Saturday, July 31, 2021

Manjhi moves a Mountain by Nancy Churnin illustrated by Danny Popovici

Publisher blurb: When a mountain separates Dashrath Manjhi's poor village from schools and hospital, he sees a solution no one else can imagine. Using only a hammer, chisel, and twenty years of exhausting work, Manjhi shows that one determined person can wear down even the most massive of problems.

This is an incredible true story - one I only just discovered today.

Here are a few facts which will expand on the publisher blurb above.

  • Manjhi was born in 1934 and he died in 2007
  • A mountain blocked Gehlar a village near Gaya in Bihar, India from another village called Wazirgani.
  • Wazirgani had running water, doctors, a school and jobs. People in Gehlar live in poverty.
  • Manjhi's wife, Falguni Devi, fell on the mountain trail. She died because Manjhi could not reach medical help in time.
  • Manjhi decided their village needed access to Wazirgani and so he worked with hand tools after work each day chipping away at the mountain.
  • He cut a road 360 feet long, 30 feet high and 25 feet wide. It took him 22 years.
  • This book has won numerous awards and has been translated in to 18 languages. 

Here is the road carved by hand by Manjhi:


Image Source: Wikimedia Commons


Churnin’s prose has an elegance appropriate for her inspiring tale, which is based on a true story. Popovich’s double-page illustrations use a warm palette and are nicely composed. Kirkus

Here is a set of teaching notes from the publisher Creston Books. My friend at Kinderbookswitheverything collects picture book biographies in her school library. The power of these stories comes when you read about wonderful people who do amazing things and yet are often people you may have never heard of. For example I discovered Maria Merian through the biography Summer Birds and Emmanuel's Dream the story of Emmanuel Ofosu when I read the book by Laurie Ann Thompson. These are not related to the book I am discussing here today but they are powerful stories which linger with me.



I am keen to see another book by Nancy Churnin which compares the lives of Anne Frank and Martin Luther King Jr. who were born in the same year. "Both faced ugly prejudices and violence, which both answered with words of love and faith in humanity. This is the story of their parallel journeys to find hope in darkness and to follow their dreams." Booktopia


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