A different world out there at Brian Jenkins’ offbeat Sholai School in Kodaikanal
When the entire neighbourhood plunges into darkness -- thanks to the State Electricity Board’s crippling power cuts -- the 65 students and their 18 teachers at Sholai School, Kodaikanal, are not power-starved for a moment. Their school was never connected to the grid. It uses renewable energy to meet all its requirements.
The man who made this mechanism possible is their principal, Mr. Brian Jenkins, a British-born social anthropologist. Painstakingly, he has built a creative green campus with the greater social good in mind. This disciple of J. Krishnamurthy is living his utopian dream in the verdant hills of Palani.
“I don’t believe in teaching values” he says. “It is a pompous adult attitude, like an old chestnut. My idea of education is about applications and trying new things. It is not just being sentimental but developing genuine sensitivity to all life forms. It’s also a lot about growing a sense of responsibility by speaking up.”
Mr. Jenkins likes being primal. He navigates the pot-holed roads from the valley to the hills in a vintage 1934 Baby Austin. “It’s tiring. But unless you make a mess of things, you will never learn to innovate,” he grins. His students are making a power engine for his car, which arrived dismantled in a box from London to Mumbai 43 years ago.
“It was prohibitively expensive to transport the car across the seas. Putting it back together was fun,” he laughs. He is proud of the engineering department he has set up for his school. “Our students are adept in repairing old bicycles into new and with a bright coat of paint they are back in market. They have modified an old ambassador car engine to run on both petrol and biogas.”
Running a self-sufficient alternative school is hard work. Jenkins invested all that he inherited from his grandmother to showcase a unique curriculum. “This is a stress-free school where there are no awards, no punishment, no exam fear, no rat race. You only have to take a liking to the environment and work in harmony with nature.”
Dream project
The Sholai School became Jenkins’ dream goal when his spiritual guru and philosopher Jiddu Krishnamurthy asked him to “free his mind from all types of conditioning”. Having trained for 14 years at Krishnamurthy Foundation Trust at Brockwood Park, England, Jenkins first arrived in India in 1969. He travelled 7,000 km in search of a suitable place for a school.
The Sholai School foundation was laid in 1986 under its parent body, the Centre for Learning, Organic Agriculture and Appropriate Technology, with one local boy and one each from Ladakh and Moscow. It has grown into an astonishing place in the last quarter of a century. Half the students are poor and rural children from the district who pay no fee and the remaining half are students of all nationalities from across the globe. They mingle famously, enjoying a higher-quality education than what is normally available in their region.
The activities
At this 1,150 metre altitude, there is always a nip in the air and a floating mist. The sunshine available 205 days a year is harnessed optimally. The entire school is powered by solar panels and generators powered by micro hydro energy. The campus buildings are built with bamboo, local stones, mud and bricks on 100 acres of delightful greenery. Four biogas plants fuel the kitchen.
The school engages in organic farming and grows coffee, pepper, banana and seasonal vegetables and fruits. All school meals are from these farms. It also runs its own dairy, producing organic milk and cheese and even exports home-grown coffee to Germany. Students follow the University of Cambridge syllabus here but equally important are their other experiences. They farm, collect, segregate and recycle waste, manage the livestock, learn carpentry and make every piece of furniture for the school. In addition they are trained in horse riding, swimming, outdoor and indoor games, yoga, trekking and bird watching. They have also built check dams and a wooden bridge across a small river that cuts through the campus. They are the first ones to rush to put out forest fires any time of the day.
Social change
Education is a holistic experience here and Sholai students are lucky to spend the day creating positive changes. Mr.Jenkins addresses socially conscious issues. “The aim is to produce responsible citizens of the Earth, who would not only relish the fruits of the earth but also learn to preserve it in return.”
He does not believe in hierarchical system. Students from any class and of any age are clubbed together to “explore the truths of daily life.” “Learning ceases in classrooms but it is the practical knowledge out there in the field that teaches you the values of existence. And in a hands-on-work class, anybody can assist anybody, you don’t have to be divided according to age group,” he asserts.
Everything is undefined here, yet, there is a sense of security, a spirit of sharing, openness and freedom. Jenkins feels it is important not to be intimidated by the present marks-driven education system. “All we need to do is to explore a new culture of alertness which is sustainable, emphasises self-awareness, dialogue, and right relationship among all.”
Keywords: Brian Jenkins, Sholai School, Kodaikanal, renewable energy








Sholai is an amazing place for holistic education. For those who want more details, search for 'Sholai CLOAAT' and you should get the official school website.
Thank you all, for your comments. Please do visit our website:
www.sholaicloaat.org for contact details etc.
Wonderful place, made a lot of difference in life. Thanks To Mr. Jenkins. Must visit it folks.
Truly inspiring and inspirational. I wish Mr. Jenkins write a book about his experience and philosophy in bringing up the Sholai school. The society is in dire need for holistic students who understand the strong synergy between nature, earth, life and their own life.
I spent two of the best years of my working life there, and that in no
way excludes the hard lessons learnt and the rough moments!!!it was all,
in retrospect, intensely valuable.
Its really cherishing to read that practicals,skills and understanding of the nature is given more importance rather than "mugging up". All schools should take this as an example for motivating green technology.
Thank you, Mr.Jenkins for keeping at least some Indians away from the
rat race by choice.
Would love to visit this school. Sounds great work. Could The Hindu writer also provide the complete address of Sholai School and contact numbers. Do they allow visitors?
I wish I could go back to my childhood days and be a student in this school.
As I am very much impressed and intyerested to share my experience as well learn with the new environment,May I join the school.
I am available from July onwards and shall be grateful if someone from the school contacts me thru this means.
Alternately,if I may have their contact number/email etc.
after reading this article, just one thing comes to me... Thank you Mr. Jenkins!! truly a wonderful job towards the mankind revolving around the central idea for mother Earth.
It takes guts to make people who will in all probability stay out of the rat race! This school is not for the faint hearted
I am an educator in United States teaching in a school that emphasizes academic excellence, ethical responsibility and global engagement. I would love to teach in Sholai School. It seems like our educational philosophy is the same - raising responsible citizens.
Interesting place. I heard about this school from a friend. There are lots of similar schools all over India and each tries to surpass the other with some new thinking. In this case, it is Mr.Jenkins decision to delink his school from the GRID. Could the Hindu provide full contact address of the school and the principal, please?
Is it true and are such things really possible? I am fascinated to read about this school.
I wish we had more schools like this one, teaching us life skills, developing a positive personality, and self sustenance.
WELL DONE KEEP UP THE GOOD WORK IN THIS MATERIALISTIC AGE.
RAJAMANOHAR
great thank you
Wow... a great school..
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