Extraordinary Indians: Sonam Wangchuk's Mission to Reimagine Schools, Water, and Work in the Himalayas

Through SECMOL and the Himalayan Institute of Alternatives, he is creating self-sustaining models for education and climate resilience.

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Through SECMOL and the Himalayan Institute of Alternatives, he is creating self-sustaining models for education and climate resilience.

If you look up the name Phunsukh Wangdu on Google, the problem-solving Ladakhi teacher from 3 Idiots, played by Aamir Khan, the first search result that pops up is the page of Sonam Wangchuk. The character was inspired by, not based on, Wangchuk’s life, as he’s quick to remind, not without a bit of irritation in his voice.

Who is Sonam Wangchuk? He is an engineer, innovator and education reformist who won the Magsaysay award last year for his contribution towards the progress of the Ladakhi community by harnessing nature, culture and education. There’s a long list of awards and honours, including recognition from the Jammu and Kashmir government and an Ashoka fellowship, among others.

Wangchuk founded Students’ Educational and Cultural Movement of Ladakh (SECMOL) with a group of Ladakhi students in 1988, at the age of 22. The non-profit was born out of a desire to improve primary education for Ladakhi children, 95 per cent of whom were ‘failing’ in school. Or rather the state school system was failing them, with unfamiliar languages as a medium of instruction, and untrained teachers who emphasized learning through rote, which led to Ladakhi children dropping out of school.

Witnessing this, Wangchuk asked an important question: “The system would still be creating broken products for us to repair 50 years down the line. Why create products that were bound to break?” SECMOL launched Operation New Hope in 1994 to overhaul primary education in Ladakh. The intervention proved a success; their initiative was adopted as Ladakh’s education policy and the local administration made primary education their to...

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