Q3 of 9 Page 1

You are Amrit/Amrita. You are participating in a debate. Write either for or against the topic ‘In today’s world only wealthy people can afford to be healthy.’ (150 – 200 words)

OR


One of the biggest problems of our society is frequent cases of missing small children. Write an article on the topic, ‘The Rising Crime of Child Lifting’ for a newspaper. You are Ankul/Avantika. (150 – 200 words)


In today’s world only wealthy people can afford to be healthy

(For the motion)


Is it that in today’s world only wealthy people can afford to be healthy? The answer to this is a big ‘yes’. Today I speak in favor of the motion as I believe that only wealthy people can avail timely medical facilities.


If you open the newspaper on any morning you will find a small column talking about the death of a person due to untimely treatment. But if you read it more carefully you will notice that it was a person with a poor economic background and lack of access to medical facilities. On the other hand if a rich person suffers from an untimely treatment it would become a major case and the entire medical fraternity would be held responsible for such a death. Why does this happen? The basic reason behind this is that the poor people are the ones who live without nutritious food or proper sanitation facilities. On the other hand rich people find it much easier to get access to medical facilities. They have the access to healthy and nutritious food and live in a clean and hygienic environment. This difference points towards the fact that money makes it quite easier to access any facility. If the wealthy people face any serious illness they can simply move to a foreign country and get the best treatment under the latest technology whereas the poor ones have no option but to rely completely on the local doctor.


Thus in today’s world the rich people have always had an upper hand over the poor ones be it in terms of medical care or any other facilities.


In today’s world only wealthy people can afford to be healthy


(Against the motion)


Is it that in today’s world only wealthy people can afford to be healthy? The answer to this is a ‘no’. Today I speak against the motion as I believe that everyone in the society has the access to medical facilities.


We cannot simply blame the rich people for being rich. They are only using what is already available to them and why would a person not make use of resources that they have. Also a lot is being done for the betterment of the poor people. This improvement is being made on medical, educational and sanitation facilities with a view to provide a cleaner and healthier environment to everyone. We cannot deny the efforts of the Government in making available free medical care to poor people and implementation of welfare schemes like health insurance. We need to accept that a change takes time and what has been done wrong for years will take more time to be good again. There has been a lot of development in the rural areas where a major section of poor people are situated and there has been a drop in the mortality rate with the increase in health consciousness of the people.


If we want to bring about a revolutionary change then even we need to give our contribution to it. Simply putting all the blame on the rich section doesn’t give us a solution.


OR


The Rising Crime of Child Lifting


By Avantika


One of the biggest problems of our society is frequent cases of missing small children but this issue has not gained much attention especially on the media front.


With the fast growing development, the rate of crime has also been growing. There are legislations that already exist or have been newly passed but for its effective implementation the culprit needs to be caught. Child lifting has recently become a major crime in the recent times. Children are easy targets as they can be easily convinced and they tend to believe in people very soon. There are gangs of people who are engaged in such crimes because it is a source of easy money for them. They kidnap children and blackmail their parents for ransom against the safety of their children. They also warm them not to inform the police or they would harm their child. Out of fear and concern most of the parents find it easier to give away ransom and get back their child. This is just one form of crime. Some people lift children especially girls for crimes like human trafficking. Some of them even indulge in sale of organs of these small children. These people usually belong to the unemployed class who has been a subject to poor economic conditions which force them to take the wrong path for money. They take advantage of the communication gap between parents and children and usually target such families which leave their children go out all alone. Many of these people become a servant or maid in the family which help them gain their trust and make their work easier.


It is the responsibility of parents to keep in touch with their children and until they are capable of taking care of themselves they shouldn’t be left alone all the time even on the trust of a worker. Even social media plays a role in providing information about the daily schedule of a child because teenagers these days are prone to uploading pictures of their life every now and then.


