A classroom in Cameroon
A classroom in Cameroon by Peace Corps is licensed under CC-CC0 1.0
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A 92-year-old, Indian great-grandmother has learned to read and write after going to school for the first time, inspiring others to join her, media and officials said Wednesday.

Salima Khan, born in about 1931 and married at 14 — two years before the end of British colonial rule in India — had a lifelong dream of being able to read and write.

Khan, from Bulandshahr in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh, said there were no schools in her village when she was a girl.

Six months ago, Khan began studying alongside pupils eight decades younger than she is. Her grandson’s wife accompanies her to class.

Her story emerged after a video of her counting from one to 100 went viral on social media.

“My grandchildren used to trick me into giving them extra money as I couldn’t count currency notes,” she told the Times of India. “Those days are gone.”

India’s literacy rate is about 73 percent, according to the 2011 census.

“Her story reinforces the belief that the pursuit of knowledge is not limited by age,” Lakshmi Pandey, a local education officer, told AFP.

Volunteers from a government education initiative had identified Khan as a potential student and encouraged her to go to school, Pandey said.

School headmistress Pratibha Sharma said teachers had been initially “hesitant” about embarking on teaching Khan but were won over by her “passion” to study.

“We didn’t have the heart to refuse her,” Sharma told the Times of India.

Since Khan started going to school, 25 women from her village have also started literacy classes, including two of Khan’s daughters-in-law, Sharma told the daily paper.

Guinness World Records lists the late Kimani Ng’ang’a Maruge from Kenya as the oldest person to complete primary school. He enrolled in 2004 when he was 84.

A former Mau Mau guerilla fighter against British colonial forces, Maruge started school to learn to count money and to read the Bible. He was later appointed “senior head-boy.”

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