[Reproduced below is a news report, at sl.no. I, and a satirical
piece, at sl. no. II., in feigned spirited defence of Singh.]

I/II.
http://www.daijiworld.com/news/news_disp.asp?n_id=270455

Thursday, October 16, 2014 9:31:58 AM (IST)
Westernised education concept dealt a blow to Indian culture: Rajnath Singh

Jodhpur, Oct 16 (PTI): Union Home Minister Rajnath Singh on Wednesday
held westernised education concept brought by Britishers responsible
for dealing a severe blow to the values and culture of the country and
said present system was not fulfilling the main objective of
education.

Singh, while addressing a gathering at the Chopsani Schools centenary
celebrations here said the main objective of the education is
"comprehensive development of the personality" and lamented that the
present education system was not fulfilling this objective.

Holding the westernised educational concept brought in by the
Britishers, Singh said "this education system has dealt a severe blow
to the values and culture of the country, for which, India has been
recognised across the globe."

Terming Indian culture to be unparallelled, Singh said only Indian
culture and value model is such rich and holistic that it thinks not
only about the human being but everything on the earth, be it
lifeless.

The Union minister said everyone has unique talent and ability and
there was a need to provide an opportunity to them.


"Unfortunately everyone does not have access to this opportunity," he
said while assuring that his government would provide the opportunity
to all to identify and harness the talents and abilities of the
students in the interest of the nation.

Singh said that we will have to realise the malicious intentions of
nipping this value and cultural model behind introducing this
westernised educational model and never treat us as inferior, which
the education system of present time seem to be instilling in the new
generations.

Avoiding a direct criticism of Congress, Singh said that since
independence, what Indian have got, was assurances only.

"Had these assurances converted into reality, the country would have
been a recognised super power and a prosperous nation," he said.

II.
http://scroll.in/article/684390/Rajnath-Singh-is-rite:-Western-educashun-has-ruined-Indian-culture

SATIRE SHOT
Rajnath Singh is rite: Western educashun has ruined Indian culture
Cocktail communists have used a good man's own words to make him look
xenophobic, short-sighted, inaccurate and racist.
Overrated Outcast
Today ยท 05:30 am

We live in turbulent times. The threat of disaster permeates
everything. If it's not the onslaught of a nuclear winter that
threatens to erupt every time two countries are at a standoff, it's
the risk of a single sneeze infecting a whole continent with a serious
plague. Right now, we're like people climbing a mountain during a huge
thunderstorm. But thanks to the wisdom of the people of this country,
we've ended up electing some excellent sherpas to lead us to the
nearest summit.

One of these sherpas is none other than the Union Minister of Home and
the dad from every Rajshri Productions movie, Rajnath Singh. He's been
a target of a lot of controversies, which is perhaps to be expected.
The Lutyens Delhi liberal mafia doesn't really like him. Unlike them,
he's not some troglodyte elitist from a posh Ivy League school. He's
not a Nobel-prize winning economist who has written a white paper
about the impact of inflation-indexed bonds on the unskilled labour
market. He hasn't spent his life being a tool of western imperialism
by working his way to the top echelons of an intergovernmental
organisation.

Shine On You Crazy Diamond

Rajnath Singh is a simple man who believes in four things: god,
country, sangh and party. These are the pillars his life revolves
around. Unlike most denizens of the fledgling Delhi durbar, he's not
after power. He is happy to serve the country in whatever capacity its
people deem fit. Yet left-libbers deem him worthy of attack: just
because he doesn't attend their ostentatious lit-fests, and refuses to
use his government provided accommodation to host elaborate dinner
parties. Every time they have decided that his career is dead, he
bounces back with panache. In spite of that, they continue to go after
him.

Just a few days ago, they took a speech he gave at a school in
Jodhpur, quoted what he said out-of-context, and made him sound
parochial, xenophobic, short-sighted, offensive, wrong, historically
inaccurate and frankly, quite racist. Therefore, as a fellow patriot,
I cannot in good conscience stand on the sidelines and watch these
cocktail communists metaphorically devour this man like the
unrepentant vultures they are.

