by: Mukhtar Ahmad Qureshi
As I sit and think about what being a teacher really is, one refrain rings louder than all the rest, teaching isn’t a profession it is a social service. It is a passion for influencing minds, hearts and futures. With every step into a classroom every teacher is not simply imparting information they are creating a society.
In my world, so many professions do good for the public. Physicians heal, lawyers defend justice and engineers construct infrastructure. Teachers, though? We construct humans. We ignite curiosity, support creativity, raise dreams and sometimes we are the only people who encourage a child who might ever get in their lives. That, to me, is a kind of holy service.
As a teacher myself, I have seen firsthand how education transforms lives not just academically but emotionally and morally. I have taught students from diverse backgrounds, some of whom arrived at school carrying invisible burdens of poverty, conflict or broken homes. For them, school was not just a place to learn mathematics or language it was a heaven, a space where they felt safe, seen and heard.
That is the invisible, yet profoundly necessary, function of a teacher, to offer hope. Hope that things can change. Hope that they have a voice. Hope that their aspirations are within reach.
We should never forget, teaching is not just in blackboards or books. A teacher who is able to listen with empathy, who sees the kid sitting quietly in the back, who is able to celebrate small wins such as better handwriting or saying a whole sentence in the classroom that teacher is doing an act of social service as important as any grand scale reform.
In my own classroom, I have marked moments that are small but rich in meaning, a quiet girl raising her hand to read, a boy who used to be afraid of school now showing up early with a smile, a student communicating their feelings through pictures because they don’t yet have words. These are victories. These are why we teach.
There’s a reason why the greatest teachers are remembered for life. Not because they taught an intricate equation or an obscure rule of grammar, but because they cared. Because they believed in a child when no one else would. That belief is a turning point in the life of the child.
One of my own mentors always said, “Teaching is the only profession that creates all other professions.” What a profound truth! Without teachers, there would be no doctors, engineers, writers, or leaders. We are the foundation upon which every society is built. We are the quiet revolutionaries changing the world, one child at a time.
But for all this high-minded work, teaching is usually devalued. The sacrifices teachers make the long hours, the emotional investment, the continuous learning and adapting are not recognized. But we do it anyway. Why? Because we are motivated by something more profound than pay or prestige. We are motivated by purpose.
In the countryside, where quality education is lacking, a teacher can be a ray of hope for an entire community. I’ve seen it firsthand in my own district, where teachers trek miles to teach in isolated schools, grade in temporary classrooms and use their own money to buy simple supplies just because they want each child to have an opportunity.
Even in city environments, where temptations abound and student focus is a daily struggle, committed teachers extend their call of duty to instruct, encourage, and guide their students. Whether it’s managing afterschool clubs, coming in early to assist a struggling student, or simply being a listening ear, these gestures extend far beyond a job title. They are acts of service.
Teaching also requires profound emotional strength. We take in our students’ pain, carry their stories and continue to try to fill their days with hope and learning. We bask in their joys as our own and their failures are personal. It’s a profoundly human vocation, full of struggle and grace.
But this is the wonderful thing, the rewards of teaching are not tangible, but long lasting. The note from a student years after thanking you for the guidance you provided, the grin of a child finally comprehending a troublesome concept, the parent who tells you their child now enjoys school all of these remind us that our work counts. These are the things that inspire our passion and reaffirm our commitment.
I used to have a boy who had lost his father and lost his voice in class. I would greet him every day with a soft smile, leave him alone and rejoice over the smallest movements. Gradually, he opened up. Months later, he delivered a speech on Teacher’s Day, thanking his teachers for making him feel important. That day, I knew the real extent of our impact.
In a world where material success so often takes center stage, teaching reminds us of the strength of human relationship and service. It reminds us of the importance of humility, patience, and unwavering compassion. It reminds us that even amidst adversity, we can make a difference not by great deeds, but by steady, loving presence.
So, to all the teachers out there reading this, know that your labour is holy. You are not merely teaching subjects you are shaping society. You are building the foundation of a more considerate, better-informed, and compassionate world. And that is the ultimate social service.
Let us proudly wear this badge, understanding that in each lesson we teach, each life we touch, and each dream we foster, we are serving humanity at its best.
Author is a teacher by profession
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