More from this chapter

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1

(A) Read the passage given below and answer the questions that follow:

1 Mano Majra is a tiny place. It has only three brick buildings, one of which is the home of the money-lender, Lala Ram Lal. The other two are the Sikh temple and the mosque. The three brick buildings enclose a triangular area with a large peepul tree in the middle. The rest of the village is a group of flat-roofed mud huts and low-walled courtyards, which open into narrow lanes that spread out from the centre. Soon the lanes turn into footpaths and get lost in the surrounding fields. At the western end of the village there is a pond ringed round by keekar trees. There are only about seventy families in Mano Majra, and Lala Ram Lal’s is the only Hindu family. The others are Sikhs or Muslims, about equal in number. The Sikhs own all the land around the village; the Muslims are tenants and share the tilling with the owners. There are a few families of sweepers whose religion is uncertain. But there is one object that all Mano Majrans — even Lal Ram Lal — worship. This is a three-foot slab of sandstone that stands upright under a keekar tree beside the pond. It is the local deity, the ‘deo’ which all the villagers — Hindu, Sikh, Muslim or pseudo-Christian — visit secretly, whenever they are in special need of blessing.


2 Although Mano Majra is said to be on the banks of the Sutlej River, it is actually half a mile away from it. In India villages cannot afford to be too close to the banks of rivers. Rivers change their moods with seasons and later their course without warning. The Sutlej is the largest river in the Punjab. After the monsoon its waters rise and spread across its vast sandy bed, touching high up the mud embankments on either side. It becomes an expanse of muddy turbulence more than a mile in breadth. When the flood subsides, the river breaks up into a thousand shallow streams that wind sluggishly between little marshy islands. About a mile north of Mano Majra the Sutlej is spanned by a railroad bridge. On the eastern end the embankment extends all the way to the village railroad station.


3 Mano Majra has always been known for its railway station. Since the bridge has only one track, the station has several sidings where less important trains can wait, to make way for the more important ones.


4 A small colony of shopkeepers and hawkers has grown up around the station to supply travellers with food, betel leaves, cigarettes, tea, biscuits and sweetmeats. This gives the station an appearance of constant activity and its staff a somewhat exaggerated sense of importance. Actually the station-master himself sells tickets through the pigeon-hole in his office, collects them at the exit besides the door, and sends and receives messages over the telegraph ticker on his table. When there are people to notice him, he comes out on the platform and waves a green flag for trains which do not stop. His only assistant manipulates the levers in the glass cabin on the platform, which control the signals on either side and helps shunting engines by changing hand points on the tracks to get them on to the sidings. In the evenings, he lights thelong line of lamps, on the platform. He takes heavyaluminium lamps to the signals and sticks them in the clamps behind the red and green glass. In the mornings, he brings them back and puts out the lights on the platform.


5 Not many trains stops at Mano Majra. Express trains do not stop at all. Of the many slow passenger trains, only two, one from Delhi to Lahore in the mornings and the other from Lahore to Delhi in the evenings, are scheduled to stop for a few minutes. The others stop only when they are held up. The only regular customers are goods trains. Although Mano Majra seldom has any goods to send or receive, its station sidings are usually occupied by long rows of wagons. Each passing goods train spends hours shedding wagons and collecting others. After dark, when the countryside is steeped in silence, the whistling and puffing of engines, the banging of buffers, and the clanking of iron couplings can be heard all through the night.


(a) Name any two brick buildings in Mano Majra.


(b) Where are the keekar trees growing?


(c) What type of trains stop at Mano Majra?


(d) Which common object of worship is visited by all the villagers?


(e) Why did people not build their houses on the banks of the rivers?


(f) What do the shopkeepers around the railways station sell to the travellers?


(g) What additional job did the station master perform in addition to selling tickets and sending and receiving messages over the telegraph ticker?


(h) What breaks the silence of the village at night?


(i) Find the word from the passage, which means the opposite of ‘broad’ (para 1).


(j) Find the word from the passage, which means the same as ‘lazily’ (para 2).


(B) Read the extract given below and answer the questions that follow:


(From ‘‘The Passing of Arthur’’; Alfred Lord Tennyson)


And slowly answer’d Arthur from the barge:


‘The old order changeth, yielding place to new,


And God fulfils Himself in many ways,


Lest one good custom should corrupt the world.


