Is there more to ragging?
by Amit Chamaria, Indian Express  -21/7/2007

Caste biases play a major role in the way students in prestigious
institutions are targeted.
The conclusions of two recent committees make an interesting study
in contrast. The first was constituted by the Central government,
under the chairman of the University Grant Commission (UGC),
Professor S. Thorat, to inquire into the allegation of differential
treatment being meted out to SC/ST students at the All India
Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS). The other was set up under the
directions of the Supreme Court, and was headed by ex-director of
CBI, R.K. Raghavan, to investigate into the prevailing practice of
ragging in educational institutions and to suggest measures to stop
it.

Both committees have recently submitted their voluminous reports to
the concerned authorities. Both have been prepared on the basis of
non-participant observations, but the conclusions drawn are poles
apart. Surprisingly, what Thorat has portrayed glaringly was
completely overlooked by Raghavan.The latter failed to notice that
social prejudices were at work inside institutions of higher learning
and prominently surfaced during ragging exercises. Raghavan
underlined the cruel forms of ragging prevalent in Indian
institutions which are rarely found elsewhere in the world.

The extensive Thorat report recorded that social prejudices were not
only on display during ragging but even played a major role in the
allotment of rooms in hostels and went to the extent of perpetrating
a clear segregation of students in the dining halls. Its observations
were based on the written complaints of many SC/ST students of AIIMS.
The Thorat report gave details about how caste discrimination assumed
ugly forms when an SC/ST student is subjected to ragging. In fact,
discrimination comes into play from the very first day and is the
practice all the year round. The report quoted from letters of
complaints, including one from Ajay Soyal, an AIIMS student, who had
elaborately described the gory caste-biased ragging he had been
subjected to. The Thorat report also mentioned that upper caste
students have even threatened many dalit students with physical
torture.

It is not just in AIIMS that ragging and caste-based ragging appear
to be common occurrences. IIT Chennai also reported several incidents
of caste-based humiliation. Ragging is not new in India but it has,
as reported by the Raghavan committee, got more cruel after the
implementation of Mandal in the nineties. The reason for this is
clear -- upper caste students had come to perceive the Mandal report
as a threat to their status. They came to regard students from the
lower castes and rural areas as hurdles in the way of their upward
mobility. The kind of ragging that the Raghavan committee had
reported should actually be seen as a problem related to caste-biases
within society at large. But the Raghavan report does not see it that
way.

This is what makes the findings of the Thorat committee so
significant. They captured the caste-based humiliations that SC/ST
students in a prestigious institution routinely faced. It is a pity,
therefore, that the mainstream media has chosen to overlook this
important report.




-- 
Ranjit

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