[http://cities.expressindia.com/fullstory.php?newsid=245568]
Link to reportAs the new academic session begins in colleges across the
city, hundreds of freshers are discovering that the demonised and
much-feared ritual of ragging can be a whole lot of funPremankur
BiswasThe class was already in progress when Anupam Chatterjee walked
into the room. Flustered and anxious, this first year student of
Comparative Literature at Jadavpur University, settled himself in a
corner while a genial looking girl addressed the class in the first day
of college. Introducing herself as a senior, the girl urged them to
forge a friendly bond with her batchmates. As Chatterjee concluded that
he has the good fortune of having helpful seniors, suddenly someone
among the freshers protested. