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This is an archive article published on January 29, 2012

For law professor,life turns full circle

Every city has its rags to riches story,and the story of Sarfaraz Ahmed Khan is something that fits the bill perfectly.

Every city has its rags to riches story,and the story of Sarfaraz Ahmed Khan is something that fits the bill perfectly.

During the 1980s,Khan started off as a vendor on the sidewalk of Esplanade,selling sarees and today he is the professor of law at the West Bengal National University of Juridical Sciences NUJS.

Khan gets nostalgic about his school days,and he says,it was nearly impossible for his father to fend for a family of seven,so,he being the eldest,had no other choice than to offer his father a helping hand in his business of hawking sarees. “I used to sell sarees in the scorching heat and study late into the night,” he says. It was the grit and determination of Khan and his love for education that kept him going.

Later,as he completed the Secondary and Higher Secondary exams in 1988 and 1990,respectively,and worked part-time with the local branch of United Bank of India as its commission agent of mini deposit schemes. He completed graduation from South Calcutta Law College,and then his LLB from the Calcutta University. Khan completed M.Phil this year from NUJS. The name of the school that he was started is Saket Public School.

“We organise 10 to 12 career counselling sessions every year,at our school for students of Classes IX to XII where a large number of my friend from distinct professions share with the students about available career options. We organises this programme mainly in vernacular language schools in Topsia and surrounding areas,” he says,adding that since the last four years they have been organising free crash course for underprivileged students who pass higher secondary and want to join LLB course at Calcutta University.

His career took a turn,when he got himself enrolled as an advocate at the Alipore Judges’ Court and then at the Calcutta High Court. But his quest for knowing more did not seem to know an end. He acquired a Master’s degree in law from the National University of Juridical Sciences (NUJS),Kolkata,specialising in Alternative Dispute Resolution. NUJS then appointed him as a lecturer of law.

His endeavour bore even richer dividends in the shape of his first overseas stint when he bagged a full scholarship for a 12-month course in International Human Rights Law at the University of Essex,UK. Arranging for funds for this course was an onerous task for Khan but thanks to his perseverance,he managed to get it done,finally,through the British Council,which also sponsored him for attending an International Seminar on Alternative Dispute Resolution in Dhaka.

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Khan’s track record and brilliance led to his selection as a scholar for the British Chevening/Human Rights Scholarships programme in 2004 and in September 2006,he was one of the 12 Indian delegates sent to Brazil for an Inter-Regional Conference on Justice System and Human Rights.

Today,as he recollects his journey from rags to riches,he feels when you take so much from the society,it becomes your inherent duty to give back a bit to it as well. “I have opened a school where,along with others,around 60 students from the adjoining slum areas and shanties,get free education and their expenses are shared by the school and an NGO.

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