5 Comfort thyself: what comfort is in me ?


I have lived my life, and that which I have done


May He within himself make pure !but thou,


If thou shouldst never see my face again,


Pray for my soul, More things are wrought by prayer


10. Than this world dreams of. Wherefore, let thy voice


Rise like a fountain for me night and day.


For what are men better than sheep or goats


That nourish a blind life within the brain,


If, knowing God, they lift not hands of prayer


15. Both for themselves and those who call them friend?


For so the whole round earth is every way


Bound by gold chains about the feet of God.


18. But now farewell.


(a) What does the expression ‘The old order changeth, yielding place to new’ signify?


(b) What does the speaker ask the listener to do if he fails to return?


(c) Identify and name the figure of speech in lines 10 – 13.


(d) What makes human beings different from animals?


(e) (i) Which word in the extract means the same as ‘giving’?


(ii) Which word in the extract means the opposite of ‘foe’?

2

(a) It is said that ‘well begun is half done’. Applying this to ‘Swachh Bharat Mission’ we can safely assume that praiseworthy success has been achieved under this Mission. But much more remains to be done yet. Write a speech in 80 – 100 words on the need to intensify this drive. You are Raunaq/Asmeeta, Secretary, Environment Conservation Club in your school. 5

(b) Trees are the biggest source of oxygen. They help us control pollution. We should not only not cut the trees but we should also plant more and more trees in our neighborhoods. Write an article in 80 – 100 words on the topic, ‘Plant more Trees’ for your school magazine. You are Promila/Primal. 5


4

(a) Read the following sentences carefully and then rewrite them as per instructions given in the brackets : 1× 5=5

(i) The teacher said, ‘‘The Earth rotates round the Sun.’’


(Change the narration)


(ii) Who broke the table? (Change the voice)


(iii) As soon as I entered the room the alarm went off.


(No sooner ... than)


(iv) What a sweet voice! (Assertive sentence)


(v) If you do not work hard, you will not clear the exam.


(Use lest ...)


(b) Read the conversation given below and complete the paragraph that follows: 1×5=5


Ram : Hello, Shyam, where are you going ?


Shyam : To meet my uncle.


Ram : Where does your uncle live ?


Shyam : At Elgin Road.


Ram : You seem to be very excited.


Shyam : Yes, my uncle returned from the U.S., and he has brought a few gifts for me.


Ram greeted Shyam and asked him (i) where he was going. Shyam replied that he was going to meet his uncle. At this Ram wanted to know (ii) where his uncle lived .Shyam’s answer was that he lived at Elgin Road. Ram observed that Shyam (iii) seemed to be very excited. Shyam agreed and said that (iv) his uncle had returned from the U.S. and that (v) he had brought a few gifts for him.


5

Choose any two of the extracts given below and answer the questions that follow in 50 – 60 words each : 4×2=8

(a) ... Tao Ying takes out her own tape measure and insists on measuring him again.


‘I don’t want to! Everybody says I am tall enough except you. It’s because you don’t want to buy me a ticket, don’t think I don’t know. If you measure me I am bound to get shorter again. I don’t trust you! I don’t trust you!’


The yellow tape in Tao Ying’s hands has turned into a poisonous viper.


(i) What prompts Tao Ying to measure the height of her son? 2


(ii) What makes the son feel that the yellow tape in Tao Ying’s hand has turned into a poisonous viper?


(b) Her name meant nothing to me when I read it in the newspaper, but I was intrigued by the snake ring and its emerald eyes. I could not find out, however, on which finger she wore it.


(i) Who is the woman being talked about? Where and how had the writer met her?


(ii) What is special about the ring she wore?


(c) Pity would be no more


If we did not make somebody Poor;


And Mercy no more could be


If all were as happy as we.


(i) What is the relationship between Pity and Poverty?


(ii) What kind of society does the poet visualize in these lines?