Four Dead In Jhalawar School Collapse: The Hidden Danger Inside Classrooms In India

On the morning of July 25, 2025, as school prayers began in Piplodi village, Jhalawar district, the unthinkable happened-a portion of the government school's roof gave way, burying students under heavy debris. At least four children lost their lives, while 17 others were injured, some critically. What should have been an ordinary start to the day turned into a desperate rescue operation involving villagers, school staff, and cranes clawing through broken cement.

Locals say the building had been in poor shape for years, with cracked walls, sagging ceilings, and repeated complaints-none of which saw meaningful action. Within hours, the school was sealed off, and a probe was ordered by Rajasthan's Chief Minister. But even as condolences poured in, the question hung heavy: how many more schools like this exist across India?

Photo Credit: PTI

Barwani, Madhya Pradesh: Four Years Under Plastic Sheets

In Jaliyapani village, a primary school building collapsed four years ago. Since then, students have studied under a makeshift canopy of plastic sheets and bamboo sticks in a villager's veranda-exposed to wind, rain, and fear. Despite the clear danger, no permanent reconstruction has occurred.

Gurgaon, Haryana: Unsafe Rooms Still In Use

At Lohsinghani Government Middle School, eight classrooms were demolished after being declared unsafe. But due to a lack of space, two other structurally compromised rooms are still in daily use. During the monsoon, leaks and falling debris are common-and complaints from staff continue to be ignored.

Chittempadu, Andhra Pradesh: Cracks And Rainwater Inside

Students in this village are forced to study under ceilings that leak heavily and are visibly cracked. The school remains in use, even though water seeps into classrooms during heavy rain and cement chips regularly fall from above. The situation has remained unchanged despite repeated appeals.

Kalahandi, Odisha: Classes Held In A Cowshed

After a school in Kalahandi was declared unsafe, students were shifted to a nearby cowshed. With livestock nearby, no blackboard, and no insulation from the elements, children try to learn amid smells, flies, and heat-conditions far from conducive to concentration or safety.

Narsampet, Telangana: School Under A Tree

In the absence of any shelter, 53 students from a collapsed government school now take classes outdoors under a large tree. A single tarpaulin offers minimal shade. Their "classroom" is the soil, and learning pauses when it rains.

Bhopal, Madhya Pradesh: Ceiling Plaster Falls Mid-Class

In early July 2025, a Class X student was injured at a government school in Bhopal when ceiling plaster suddenly collapsed. CCTV footage showed the panicked scramble of students. Teachers had already warned of structural instability, but no timely repairs were done.

Jharkhand: Building Collapses Years After Being Declared Unsafe

A school building in Jharkhand collapsed in July 2025, killing a 65-year-old man and injuring two others. The building had been declared unsafe years ago but was still standing without support or demolition. Local authorities blamed budget delays.

Aligarh, Uttar Pradesh: Girls Injured, Complaints Ignored

In 2022, five girls were injured when a classroom wall caved in at a school with a long history of ignored warnings. Community members alleged that officials had inspected the site multiple times but never followed up with action.

Mangaluru, Karnataka: Collapsed Wall During Repairs

Four girls were injured when a classroom wall and part of the roof collapsed during repair work-ironically while labourers were working just above. This highlighted not just poor infrastructure, but negligence in executing safety procedures even during maintenance.

When Education Demands More Than Just Books

Education isn't meant to be life-threatening. And yet, for countless children in India, the classroom is no longer a space of learning-it's a place of quiet, daily risk.

The tragedy in Jhalawar is not an isolated failure. It reflects a deeper rot-where complaints about crumbling walls go unanswered, where danger is normalised, and where safety is deferred until lives are lost. These aren't accidents; they're outcomes of neglect, underinvestment, and administrative indifference.

Every time a child walks into a dilapidated classroom, the system gambles with their future-and their life. Until structural safety becomes as non-negotiable as mid-day meals or textbooks, the promise of education will remain incomplete.

Photo Credit: PTI

It's not enough to rebuild what's collapsed. India must now act urgently to assess, repair, and rethink how school infrastructure is treated-especially in rural and underserved areas. Until then, we are teaching our children not resilience, but resignation.

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