
"Mini-Library" At Manipur Relief Camp A Huge Success Story Of Youth Power
Imphal:
A group of young people installed three metal shelves filled with some books at a relief camp in Manipur in July 2024. They called it a "mini library". A rectangular plywood table, unpainted, and some plastic chairs served as the reading area in the centre of the otherwise spartan room.
Nearly a year later, from a few textbooks like IIT JEE Physics, Chemistry, Biology, NEET sample papers and NCERT titles, the mini library has grown larger with books donated by the public.
The small room at the relief camp that housed the three metal shelves sees more visitors, most of them students, today.
"We formed the group in April 2024 to help students living in relief camps with books and any skill matters that would be within our ability to train or provide," a member of 'Youth Connect - The Champion for Change' (YCC) told NDTV.
"It has been over a year, and looking back we are glad we took this up ourselves," the YCC member said, adding many of the members are PhD students and candidates of competitive exams.
The library has approximately 500 books at present, another YCC member said.
A majority of them are textbooks of all subjects for Classes 9 to 12, some sample test papers for Staff Selection Commission (SCC), Joint Entrance Exam (JEE), National Eligibility cum Entrance Test (NEET), etc. There are few novels.
The YCC handed over the responsibility of running the mini-library and day-to-day tasks to a small team comprising students living at the relief camp in Imphal West district's Lamboi Khongnangkhong. In the meantime, the YCC reached out to the public with information about the initiative.
While some came forward to donate used books, others bought the latest textbooks in bundles and donated them.
Members of 'Youth Connect - The Champion for Change' (YCC) who are running the mini-library at a relief camp in Manipur's Imphal West district
Independent filmmaker and Manipur University assistant professor Meena Longjam was among those who visited the relief camp to donate books. The titles she gave included 'Wings of Fire', the autobiography of former President Dr APJ Abdul Kalam, and 'Great Stories for Children' by Ruskin Bond.
YCC said the mini-library works as a community-based bookshelf from where students can borrow books and study material, and in the process help in creating a positive vibe and give hope.
They have also regularly held play sessions, football games, and other activities for children living in relief camps.
The ethnic violence in Manipur that began in May 2023 led to the displacement of at least 50,000 people. The clashes killed over 260.
Thousands from the Meitei community and the Kuki tribes are still living in relief camps across the state.
While the government has from time to time announced the steps it has taken to help internally displaced persons (IDPs), individuals from both the affected communities have taken it upon themselves to help as many IDPs as possible by forming small coordination groups.
The scale may not be large due to limited resources; however, many small groups whose members are mostly common working professionals have shared success stories of their interventions despite their busy schedules and work commitments, such as funding the education of a few meritorious students outside the state, providing scholarships for higher studies, etc.
For YCC, the latest milestone happened when a Shillong-based graphic design firm took interviews of candidates at the mini library on May 26.
From three thin shelves of textbooks, the mini library at the relief camp in Imphal West has come a long way, but still has a ways to go for the shelves to run out of space.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Hindustan Times
40 minutes ago
- Hindustan Times
Rijiju reaches out to Oppn on Justice Varma impeachment
NBEMS seeks Supreme Court approval to conduct NEET-PG on August 3 in a single shift, after the court rejected its two-shift model. The exam requires over 1,000 centres, technical infrastructure, and coordination with various authorities to accommodate 242,679 candidates.


Time of India
2 hours ago
- Time of India
Power outage: No need for NEET re-exam, NTA tells HC
Chennai: There is no need to conduct re-examination for NEET-2025, as the power outage on May 4 at a Chennai exam centre did not cause any significant disruptions, National Testing Agency ( NTA ) told Madras high court on Tuesday. An inquiry revealed that the exam was not affected, and most students answered majority of the questions. Therefore, there is no need to conduct a re-exam, additional solicitor-general A R L Sundaresan said. On May 17, a vacation judge of the court passed an interim order restraining the NTA from releasing the results of NEET-2025 due to alleged difficulties faced by a group of students because of a power cut at an examination center in Avadi. The court passed the order on a plea moved by 13 students highlighting the issue. On Tuesday, when the plea came up for hearing before Justice C Kumarappan, counsel for the students requested the court to direct the NTA to produce CCTV footage of the exam center to prove whether there was proper lighting during the exam. Recording the submissions, the judge adjourned the plea to June 6 for passing orders. According to petitioners, at the Shri Kendriya Vidyalaya CRPF centre in Avadi, 464 students were issued admit cards to appear for the exam. The exam began at 2 pm as scheduled. However, due to heavy rain, a power outage occurred from 3 pm to 4.15 pm. No backup power facilities were arranged at the centre. As a result, students had to write the exam in poor lighting conditions, they said. Additionally, rainwater entered the exam hall, and students were asked to shift to another location, causing further disruption. Due to these difficulties, students were unable to fully demonstrate their abilities. A request made to exam authorities to allot additional time was also denied, the petitioners said.


The Hindu
6 hours ago
- The Hindu
‘Power outage in NEET centres did not impact students' performance'
There has been no impact on the performance of NEET candidates due to power outage at three different examination centres in and around Chennai on May 4, 2025, the National Testing Agency (NTA) told the Madras High Court on Tuesday. Appearing before Justice C. Kumarappan who was seized of writ petitions filed by a group of candidates, Additional Solicitor General (ASG) AR. L. Sundaresan said, the NTA had conducted a scientific assessment and found no such impact. He said the examination was conducted in broad daylight, and hence, the power failure did not make much of a difference. Moreover, the students could not have marked the OMR sheet if there had been any impact, he added. Stating that the number of questions answered by the students before the court was compared with the district average, he said, such comparison showed that the students had answered a higher number of questions than the district average. However, the petitioners' counsel wondered how such a defence could be taken by the NTA against the helpless students who had undergone a great deal of anxiety due to power outage, and consequently, could not perform to the best of their abilities. After hearing both sides, the judge directed the High Court Registry to list the matter under the caption 'For Orders' on Friday. Though the petitioners' counsel insisted on restraining the NTA from releasing the NEET 2025 results till then, the judge refused to pass any such interim order. The ASG told the court that a summer vacation judge had directed the NTA not to release the results until the agency conducted an inquiry and found out whether the power outage in the three centres had any impact on the performance of the candidates. Now that the inquiry is over, there should not be any impediment on releasing the results, he said, and urged the court to dismiss all three writ petitions filed by students who had appeared for NEET at the centres in Avadi, Kunrathur, and K.K. Nagar in Chennai.