[What does it mean to ‘Indianise’ education? As Shivarama Karanth once
pointed out, it is impossible to talk of ‘Indian culture as if it is a
monolithic object’. ‘Indian culture today,’ he continued, ‘is so
varied as to be called “cultures”. The roots of this culture go back
to ancient times: and it has developed through contact with many races
and peoples. Hence, among its many ingredients, it is impossible to
say surely what is native and what is alien, what is borrowed out of
love and what has been imposed by force. If we view Indian culture
thus, we realise that there is no place for chauvinism.’]

http://www.hindustantimes.com/ramachandraguha/what-does-it-mean-to-indianise-education/article1-1355837.aspx

What does it mean to indianise education?

    Ramachandra Guha | Updated: Jun 06, 2015 22:30 IST

A writer is known by the enemies he makes. I was therefore interested
to hear from a friend in Delhi that I had been attacked in an
editorial in Organiser, the English mouthpiece of the Rashtriya
Swayamsewak Sangh.

I went online and found the editorial. This argued that ‘the likes of
Ramachandra Guhas and Romila Thapars who talked about “change” but
benefited from the status quo are the people who coined and abused the
term “saffronisation”. Without getting into their malicious
intentions, one needs to take an objective stand on connecting
education to Indian realities’.

I was mystified to read this. For, I played no part in coining the
term ‘saffronisation’. In fact, I have been careful not to describe
the ideology of the Sangh Parivar as ‘saffron’. Here I follow the late
UR Anantha Murthy, who pointed out that saffron was a beautiful
colour, associated with purity and renunciation throughout Indian
history. Like Anantha Murthy, I am loath to cede the colour and all
that it signifies to the RSS.

After charging Professor Thapar and myself with ‘malicious
intentions’, the editorial in The Organiser argued that ‘Indianising
education based on our socio-cultural roots is the only way to
transform India’s population into a human development hub’.

***What does it mean to ‘Indianise’ education? As Shivarama Karanth
once pointed out, it is impossible to talk of ‘Indian culture as if it
is a monolithic object’. ‘Indian culture today,’ he continued, ‘is so
varied as to be called “cultures”. The roots of this culture go back
to ancient times: and it has developed through contact with many races
and peoples. Hence, among its many ingredients, it is impossible to
say surely what is native and what is alien, what is borrowed out of
love and what has been imposed by force. If we view Indian culture
thus, we realise that there is no place for chauvinism.’*** [Emphasis
added.]

In the RSS view of the world, all that is Western is to be suspected.
The Organiser editorial characteristically attacks ‘Anglo-Saxon’
values and education methods as ‘not in tune with our culture’. Let me
posit, to this xenophobia, the warnings of an Indian writer even
greater than Karanth. In an essay published in 1908, Rabindranath
Tagore observed: ‘If India had been deprived of touch with the West,
she would have lacked an element essential for her attainment of
perfection. Europe now has her lamp ablaze. We must light our torches
at its wick and make a fresh start on the highway of time. That our
forefathers, three thousand years ago, had finished extracting all
that was of value from the universe, is not a worthy thought. We are
not so unfortunate, nor the universe, so poor.”

A hundred years on, the world is even more inter-connected than in
Tagore’s day. India still needs a robust interaction with the West,
but also with China and Japan, Africa and Latin America. In these
mutual exchanges we may get something of value from them, and they
something from us. We must keep our windows open, letting in winds
from across the world, without, as Gandhi once said (provoked in part
by Tagore) being blown away by any.

While school and college students in India must be encouraged to look
outwards, they must also be instructed to look within. Here, in fact,
I am on the same page as The Organiser, except that I have a more
disaggregated understanding of our ‘socio-cultural roots’. In my view,
a constructive way to ‘Indianise education’ is to more strongly place
the school curriculum in its local or regional context. Students must
go outside the classroom into the field to study the flora and fauna
of their district (or state), its forests and water bodies, its
agricultural and craft practices. They must also document the
district’s built heritage, listing old temples, mosques, churches,
gurudwaras, forts and homes.

A major consequence of unregulated economic development has been the
destruction of the natural environment and of historic buildings.
Making environmental knowledge central to school education shall make
young Indians more aware of what needs to be done in this regard.

If school students need to understand the extraordinary cultural and
natural diversity of India, college students must be exposed to the
diverse strands of political argument that have gone into the making
of the Republic. The RSS is right in suggesting that for too long has
modern Indian history been presented through the lens of the Congress,
the hegemonic party in the freedom struggle. But where it treads
dangerous territory is in seeking to replace the Congress idea of
India with one based on the ideas of its own icons, VD Savarkar and MS
Golwalkar. For, those thinkers mistakenly (some would say maliciously)
saw Indian culture as monolithic, as containing a so-called ‘Hindu
essence’, which it became their privilege to define, and for their
followers to enforce.

Fortunately, the spectrum of political opinion in India is far wider
than that constituted by the BJP or the Congress. Consider the recent
controversy over the ban on a student group in IIT Madras that went by
the name of the ‘Ambedkar-Periyar Study Circle’. The ban has only led
to the proliferation of study groups named after Ambedkar and Periyar,
two thinkers remarkably open to ideas from the West, as well as
opposed to the reduction of India’s diverse cultural heritage to a
single or singular ‘Hindu’ essence.

With the great sociologist Max Weber, I believe that ‘universities
must not be allowed to become vehicles of indoctrination, promoting a
particular political or religious point of view’. This pluralism is,
alas, antithetical to cultural commissars, whether the Lefists, who
once dominated university education, or the Rightists, who now strive
to supplant them.

 Ramachandra Guha’s most recent book is Gandhi Before India You can
follow him on Twitter at @Ram_Guha

The views expressed are personal

-- 
Peace Is Doable

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send an email to [email protected].
Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to