Everything was usual on that
day at St. Mary’s lower primary school Puttekkara, third grade ‘B’ batch.
Everything included rhymes of poet Cherusseri and Kunchan Nambiar behind the
cardboard partition walls of the classrooms,
routine commotion of students and
habitual teacher’s order “Keep silence”. A silent boy Jo in the middle of a
wrong group; or may be the right group; that he does not know. He found another
boy drenched in the coconut oil as his daily bench companion. That was his
usual appearance in the class. White skin over his skull was clear with Coconut
oil dripping from his combed head,
spreading over the desk and bench of the class. Desks were slippery on
certain days. But he was a good boy; Jo remembered. Most of the good boys of
those days appeared oily on the head and face. Jo captured that boy’s attention
by showing first magic of his life. He cut rough paper into small thin tiny pieces
and rubbed a plastic scale on the boy’s oily head.
After a suspense, Jo told
him “Now you see the magic.” He placed the plastic scale one centimetre above
the pieces of paper. Oil boy and others were surprised; the way paper pieces
jumped up and stick on to the scale like a magnet. The whole batch surrounded to
watch the magic activity; uproar doubled. One of the teachers excited by the
magnetic power of plastic scale reported the incident at headmistress office.
The teacher was in a different state of mind. She did not want to miss any
opportunity that may hit the new young scientist. Headmistress Edith summoned
Jo at office room to discuss on his invention. Many students followed him to
office room to hear about the result of Jo’s invention. Headmistress observed
the plastic scale and asked Jo to repeat his experiment. After watching the
action of paper pieces,
Sister Edith nodded head
in acceptance, addressed the teacher and Jo, “There may be a science behind
this. There may not be anything new to be reported to Rome. All of you, go to
your classes. Please Disperse…”
The curious lot from the
class were not happy with headmistress verdict. Boys wanted to hear something
extra ordinary. Being a scientist for a day till Annie teacher’s arrival was
not a bad deal for Jo. Senior teacher Annie heard about the incident from
headmistress and immediately walked into the 3B Batch with authority. Annie
teacher gave a final verdict convincing all students.
“It is static
electricity. There is nothing new. No need to create any noise about it. keep
silence.” She audaciously completed her statements. Annie teacher called Jo and
took him to the school office room for his second trial in front of
headmistress Sister Edith. Annie teacher affectionately talked to him.
“You know… once you reach
bigger classes you will learn about it…”
Nevertheless, headmistress Edith wanted to take a decision based on his finding. Sister Edith frowned at Annie teacher looking through her black rectangular glass frame in dilemma. “What should I do now?” Annie teacher recommended headmistress to move Jo into third grade batch C, Jo’s first horizontal promotion. Maybe it was a trick of the teachers to avoid the noisy confusion created by the new discovery.
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