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Humanity. I'm finding it hard to search someone Wh

Humanity.
I'm finding it hard to search someone
Who can teach me
What is pure humanity!
So, I stepped into myself to 
Know what is humanity.
There is more of darkness 
But a ray of brightness I can
Still see arising from somewhere.
Learning this language is the most
Difficult thing as none can 
Understand what my soul
Is trying to speak!
Will you understand and help 
Me to spread the 
Language of humanity? "Living is the least important activity of the preoccupied man; yet there is nothing which is harder to learn."
- Seneca

Did you know? 🌸
Four engineers from Tamil Nadu double up as teachers and run daily classes for kids of farm labourers who don't have smartphones. Aravind, Vignesh, Bhavanishankar and Sarathas, who are also civil service aspirants, have been conducting classes for students from classes VI-X since July.

With no space in the village for the children to gather, the band of engineers decided to hold the classes outdoors. They arranged for notebooks and pens for the students, bought a blackboard for maths lessons and fixed a lamp for the night classes. "This is our way of giving back to society," says Aravind. Kudos to them for bridging the virtual divide that stress at underprivileged children who have no means to attend online classes. ❤️
Humanity.
I'm finding it hard to search someone
Who can teach me
What is pure humanity!
So, I stepped into myself to 
Know what is humanity.
There is more of darkness 
But a ray of brightness I can
Still see arising from somewhere.
Learning this language is the most
Difficult thing as none can 
Understand what my soul
Is trying to speak!
Will you understand and help 
Me to spread the 
Language of humanity? "Living is the least important activity of the preoccupied man; yet there is nothing which is harder to learn."
- Seneca

Did you know? 🌸
Four engineers from Tamil Nadu double up as teachers and run daily classes for kids of farm labourers who don't have smartphones. Aravind, Vignesh, Bhavanishankar and Sarathas, who are also civil service aspirants, have been conducting classes for students from classes VI-X since July.

With no space in the village for the children to gather, the band of engineers decided to hold the classes outdoors. They arranged for notebooks and pens for the students, bought a blackboard for maths lessons and fixed a lamp for the night classes. "This is our way of giving back to society," says Aravind. Kudos to them for bridging the virtual divide that stress at underprivileged children who have no means to attend online classes. ❤️