Dateline,
India's Beautiful Minds
Transcript
It is 8am and kids in an urban slum are preparing for a new day. It
looks and sounds like a construction site. But it's a school.
STUDENT: Seven.
ALL: Seven.
STUDENT: Six.
This are the kids of Rickshaw drivers, maids and migrants and today one
or two of them could get a big step up in life. They are about to sit an exam
designed by Mensa, the world's oldest high IQ society and they are here to see
if they can discover a genius kid from the slums.
KISHORE ASTHANA, MENSA SCHOLAR (Translation): An IQ test checks
your intelligence. How high your intelligence is. ….And... the top 2 percent...
those above 98 percent... they will be selected.
Kishore Asthana, a Mensa scholar, is hoping this test will uncover a
brilliant mind that may otherwise be lost.
KISHORE ASTHANA: We have five to six million children, underprivileged,
who have an IQ above 130. So we are trying to locate uncut diamonds in this
whole mine of people over here, and if we can get some, we’ll try to polish
them up. But those who get selected, their lives will change.
Passing the test is just the beginning. If a genius is found, they will
win a scholarship at a school, usually only the privileged can attend.
REPORTER: What would that mean to get through to a school?
BOY (Translation): I would like that very much. My life will be
made.
REPORTER: What would you like to be one day?
JYOTI: I want to be become a policeman.
KISHORE ASTHANA (Translation): You have three minutes to do ten
questions. Time starts now. We test the giftedness of being logical
basically. It is about identifying a pattern.
He is looking for kids with the same IQ as Hillary Clinton, Thomas
Edison, even Apollo astronauts.
KISHORE ASTHANA (Translation): Don’t waste time on difficult
questions Ok because you have very little time. Time’s up, pencils down.
Close your booklet. Close your answer sheet.
There are mixed feelings as the kids pack up. But Jyoti, the girl who
wants to be a police officer, is confident.
JYOTI (Translation): I’ve never seen questions like this, some
were good and a bit difficult as well. Some were nice and pretty amazing.
REPORTER: Put your hand up if you think you will become a genius?
JYOTI (Translation): I know I’ll get a good result. I’m quite
confident
Now it is a waiting game.
REPORTER: We've got more now! There are more geniuses!
The likelihood of finding a genius in Australia is one in 100. In a week
I will find out if any of these kids will get the chance to leave this roadside
school. Mensa started its search for kids with high IQs just one year
ago. It's part of a much bigger quest, as India tries to lift itself up
to become a world leader. And this is where the transition from slum kid to
scholar takes place. This is the special school they get access to if they
blitz the Mensa test. But it's tough. Keeping good grades is only the start of
the challenges they will face.
KISHORE ASTHANA: If you can select them and guide them, we can make
pilots, soldiers, political leaders, anything we want! They are raw material
waiting to be moulded and that it is why it's very important.
Ritu Paswan is one of Mensa's geniuses. Only 12 years old, she tested
with an IQ of 145 - a score that means she's exceptionally gifted.
RITU PASWAN, MENSA GENIUS (Translation): Until now I never felt I
was brilliant… I want to be far ahead in class, in studies. I’m halfway there
and soon I’ll be twice as good!
Last year she made a big leap - moving from a school in a tent to proper
lessons, taught entirely in English.
RITU PASWAN (Translation): I never imagined that I could study in
a school like this. I imagined how big the school would be, and classes would be
so much better and in English. The canteen would be so awesome. The
playground would be huge. I was a bit dull in studies but now I'm a lot better
FRIEND (Translation): She used to struggle but now she’s
working hard and trying to get ahead.
GIRL (Translation): I want to be a doctor when I grow up. I
know 100%, I can be a doctor.
TEACHER: Over how many years does Halley’s Comet repeat its path?
VARSHA KUMARI, MENSA GENIUS: 76 years.
Next door in an 8th grade class a newly discovered genius is showing up
the rest of the students.
VARSHA KUMARI (Translation): My favourite subject is
science, like for instance, space. I really like it and I am fascinated by it.
TEACHER: As a satellite. It can be? Natural like earth is having natural
satellite…
CHILDREN: Moon.
Found to have an IQ of 135, Varsha Kumari is just four points short of
Neil Armstrong, in whose footsteps she hopes to follow.
VARSHA KUMARI (Translation): I want to be an astronaut…..I can
listen to things about space all the time.
But these genius kids are under a constant threat. They can potentially lose
their scholarship if they don't perform well enough.
KISHORE ASTHANA: We give an opportunity but we also know there are many
pitfalls along the way, that you can be born a genius. But you can end up as a
dumb adult if you are not nurtured properly. Your genius can become blunted.
