Bihar Board Teacher - Directory

Page 34: Kaushalya Kumari, Science, 2005. She had no table, no lab. She taught the water cycle using a leaky bucket and evaporation on a hot tin roof. Today, Kaushalya is a cardiac surgeon in Delhi.

Page one: Ramdeo Sharma, Sanskrit, 1984. Next to it, a tiny star. “Star for every child who passed,” Manoj Sir whispered, tracing the faded ink. Ramdeo was now the District Magistrate.

Manoj Sir reached the final page. The last entry, in shaky handwriting: Manoj Thakur, All Subjects, 2024. That was him. Beside it, no stars yet. Only a question mark.

He flipped. Fateh Singh, Mathematics, 1991. Fateh ran a small shop. But last year, his son had topped the board exams. Fateh had cried, touching Manoj Sir’s feet. “You taught me the tables, sir,” he’d said. “Now my son knows calculus.” bihar board teacher directory

In the sweltering heat of a Bihar summer, old Manoj Sir sat on the cracked floor of his village school, a tattered red ledger open on his lap. This was the Bihar Board Teacher Directory —not the official government one, but his . He had handwritten it forty years ago.

“Sit, child,” he said, taking out a chalk stub. “Let’s add one more story to the directory.”

Not for himself. For her. In every village of Bihar, there is a teacher like Manoj Sir—unlisted, unsung, unforgettable. The real directory is not in an office. It is in the hearts they have changed. Page 34: Kaushalya Kumari, Science, 2005

The directory wasn’t a list of teachers. It was a map of miracles.

As he wrote the steps on a broken slate, he realized: the Bihar Board Teacher Directory was never a record of names. It was a promise. Each teacher, a bridge. Each student, a future.

He smiled. The same smile he’d given Ramdeo, Fateh, and Kaushalya. Today, Kaushalya is a cardiac surgeon in Delhi

And on that dusty floor, with a piece of chalk, Manoj Sir wrote the first star next to his own name.

A shadow fell across the page. “Sir?” A young girl, no older than twelve, stood with a torn notebook. “The LCM sum… I don’t understand.”