One recent example that contradicts the perception people tend to have about the poor, the less privileged or the uneducated is of an 8-year-old girl who recently approached a donkey-camp organized by animal welfare organization and shelter the Ayesha Chundrigar Foundation (ACF).
While the people at ACF offered to put Nughma and her younger brother in school, she remained adamant that the donkey-cart only be used for work. Even when the ACF management offered to give her a monthly ration if she went to school, she declined and said she didn't believe them, and chose to work instead. This entire interaction is so heartwarming and gives rise to many questions, most importantly, what kind of society and state are we building where children are forced to provide for their families in the most taxing of ways? How badly has the state failed that an 8-year-old girl had to have the prudence to save up to buy a donkey? That an 8-year-old chooses wages over school?
Furthermore, Nughma's donkey showed no signs of neglect, and was kept in such perfect pristine condition that it really makes you think why we're so quick to associate poverty with a lack of ethics. And if anything, recent events have shown that your socio-economic status has no bearing on your morality.