A Romanian school has been told they can keep their skeleton
staff after education officials discovered they were using the bones of a
former headmaster to teach anatomy.
Alexandru Grigore Popescu had been working at the rural
Puchenii Mosneni elementary school in south-eastern Romania's Prahova county
for 50 years until his death.
He said in his will that he had always wanted to have a
skeleton in the class for biology lessons.
It had never been possible, but in his will he had arranged
for his skeleton to be cleaned and professionally put back together so it could
be hung in the classroom where he had taught kids for 50 years.
But the skeleton had been confiscated when health and safety
officials discovered it was the real thing on a visit to the school and
insisted on having it checked to see if it was hygienic.
But now after being professionally checked and specially
treated to make sure it was safe, and put in a glass case, the skeleton has now
been returned to the school.
Although it may seem grisly kids at the school said they
found it really helpful during classes to have the skeleton, and were pleased
to see a return.
The former headteacher Popescu had started work as a teacher
at the school in the Puchenii Mosneni commune in 1908.
History teacher Sorin Stanciu said: 'He was made head
teacher 10 years after starting working there and was famous for the fact that
he never missed a class. His skeleton was made into a display in the 1960s
after his death and he hasn't missed a class since then either.'
The skeleton is now being kept in a glass case just to make
doubly sure that it is not only healthy but also that none of the kids are
tempted to mess around with it.
Sorin added: 'I think having our own skeleton is really one
of the reasons that we always do really well with students graduating in the
sciences and in particular going on to study medicine.'
The current headteacher Violeta Badea said: 'There is nobody
around now that remembers him as a teacher but I think you can say that from
the shape of his chin he was probably an extremely determined and decisive
individual and a man with a very powerful personality, which explains his
enormous attachment to the school, this community and its children.
'The professor's wish was fulfilled because he did not want
to be put six feet under the ground but rather he wanted to be placed in the
back of the classroom, which has been done as he wanted so that he could
continue to assist classes.
One of the pupils told local TV: 'He donated his body so
that we could study biology better. Instead of reading off a book, we look at
the skeleton and understand better.'
Another added: 'At the beginning I thought it was something
weird because I hadn't seen a real skeleton, but now I'm used to him.'
Source-Dailymail
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