Pupils study amid dust, termite nests

Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Tangerang
Children are full of wonders: even in a dilapidated classroom, the sound of their laughter and cheerful chatter fills the air and spills outside.
The children are third graders at Rancagong State Elementary School in Legok district, Tangerang. They played a guessing game while they waited for their teacher in the morning.
The game and the noise came to a halt, however, when a Jakarta Post reporter and two teachers entered their worn-out and dirty classroom.
"We're guessing whose table the insects will fall on today," one of the students, Dewi Gustiana, 9, told the Post.
It was just another of the wonders of children that they could turn the tragedy of insects falling through a roof full of holes into a game.
It's the students favorite game to play while they wait for their teachers.
Every corner of the school was in a serious state of disrepair. Parts of the roof were missing. The wooden plank holding up the roof was infested with insect nests.
The floor collected dust and the sky was visible through the ceilings and walls in nearly every classroom. Parts of the roof were loose and posed a serious danger to the students and teachers below.
Nonetheless, the students seemed to enjoy themselves as they played while awaiting their teachers. None seemed to realize the dilapidated school building was a hazard.
According to the teachers, the building has been in deteriorating condition since 1998, but they have no funds to repair it.
One of the students spontaneously asked the Post: "Are you going to publish our school's story in the newspaper, sir? When will our school be repaired?"
Neither the teachers nor the Post could answer the question.
One of the teachers, S. Penny, invited the students to say a prayer asking God to tell the government to immediately repair their poor school building.
This school is not the only one that poses dangers to its students and teachers.
Head of the regental education agency Muhyi Syariffudin said as many as 1,031 classrooms spread out at hundreds of schools in 26 districts across the regency are in disrepair, with no efforts having been made to renovate the buildings despite widespread publicity about the problem.
Peusar State Elementary School in Curug district was no better. There are only three classrooms available, so students use them alternately.
First- through third-graders study in the afternoon, while fourth- to sixth-grade students use the classrooms in the morning.
"Damaged schools must be repaired soon because students and teachers are scared to be in the classrooms. The roof could collapse at any moment, especially during rainy season," said the school principal H. Undang K.
Muhyi said he had submitted a proposal to the Banten provincial administration to renovate the school along with 119 other damaged schools this year.
"But I am not sure whether our proposal will be followed up with action," Muhyu said, adding that he could only hope now the administration would fix the schools before they claimed the lives of any teachers or students. (May 08, 2006)
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