Mentors and Friends of Yellow Train
If you have built castles in the air, your work need not be lost. There is where they should be. Now put foundations under them.
While the vision and pedagogy of the school are future bearing forms, the school owes its foundational strength to him. What lends character to the school is the unique backdrop of the farm, at the heart of which is situated the school. The farm and the space are gifts of his benevolence. After four decades of active work in education and industry, he now works with philanthropic organizations. His dream is for Yellow Train to serve beyond the walls of our school and to reach children who do not have access to education. Project Rohini at Yellow Train is a tribute to his vision and is intended as our outreach program.
The school believes that the self-hood of the teacher is what teaches. We teach who we are. When we teach who we are our wounds from childhood, our fears, our aches and unresolved knots, our beliefs and all the stuff that is inside – all that is invisible becomes visible. The identity and the integrity of the self becomes the unwritten curriculum. As teachers we all undertake the journey of healing and of becoming whole. This journey of inner work and development becomes the bed on which our pedagogical work and everything else is built on. It is a defining characteristic of our community of teachers. Sai, as she is called with great love and adoration, has been a keeper of this task, over the last decade ever since our inception.
As a team comprising largely of women her work in women’s authenticity, empowerment and leadership has helped us find our voice and our presence, echoing the words of Marieann Williamson
We ask ourselves, who am I to be brilliant gorgeous, talented, fabulous?
Actually, who are you not to be? You are a child of God.
Your playing small does not serve the world.
Chris once shared about his experience with a class of first graders. He was telling them a story in which was a reference to God. And on child spontaneously shared “ But I don’t believe in God”. And this was a moment for the teacher to be present and to respond. And Chris remembers what he shared with the class ‘ But God believes in you. And he shared this experience from his decades as a teacher when he said – we are not alone in this task as teachers. We are guided by our angels. Everyday in every lesson. This sharing is so characteristic of the essence of what Chris brings – his presence, his faith, his wisdom, his humour and his convictions.
As a School we are ten years old. And as a body of teachers we are mostly between 35 and 45 years old. We have always longed for an ‘elder’. Someone who knows, who has seen the world, who has white hair who can be the elder of the tribe. That’s what we found when we found Noela.
We met Noela in Bangkok in a Waldorf 100 conference and we all had the same instinct - To bring her home. To our school. And that wish came true when she came to spend a little over a month with us in 2019. She has left a big part of her, living with all of us with her biography work, her art, her wisdom, her love, her humour just who she is.
To move is to be alive. At Yellow Train children move and move a lot. Through the day and the week. Sometimes is it mere free play. And other times it is co-operative games and Gymnastics. From hosting the Waldorf Olympics to having 5 Gymnasts at the school holding the promise of health giving movement education, the school is thriving in its deed of educating the whole child through movement. And this has made possible by this extra ordinary teacher whom we all dearly love called Dan.
Madhavan is a photographer - both profound and playful. A thinker with the questions: who are we, where do we come from, why are we here, how are we connected? His art brings together various things that he loves: writing, drawing, photographs and moving images.