AID: Our last hurrah
Our farewells continued today as we wrapped up our work with Association for India’s Development. As I ate dinner with two Googlers and Professor Vidya, I realized how lucky our group has been over the trip to meet amazing people from around Hyderabad. Our trips to universities, temples, and cultural events have been excellent, but often spark more questions than answers. The people we have met have been great at answering our questions and giving us a view of Hyderabad that we otherwise would have never known.
The professors, guides, and professionals that we meet all have amazing stories to tell us. Some of the first people we met were three local college students. Just meeting them, talking about the city and what it offers, really opened our eyes to the size and scope of Hyderabad. Last Friday, our gender talk with a professor at Hyderabad Central University gave us the opportunity to learn more about how women have struggled for equal rights in India, but how they have also risen to the highest offices in the land. We spent time exploring the palaces of the Qitub Shah Tombs and the Nizam Palaces with Mr. Abbas, learning about the history of a city with over 1000 years of forts, love stories, and pitched battles.
Tonight, we had a send off dinner at the AID office with Professor Vidya and two Googlers. Throughout the entire program, Professor Vidya has been great. She worked with us to introduce science to the classroom while also helping to expand the outreach of AID through vital posters. I also had the great chance to talk to two Googlers who were a part of AID, helping to tutor children a couple hours of week with fellow coworkers. It is people like them that we hope will continue our work when we leave Hyderabad later this week. It was sad to leave the AID office for the last time on our trip, but we know that we cannot change the educational system in India by ourselves. It will take a concerted effort from the entire community to help force the seismic shift necessary to change education in India.
Hyderabad has truly grown on us as a city. The people are friendly, if not curious, from the youngest child to the oldest resident. Many of them are brilliant and can offer a beautiful and detailed account of Charminar, Golconda fort, or just how to make a great masala chai. I am truly sad that I will soon have to say goodbye, at least for now.