The pressure is relentless - at school and also at home. Ritu lives in a
migrant neighbourhood and while she aspires to be a doctor, all the women
around her work as domestic servants. None have finished high school, let alone
a medical degree.
SHEELA PASWAN, MOTHER (Translation): She draws trees, bushes,
flowers and animals. I wish I had the chance to study and create like
Ritu! Right from when she was very young, I felt that she was
different to my other kids. That is why I feel she can become someone.
There is a lot of love here at home. But there's also a lot riding on
Ritu's cleverness. Her mother and sister were both married off young and both
their lives have been shaped by traditional duties, which they don't want for
Ritu.
SHEELA PASWAN (Translation): This is no life. I don’t have a
husband. My life is useless. When my husband left me we were
devastated. I felt it was better to die than live a life like this. When
my kids were asleep I twice tried to hang myself. My daughter Ritu woke
up and opened her eyes then she ran outside and made a lot noise. Many people
came and got me down.
Her mum is pinning the entire family's future on the 12-year-old, all
because of her gift.
RITU PASWAN (Translation): When dad wasn't there....
SHEELA PASWAN (Translation): Don’t cry… Ritu! Please child.
RITU PASWAN (Translation): No one visited us after Dad had gone.
No one spoke to us or visited us. I was alone with my mummy and she cried all
the time. So I thought, I will study and become someone. I will show everyone I
can become someone. That’s it.
The hopes and dreams of two generations are riding on Ritu's shoulders.
It's 4 in the afternoon, and after a long day at school, Ritu should be doing
assignments but she's needed across town with her mum.
RITU PASWAN (Translation): I enjoyed my studies at school today. I
worked hard at school. I’m tired. I don’t want to do this.
SHEELA PASWAN (Translation): Put the bag there, take this
tray and chop the cauliflower. Go on, hurry up. Be careful of your
fingers and chop it like this.
RITU PASWAN (Translation): I can do it.
REPORTER: Ritu, do you worry that you should be studying?
RITU PASWAN (Translation): I do think I should study but if I am
of some help to my mother that’s a good thing. I still study but I help my mum
too. That’s how I feel.
SHEELA PASWAN (Translation): If she doesn’t know how to cook
and if something happens to me she will be able to earn some money.
That’s why I ask her to learn to do a little bit each time. I worry about what
she will do and how she will live. I keep worrying. There’s no one to look
after her.
She may have high hopes for Ritu, but her mum is already thinking of a
plan B. The reality is the Mensa scholarship with stop after high school and
she knows a medical degree is very expensive.
SHEELA PASWAN (Translation): As she passes and finishes her
schooling her support will stop. Then what will I do? Thinking about that makes
me anxious. I’m not sure whether she will be able to fulfil her dream or not.
She can’t do it without help.
Every parent worries what will become of their child. For girls in
India, security comes from marriage, which means many genius girls battle their
parents just to stay in school.
V SUPRABHA, VIDYA PRINCIPAL: The more challenges are coming from the
society. From the families they come from. Because for them, once they are
educated, they need to find a good match for marriage.
The principal admits it can take more work educating parents than it can
the scholar.
V SUPRABHA: You know some parents don't understand Mensa. They aren't
educated enough to understand. When we tell the parent “your child is gifted” I
mean they look at us like “what gift?”
In the constant struggle to make ends meet, it can be difficult for
families to see a child's role beyond their duty to the family. For 14-year-old
Varsha, the budding astronaut, home is a place she tries to avoid. It means
returning to a world where life is ruled by poverty, not possibilities.
VARSHA KUMARI (Translation): Don’t eat the carrots…Why didn’t you
get some for us?
MUMTA, MOTHER (Translation): There’s no money.
REPORTER: You look like you know how to make that pretty well?
VARSHA KUMARI (Translation): No! They tell me to cook otherwise
it’s not good. The rice is cooked, shall I cook roti now?
REPORTER: Do you like helping your mum out?
VARSHA KUMARI (Translation): No. But I have to.
MUMTA (Translation): Maybe they think they want to study, but this
is also a kind of work.
REPORTER: Did you ever suspect that Varsha was so smart?
MUMTA (Translation): No. Why are you just staring at us?
Varsha's family not only struggles financially, her father has a serious
problem.
MUMTA (Translation): Come and have some food.
VARSHA KUMARI (Translation): Dad doesn’t have a job at
the moment, sometimes he looks for a job and gets one, but then he just comes
home and drinks and starts fighting at home.
MUMTA (Translation): After drinking, he argues and picks fights
with everyone. We have problems with him, all six of us face difficulties.
Because of his drinking, her father can't hold down a job. Varsha's
constantly worried she will have to drop out of school to work.
MUMTA (Translation): It’s burning.
VARSHA KUMARI (Translation): What can I do?
MUMTA (Translation): Turn down the heat.
