This story is from February 17, 2020

Kerala: Bihari mother of 3 scores perfect 100 in literacy exam

A 26-year-old woman from Bihar has proved language is no barrier as she emerged the topper in a literacy examination conducted in Kerala for migrant labourers.
Kerala: Bihari mother of 3 scores perfect 100 in literacy exam
Kerala State Literacy Mission Authority director P S Sreekala congratulates Romiya Kathur who topped the literacy examination
KOLLAM: A 26-year-old woman from Bihar has proved language is no barrier as she emerged the topper in a literacy examination conducted in Kerala for migrant labourers.
Romiya Kathur, hailing from a nondescript village in Bihar, scored the first rank with full 100 marks in the examination held by the Kerala State Literacy Mission Authority.
She had reached Kerala in search of a job along with her husband Saifullah and settled down in Umayanalloor in Kollam in 2014.

The mother of three, who runs a juice parlour here, had written the exam at a local higher secondary school carrying her four-month-old baby daughter, Thamanna, last month.
A total of 1,998 migrant labourers had appeared for the literacy exam in the second phase of the scheme 'Changathi' across the state on January 19.
Changathi (friend) project is aimed at teaching migrant labourers living in the state Malayalam within four months. It had begun in Perumbavoor in Ernakulam district, the hub of migrant labourers in the state on August 15, 2017, literacy mission officials said. More than 3,700 migrants, who flocked to the southern state in search of better wages and living conditions, had cleared the exam under the initiative so far in two phases, they said.

Kerala State Literacy Mission Authority director P S Sreekala visited Kathur at her home here recently and congratulated her for the rare achievement.
The migrant woman said she wanted to clear the higher secondary equivalency exam conducted by the mission, for which the director extended complete support.
She also said 'Hamari Malayalam', the textbook prepared for students of the Changathi scheme, was helpful in the daily life. "It has helped me a lot in communicating in Malayalam, especially in railway station and market," she said, adding she also wanted to teach her children Malayalam.
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