In his speech, the point the minister was trying to make is simple:
colonialism is the worst. That's a sentiment we can all get behind,
right? In the modern world, we frown upon treating people as second-
or third-class citizens in their own home. No matter how many books
Niall Ferguson writes about the supposed glory of the empire, there is
no bravery in decimating the local population's indigenous industry
and stealing all their natural resources while forcing them to buy
your overpriced junk. In the 21st century, everyone is considered
equal! Unless of course they're gay or eat non-vegetarian food or live
in the North-East or like to wear skinny jeans. Then they're pretty
much asking for it. They might as well walk around wearing
"discriminate against me now, ask me how!" placards on their backs.

Ebb and Flow

Not only did colonialism leave us with a legacy of division, it also
made us lose our sense of self. They accomplished this terrible goal
by decimating our age-old education system, replacing it with an
inferior version of theirs. You see, formal education was another
awesome thing that was invented in our country, even if at that time
this blessed land was divided into a rag-tag bunch of ephemeral
nation-states. It is widely known that the most important intellectual
conversations of those times were taking place in universities that
existed in the primordial precursor to the geographical entity that we
now refer to as India.

Before that, children were educated using the gurukul model.
Basically, every man who claimed to be "enlightened" could set up one
of these in his own backyard. Since no one paid any fees, the students
worked off their debt by performing various tasks around the teachers'
house. It was a great system! The teachers got free labour and
students got an education! Since India has a rich tradition of
respecting teachers, no parents ever questioned the quality of the
education being imparted to their ward. Not that the teachers had any
incentive to listen to them. What were the parents going to do in case
they weren't satisfied? Stop paying the fees? Leave a bad Yelp review?
The gurukul system paved the way for current institutions of higher
learning, like IIPM.

Everything was going well! Then, out of nowhere, the damn British
walked into the country with their standardised education and fancy
words for going to the loo and charmed our students into abandoning
this time-honoured system of learning. Even the so-called leaders of
our freedom movement could not resist this seduction. While they were
advocating the use of only indigenous goods and services, they became
more British than the actual people living in England. If the leaders
of our freedom movement hadn't existed, they'd have to be invented by
PG Wodehouse.

This drove the people of this venerable land away from the one thing
that has made our country different from everybody else in the world:
our culture. You see, as a rule of thumb, ancient things are always
the best. If it was good enough for a group of primitive people who
made up superstitions to explain normal scientific phenomenon, then
it's good enough for us!

Another Prick in the Wall

I, for one, think that Rajnath Singh is right. If it wasn't for our
culture, we might as well have been some nondescript country like
Ecuador or Canada. Canada! Canada is the Hamid Ansari of countries:
always needing to remind everyone of its presence. We should be
teaching our kids to be proud of our culture. From the zero, to
marrying someone you've met only once, to Deepak Chopra, we've
invented everything! If it weren't for us, people the world over would
only be having sex in the missionary position. How boring would that
have been? What tools would people have used to spice up their
relationships? The Kamasutra has saved more marriages from
self-destructing than the fear of social ostracism. Who else but fair
minded people like our ancestors could have come up with something as
unique as sixty-nining? (By the way, ladies, you're welcome!)

Another misguided export that we revere in this country is democracy.
Why couldn't we let our Prime Ministers be decided the old fashioned
way: through the use of astrology? Now Rajnath Singh is not advocating
this policy for personal gain. He doesn't want to be Prime Minister,
despite what his astrologer keeps telling him. He's a loyal party
worker. He will do whatever job the party assigns him. If one day in
the very distant future  they want him to be the country's primary
sevak, who is he to stop them? Respecting the wishes of your elders,
isn't that what Indian culture is all about?

Unless of course, the elder person in question is LK Advani. In that
case you just ignore whatever they have to say and do your own thing.

We welcome your comments at [email protected].
-- 
Peace Is Doable

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