*The Outsiders*

*A new case of caste discrimination in IIT Delhi highlights the miserable
plight of Dalit students in India's premier technical institute,
reports**SHOBHITA NAITHANI
*
   *Brave heart *Ravinder
Kumar wants to force caste discrimination into the public eye
Photo: Jake Cornish

FOR AKSHAY (name changed), his admission in 2002 to the Indian Institute of
Technology, Delhi, (IIT-D) was an achievement whose magnitude has less to do
with his being Dalit than with the fact that he has battled schizophrenia
since his early teens. Diagnosed in 1997, Akshay has been through years of
therapy, which his doctors at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences
(AIIMS) have certified to have had 95 percent success. His struggle with
this complex, mind-debilitating illness, however, meant that it took him six
years to reach third-year studies at India's premier engineering institute.

This May, Akshay went to his professor of Applied Mechanics to request an
attendance waiver because he hadn't been keeping well. A sensitive response
is what one would have expected, particularly from a person of the
sophisticated calibre IIT professors can be thought to possess. What Akshay
received, instead, was a reprimand of stunning crudity. "Every second beggar
on the street is a schizophrenic," he claims the professor told him. "IIT
has no room for such people. Degree engineer ko milti hai, bimaar ko nahin
(engineers get degrees, not the sick)." Then came the crowning blow: "The
only reason you're here is because of reservations." The stunned 24-year-old
stood speechless.

But worse was to come. Akshay's name, along with those of 19 other IIT-D
undergraduates, was struck off the institute's rolls earlier this month
because his "performance was below the required minimum level for
continuation". This is the first time the institute has asked so many
students to leave; 12 of them are Dalits. Akshay, a bank clerk's son from
Faizabad in Uttar Pradesh, doesn't deny the fact that he hadn't done well,
but insists that the institute must examine the reasons for his poor show.
"I sought support but all I got was a dressing-down for being a Dalit," he
says. "I can't get over that, and I can't understand why the faculty is not
more supportive."

Along with AIIMS, IIT-D was at the vanguard of anti-reservation protests in
2006, when the human resources development ministry sought to expand
reservations for Other Backward Classes (OBCs) in State-funded institutions
of higher learning. The anti-quota campaign reached a nadir of vulgarity
when IIT-D students took to articulating their protest by pretending in
public places to mend shoes and sweep roads, implying that these "low"
professions (to which Dalits have traditionally been confined) would be the
upper-caste IIT aspirant's only career options were the quota law to be
enforced. Propaganda through SMS and e-mail was a highlight of the campaign
— these and other inspired ideas were, it was later found, the brainchild of
a Gurgaon-based public relations firm, which had offered to help out.

Resentment of backward-caste students is apparently endemic at IIT-D, and
comes not just from peers but the faculty as well. Where professors are
meant to guide students through the institute's demanding course work, many
of them actively demoralise those from disadvantaged backgrounds. "The IITs
were never democratic," avers a former student, who asked not to be named.
"I don't mean in terms of functioning, but in their attitude towards
students."

The 20 students expelled this year were also obliged to vacate their hostels
without delay. Some left without questioning. One decided to fight back.
Last December, Ravinder Kumar Ravi achieved passing marks in a subject he
was later informed he had failed. He approached the Dean with the initial
mark sheet, but, he says, "the Dean took no heed and said the teacher's word
was final". He then went to the teacher concerned (whom he doesn't wish to
name); she subsequently e-mailed the Dean to explain that the discrepancy
had occurred because she had missed one of Ravi's assignments, which had
caused his grade to fall from D to E. "Is it not perverse that the same
teacher who gave me passing marks at first found cause to fail me later?"
Ravi asks.

HAVING APPROACHED the offices of Union Human Resources Development minister
Arjun Singh, Congress president Sonia Gandhi and Uttar Pradesh Chief
Minister Mayawati but to no avail, Ravi lodged a complaint with the National
Commission for Scheduled Castes (NCSC), which sought an explanation from
IIT-D director Surendra Prasad. Although NCSC chairman Buta Singh has told
TEHELKA that Ravi's is a clearly established case of discrimination, Prasad
denies the charge. "Students who are aggrieved will obviously make
allegations of discrimination," he says. "Our teachers don't even know who
is a Dalit student and who is not." When told that students contend that
faculty members often ask them their caste, Prasad said: "You must take
their claims with many, many pinches of salt."

Ravi, meanwhile, is planning his next move if the "institute doesn't accept
its mistake": a hunger strike. Following the termination letters, he has in
fact started a mini movement of sorts. Its aim, he says, is to force into
the public eye the discrimination that has gone unobserved at IIT-D for
years. IITians allege that four to five students are expelled each year from
the institute for poor performance. Of them, at least three are from the
Scheduled Castes/Tribes (SC/STs). This time, while the institute claims that
20 termination letters were dispatched, students suspect that there are 28
expulsions of which at least 18-20 are SC/STs. After Ravi put up posters in
each of the campus hostels, asking fellow sufferers to get in touch with
him, distressed students began calling him right away. "One of them told me
it was best for him to end his life," Ravi says.

"In all the institutes of excellence, the question of merit has turned into
blatant casteism," says Anoop Kumar, the editor of Insight: Young Voices, a
bimonthly Dalit youth magazine. "The faculty is already prejudiced and
therefore they treat Dalit students as substandard. It's worse for students
who are from financially weak backgrounds and lack proficiency in English."

Sunil (name changed), a Dalit who graduated from IIT-D in 2003, says the
discrimination begins in senior school itself. In his final years at the
premier Delhi school he attended, Sunil says his classmates were resentful
of the fact that he, an SC, had a reservation-ensured fillip to his chance
of an IIT admission. "When you enter IIT, you arrive with this baggage of
having been branded as second-rate," he observes. The 27-year-old says he
escaped jibes from his professors because of his urban background; a Dalit
student from a small town or village, however, has a bad time of it. Lacking
proficiency in English, these students are thrown into the same pool to sink
or swim as the rest. With little institutional assistance, many of them are
unable to cope. "There is immense pressure at IIT for a general category
student, but for a Dalit, it becomes twice as tough," says Sunil, now
pursuing an MPhil in sociology from Jawaharlal Nehru University. He recalls
a day in the first month of his course when a chemistry professor found out
that one among a group of students who had sneaked out of his lecture was an
SC. "He went ballistic," says Sunil. Addressing a class of 50, the professor
reportedly said, "These worthless people resort to such antics. They don't
deserve being educated."

Dalit students were often referred as 'shadda', a derogatory term derived
from 'Scheduled Caste', leading to a sense of segregation. According to
Kumar, it is then that students withdraw into a shell and some even
contemplate suicide.

The IITs always claimed that they admit students on the basis of merit. But
Kumar says the concept of merit is bogus and it's all about opportunity.
"The Dalit predicament is not only about caste and reservation. It's about
educational reforms. And these so-called premier institutes need to value
that." •
   *From Tehelka Magazine, Vol 5, Issue 26, Dated July 05, 2008*







-- 
Ranjit

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