The class had a messy youngster. The other kids avoided him because he smelled awful. A teacher wrote to his parents to encourage him to bathe more.
He brought a note from his father to school the next day: “My son tries his best, but we don’t have hot water at home and we can’t afford soap. I apologize.”
The instructor carefully folded and placed the note in her desk drawer after reading it twice. Her heart broke when she saw the youngster with matted hair and a dirty clothes.
Her lesson concentration was off that day. She kept looking at him, seeing how he kept to himself and avoided raising his hand to avoid being smelled. The boy sat alone under the large oak tree at recess.
Two lads from his class were kicking a ball nearby, but whenever it rolled nearer him, they would race over, grab it, and leave without saying a word. Sighing, the teacher observed from her window. She remembered her upbringing, how her family suffered and how she had holes in her shoes.
She called him over and knelt after school. She invited him to her house since she had extra soap and possibly some clothes that fit him. Though his eyes expanded, he nodded gently.
Teacher Ms. Patel drove her modest red automobile to the note’s address that weekend. Broken walkways and stray animals ran between trash cans in the aged neighborhood.
She parked in front of a faded yellow house. Father of the boy opened door. He appeared exhausted with black circles under his eyes and large hands for his tiny body.
He cordially greeted her and apologized about the house smell. She dismissed it, entering. It smelled like mildew and old cooking oil.
A solitary electric heater buzzed noisily in the living room, where clothes were stacked in corners. Arjun was playing with a broken toy truck on the floor. Surprised, he looked up at his teacher.
Sitting on the couch, Ms. Patel explained she wanted to help. She offered soap, shampoo, and clothes.
After some hesitation and pride, the father accepted. He said he lost his work months before and was struggling to pay the bills. Their conversation lasted nearly an hour over tea prepared on a camping stove in the kitchen.
She delivered boxes of donated garments from the school’s lost and found the following week. She added some instant soup and rice packets to the boxes in hopes of helping. Arjun started school with clean hair and a tidied shirt.
The youngsters noticed. Some started talking to him about his toy truck or inviting him to recess games. He initially stayed to himself, but he eventually smiled and laughed at jokes.
Rina volunteered to share her homemade samosas with him one afternoon as the students waited up for lunch. He hesitated, but she insisted. After that, they were inseparable.
They ate lunch and laughed under the oak tree. Other kids joined them gently, captivated by their hilarity. Arjun stopped being lonely by month’s end.
Member of the group. Not everything was ideal. Vikram, a troublemaker, pushed Arjun into the dirt during recess.
He mocked Arjun as a “dirty boy” despite his clean clothes. The teacher quickly scolded Vikram and sent him to the principal. Arjun softly grieved to his father that night, asking why people despised him for being poor.
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