Marshalling his meagre resources a few years ago, Ambia set about putting up a coaching centre for the kids—but only after spending six months convincing their mothers to educate them, and repeatedly appealing to the local panchayat for funds. "I could tell that the sex workers were happy with the idea of schooling, but they were wary of us outsiders," he recalls. He found unlikely support in Swapna Chakraborty, a sex worker with considerable leadership qualities. Chakraborty rounded up the kids, and helped Hossain and his band of do-gooders set up the centre in an abandoned cattleshed. In 1996, in its first year, the school had 103 kids, between the ages of four and nine.