• Once teachers, now they stare at bleak future; darkness prevails after SC verdict
    Telegraph | 5 April 2025
  • Livelihoods lost. Lives damaged beyond repair.
    Despair, hopelessness and dismay were writ large on the faces of the teachers
    who lost their jobs following the Supreme Court judgement on Thursday. Metro
    spoke to some of them:

    Sangeeta Sinha, 40

    Sangeeta Sinha teaches life science
    at a school in Diamond Harbour. She had cleared the 2010 SSC before clearing
    the 2016 SSC.

    On Thursday, her life was shattered. She held the state
    government and the opposition parties responsible for her plight.

    “This
    has now turned into a political blame game. We are suffering because of
    government apathy. The government has promised to support us. But when we
    needed their support, neither the ruling party came forward nor did the
    opposition,” Sinha told Metro after the verdict.

    “When we took to the streets
    last year after the Calcutta High Court scrapped the 2016 panel, no one came to
    our support,” she said.

    She got a job at a school in Hingalganj, in Basirhat
    subdivision in North 24-Parganas. But she did not take it up because it was too
    far from her home.

    She lives in Budge Budge, on the southwestern fringes
    of Calcutta and part of South 24-Parganas district. The two are around 110km
    apart.

    She cracked the SSC exam again and got a job closer home in
    Diamond Harbour. She started teaching there in January 2019.

    “Ever
    since the recruitments came under the scanner, there has not been a single day
    that I do not spend repenting. Why did I not take up the teaching job at
    Hingalganj? I stare blankly at the mirror,” said Sinha.

    Her mother also “curses
    herself” because she had also asked her not to travel so far.

    Losing a job is
    devastating. Equally painful is the “stain” that she has to live with.

    “I
    worked hard, with honesty, to crack the exam. I will always be identified as
    part of the tainted 2016 batch,” she said.

    Chinmoy Mondal, 33

    Chinmoy
    Mondal, who teaches English at a school in Halisahar in North 24-Parganas, is
    baffled by what he called a “contradiction” in the Supreme Court
    judgement.

    “The court has said that only the tainted candidates will have
    to return their salary with interest. The others do not have to. That means the
    court treated the two sets differently. Why then did the same court scrap all
    the appointments?” said Mondal.

    “The crime was committed by a few. Why should
    all the honest candidates be punished,” he asked.

    He lived in Bihar and Madhya
    Pradesh, teaching in private schools, before taking the 2016 SSC. He wanted to
    come back to his ailing parents. They suffer from cardiac and renal
    problems.

    After clearing the exam, he started teaching at a school in
    Hatibagan in north Calcutta in 2019. In 2021, he was transferred to the school
    in Halisahar, closer to home.

    “My parents are dependent on me, both
    physically and financially. The prices of medicines and almost everything else
    are shooting up, and now, I am without a job. I don’t know how to face them,”
    said Mondal. His wife is a homemaker.

    “Every teacher has a family to look
    after. The families have also been pushed to the edge of a cliff,” he
    said.

    The school service commission (SSC) submitted to the Supreme Court
    in mid-February that 5,303 candidates were allegedly appointed illegally as
    teaching and non-teaching staff in secondary and higher secondary sections of
    government-aided schools.

    Aditi Basu, 37

    Aditi Basu is a mathematics teacher at
    a school in Dakshineswar. She lives near the airport.

    After completing
    her bachelor’s and master’s from Jadavpur University and obtaining a BEd
    degree, Basu landed an assistant professor’s job at the MCKV Institute of
    Engineering in Liluah in 2011.

    A neurological condition caused partial
    vision loss in her left eye just before 2016. She was suffering from optic
    neuritis, an inflammation of the optic nerve.

    “I was not scared that my
    right eye would also be affected. I thought that If I were to lose vision, I
    would be better off doing a government job. There is much more scope for
    visually impaired teachers in the government sector,” said Basu.

    She cleared
    the 2016 SSC exam and got the “secured job” she wanted in 2019. Her new salary was
    significantly lower than what she was drawing from her former
    employer. “Despite the pay cut, I was happy. I thought I had the
    security I wanted. Today, that security lies in tatters,” Basu said.

    On May 7
    last year, when the apex court stayed the high court’s order over the
    appointments made by the SSC, Basu was “happy and hopeful of a solution”.


    “This verdict was unexpected. I don’t know how to go home,” she said.

    Her
    right eye is not yet affected by the neurological problem. “But my life is
    shattered,” she said.

    Basu’s husband is a primary school teacher.

    Sucheta
    Maity, 36

    When Calcutta High Court scrapped the recruitments in April last
    year, Sucheta Maity was down but not out.

    “We had hope. We knew the
    Supreme Court was there. The fate of tens of thousands of deserving teachers
    cannot be decided by some undeserving ones. But after today’s order, there is
    nowhere to go,” said Maity, who teaches physical science at a school in Diamond
    Harbour. She also lives in the interiors of Budge Budge.

    Her husband
    works with a private company. They have a daughter.

    “In all likelihood,
    another test will be held soon. But to solve the problems that you did 10 years
    ago, to go through the same rigours, is it so easy? This is no child’s play,”
    she said.

    The Supreme Court has asked the Bengal government to
    initiate a fresh selection process for the teachers and non-teaching staff,
    which has to be concluded within three months..
  • Link to this news (Telegraph)