebrates with actor Hugh Jackman (L)
+ -
Dubai, 25 Mar : A Franciscan monk who gives away most of his earnings
to the poor has been handed a prize for the world’s best teacher.
Peter Tabichi won the $1 million (£760,000) Global Teacher Prize for
2019 on Saturday.
The maths and physics teacher, who works at a secondary school in a
remote village in Kenya’s Rift Valley, gives away 80 per cent of his
monthly income to the poor, organisers said.
He received the prize at a ceremony in Dubai hosted by Hollywood star
Hugh Jackman.
The 39-year-old educator was praised for his achievements in the
deprived school with crowded classes and few text books.
Tabichi, or Brother Peter as he is also known, said: ‘It’s not all
about money. Every day in Africa we turn a new page and a new chapter…
This prize does not recognise me but recognises this great continent’s
young people. I am only here because of what my students have
achieved.
‘This prize gives them a chance. It tells the world that they can do
anything,’ he added after beating nine finalists from around the world
to claim the award.
As Tabichi was handed the trophy by the Hollywood actor, he wiped away
tears of joy at scooping the prize.
The teacher is a Franciscan monk – a member of the Catholic religious
order founded by St Francis of Assisi in the 13th Century.
Tabichi, teaches at the Keriko Mixed Day Secondary School in Pwani
village, in a remote, semi-arid part of Kenya’s Rift Valley, where
drought and famine are frequent and many children are orphaned.
The Dubai-based Varkey Foundation, which organises the event and
handed out the prize for the fifth time, praised Tabichi’s
‘dedication, hard work and passionate belief in his students’ talent’.
All this combined, it said in a statement, ‘has led his
poorly-resource school in remote rural Kenya to emerge victorious
after taking on the country’s best schools in national science
competitions’.
He said ‘science is the way to go’ for the children’s futures after
collecting his award.
Around 95 per cent of the school’s pupils ‘hail from poor families,
almost a third are orphans or have only one parent, and many go
without food at home,’ the statement added.
‘Drug abuse, teenage pregnancies, dropping out early from school,
young marriages and suicide are common.’
To get to school, some students have to walk seven kilometres (four
miles) along roads that become impassable during the rainy season.
The school, with a student-teacher ration of 58 to 1, has only one
desktop computer for the pupils and poor internet, but despite that
Tabichi ‘uses ICT in 80 per cent of his lessons to engage students’,
the foundation said.
Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta congratulated Tabichi in a video
message, saying ‘your story is the story of Africa, a young continent
bursting with talent’.
source: Daily Mail
--
*GATHER THE SCATTERED*
Fr Mathew Moothasseril
Sant Thoma Bhavan
Post Box 306
RAMAN MALA
Kolhapur,416 003
Maharashtra
INDIA