Rote learning is failing us. One teacher’s legacy shows a better way – Pakistan

In a system that prizes grades over growth, Mrs Rahman kept alive a humanist tradition where learning meant wonder, dialogue, and expression.

I first came to know Aunty Sonnu in the twilight of the Zia years, through my friendship with her youngest daughter, Laila Rahman. What began as her good-humoured acceptance of a young outsider in her household, gradually deepened into a bond of genuine connection, moored in three common devotions: an abiding love for Laila, her youngest and most impassioned child; a fierce attachment to Lahore; and an enduring affection for Government College — the institution that shaped so much of who she became.

After Laila and I wed, that bond ripened into shared life itself. Together, we weathered seasons of joy and passages of grief, during which I came to understand the many worlds she gracefully inhabited. To her husband’s family in Mardan, she was Baabijan; to her friends and kin, Aunty Sonnu or Sonnu Khala; and to generations of students she mentored and inspired, she remained, Mrs Rahman.

Sohni Sondhi was born, raised, and educated at Government College, where her father, Professor G.D. Sondhi, taught. It was within those familiar halls that she met Abdul Rahman Khan and entered into a bond so profound that she embraced Islam and left her beloved Lahore to marry him, making a new home in his ancestral town of Mardan.

There, she found belonging, forming lasting ties with both family and community. She became fluent in Pashto, bridging a language divide that still fragments our communities today. Through all these years, she remained a voracious reader and gifted storyteller — a passion she passed on to her children, her grandchildren, and to the many young people fortunate enough to cross her path.

While much is being written about the many journeys that defined her life, I wish to reflect on Mrs Rahman, the educator. The truest way to honour her, I believe, is to pause and ask what her life reveals about the mission of education in Pakistan; a cause she served with rare distinction.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top