And with little time to study, the scholarship hangs by a thread -
something her family doesn't seem to grasp.
REPORTER: Do they support you in your dreams?
VARSHA KUMARI (Translation): My dad says “Do what you like
but don’t tell me about it.” When I tell Mummy she gets scared because I want
to go into space. She doesn’t want me to but I tell her this is what I want.
She says she wants to be an astronaut and, you know, she has an IQ of
Apollo astronauts. And her family don't realise that. But India's genius kids
don't face this journey alone. Varsha has a mentor, a woman who has climbed to
the top of the professional world and is guiding the way.
SABA ZAIDI: Varsha I see that she is one of those little girls from
childhood who are very clear what they want to do in life.
SABA ZAIDI (Translation): So you thought this was my home? Today I
will introduce you to someone.
This is Saba Zaidi. Brought together by Mensa, she's a role model to
confide in and today she's arranged a surprise.
SABA ZAIDI (Translation): And Varsha, do you know who is Ajay?
VARSHA KUMARI (Translation): No. I don’t know.
SABA ZAIDI (Translation): Mr Ajay Talwar is an astronomer.
VARSHA KUMARI: Wow!
AJAY TALWAR: I think you like Astronomy
VARSHA KUMARI: Yeah, I want to be an astronaut.
SABA ZAIDI: See.
AJAY TALWAR: I can show you a few things, come.
Meeting an astronomer is a chance most kids in her street will never
get.
VARSHA KUMARI: The telescope is so big.
SABA ZAIDI: It’s humungous…It’s such a big one.
VARSHA KUMARI (Translation): Three telescopes, all so different.
AJAY TALWAR: This is like a light-bucket, a bucket that collects light
and then, all the light collects over here…
Tonight there is a super moon and Varsha, the astronaut hopeful, is
getting her very first glimpse up close.
SABA ZAIDI: I want to support her completely no matter what because she
has some challenges back home. So from her perspective it's very important to
have at least one person in her life who can tell her "Varsha, take this
step - it will lead you to your destination or no not take this step because
here you may stumble".
AJAY TALWAR: Come, take a look. You can watch through here.
VARSHA KUMARI (Translation): My God! It’s so
small, so tiny! The spots on it are visible too. Wow! It’s so beautiful and I
saw craters on it.
AJAY TALWAR (Translation): You like it?
For Varsha, it's the first time her dream feels real.
SABA ZAIDI (Translation): Do you still want to be an astronaut?
VARSHA KUMARI (Translation): Yes, but I don’t want to go to the
moon.
SABA ZAIDI (Translation): Where then?
VARSHA KUMARI (Translation): Into space. I’ll see the moon and all
the other planets as well.
SABA ZAIDI (Translation): After seeing all this, do you think your
ambition is a dream or reality?
VARSHA KUMARI (Translation): It will be reality.
SABA ZAIDI (Translation): I know you will make it happen.
I don't know what's in store for Varsha. In four years, she will be among
the first Mensa scholars to graduate and the path beyond that isn't clear, but
she's already tasted a very different future. Even if her family don't realise
it's possible.
Before leaving India, there's one last thing I need to do. It's been
seven days since Mensa's last round of testing, and I want to know if a new
genius could be about to start a journey of their own.
KISHORE ASTHANA (Translation): We tested you to find out how
intelligent you all are and who is the most intelligent. In this test seven of
you have done very well.
Seven high scores out of 50 who were tested. But has anyone scored high
enough to be deemed a genius?
KISHORE ASTHANA (Translation): The best result was scored by Vinod
Kumar Yadav. Where is Vinod?
Scoring in the 99th percentile, 13-year-old Vinod has an IQ of 145 and
is announced a new Mensa scholar.
KISHORE ASTHANA (Translation): A bright boy. Vinod what do
you want to do in the future?
VINOD (Translation): I want to help my parents.
KISHORE ASTHANA (Translation): You want to help your
parents. Very good. What do you want to become? Engineer.
Jyoti, the confident 10-year-old who dreams of becoming a policewoman,
gets a mention too. She's just missed out on becoming a genius, but her high
score is incentive to try again.
KISHORE ASTHANA (Translation): You have missed it by one point, so
next year we will test you again and I feel then you will definitely qualify.
Give them the realization that they are bright, that they have the
treasure within them. They can utilize that treasure. Just knowing that makes a
difference.
For Vinod, there's a long road ahead. He's about to face challenges that
may be more difficult than the life he has known. But the opportunities that
come with them will be worth it.
Reporter
Calliste Weitenberg
Story Producer
Georgina Davies
Camera
Ben Emery
Researcher
James Elton-Pym
Local Producer
Simi Chakrabarti
Story Editor
David Potts
Translations
Aesh Rao
Chitra Sharma