Willpower, perseverance triumph over adversity | ||
By ZODIN SANGA | ||
Aizawl, May 12 : Impossible has no place in the lexicon of 18-year-old Paukhanmunga.
Most people may lose hope after losing
both their hands, that too at a tender age of nine. But Paukhanmunga,
through his sheer perseverance and indomitable will, decided to carry on
with his education and his hard work bore fruit after he passed the
higher secondary examination of the Mizoram Board of School Education
this year.
Tragedy struck in 2005 after he finished
mowing the grass near the electric transformer at Khawkhawn village near
the Manipur border in northeastern Mizoram. When he switched on the
transformer, the high voltage surge from the machine knocked him down.
He said he was asked to mow the grass by his uncle, who was an employee
in the power department.
When he regained consciousness, he was in
Aizawl Civil Hospital. The doctors had to amputate his hands to save his
life. “I lost all hope and the world had ended for me while I was lying
in the hospital. Then, a man visited me and wrote something on a paper
which gave me the courage to fight on,” Paukhanmunga said.
The man who visited Paukhanmunga in the
hospital was Lalchamliana, a popular singer, who had also lost both his
hands as a child. “My dear friend Munga, you are a normal person. You
can do anything if you have the will,” was Lalchamliana’s message.
The first thing that Paukhanmunga did once
he returned to his village after 47 days in hospital was to go back to
school. “In the first few months, my friends and teachers took notes for
me. But by the year-end exams, I could use my arms to write,” he
recalled. When he passed Class X from his village school, it was to the
much amazement of all villagers and his family. His mother insisted he
give up studies because of financial problems after his father passed
away. But he felt that he had the qualification to pursue his dream of
further studies.
“Forget relatives, we did not have any
friend in Aizawl. But my ambition was to continue higher education
there,” Paukhanmunga said.
After running from pillar to post,
Paukhanmunga finally approached L. Thangmawia, a college lecturer in
Aizawl, who was a native of his village.
The lecturer agreed to provide all possible assistance to the boy to help him get admitted to a higher secondary school.
After some efforts, the Mamawii Higher
Secondary School in Aizawl gave special consideration and admitted him
even after their seats were full.
Even though Paukhanmunga did not get any
compensation from the power department, the State Council of Educational
Research and Training (SCERT) has provided him financial assistance of
Rs 1,600 per year since 2005 till he passed Class XII. In Aizawl, some
generous people and the Zoram Educational Trust (ZET) also provided him
financial assistance.
Paukhanmunga lives in a rented house at
Mission Vengthlang here with his mother who sells vegetables for a
living. “My ambition is to become a graduate and look for a job to feed
my family. Side-by-side, I will pursue higher education in university,”
he said. His elder brother works in a jhum field in his village.
Given a chance, he wants to become a motivational speaker for physically challenged teenagers like him.
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