High School ICE Club Sponsors EKAL School in India
By Sunidhi Ramesh
On April 9th, in its last meeting for the 2012-2013 school year,
Chattahoochee High School’s ICE (Indian Cultural Exchange) Club
presented a check for $365 to Ekal Vidyalaya. The ICE students
were proud and happy that their contribution would open and run
an Ekal school in a tribal village in India for an entire year!
The CHS ICE Club’s mission and vision is to inform, educate, and
entertain students with various aspects of Indian culture.
Through their club website (www.hoochiceclub.com), bi-monthly
meetings, and various celebrations that mirror Indian
festivities, the organization has gained popularity and support
within the Chattahoochee community. In addition, ICE has
provided its members with various volunteer opportunities that
extend outside Chattahoochee. Guided by the Talented and Gifted
(TAG) Department’s Ms. Kathy Whitley and the support of its
members, officers, and sponsors, this practically first-year
organization has emerged as one of the most popular clubs in
Chattahoochee High School.

As a means of giving back to the very community that supported
its growth, Chattahoochee’s ICE Club approached Ekal to learn
how it could help in their mission of education for
underprivileged children. By donating a portion of its
accumulated funds to this charity it has funded and aided the
basic education of nearly 20 to 30 children at the cost of only
a dollar-a-day and brought Ekal one school closer to their goal
of 100,000 schools. The club plans to extend and continue this
tradition which has just begun, well into the coming school
years.
Through the Ekal Vidyalaya presentation ICE Club learnt that
Ekal is a non-profit organization engaged in promoting holistic
village development through primary, health, economic and
empowerment education in rural and tribal India. In the years
since the first Ekal School opened in 1988, Ekal Vidyalaya
movement has grown globally, entirely through volunteer efforts,
to have independent Ekal Foundations in USA, Australia, Canada
and other countries to raise awareness and funds needed to open
and support the one-teacher Ekal schools. Over 47,000 Ekal
schools today, which have a defined curriculum and are headed by
a trained local youth teacher, have changed the lives of nearly
1.3 million children in the remotest villages of India.

School Principal Mr. Tim Duncan lauded the efforts of the ICE
Club and shared his vision and ideas for organizing other
cultural programs and raising more funds for this worthwhile
cause. He saw this as a wonderful volunteering opportunity not
merely for the ICE Club but even for other school students who
wanted to contribute in the education of others while they
themselves were getting an education.
For more information on Ekal Vidyalaya and its continuous
endeavors, visit the charity’s website at www.ekal.org.
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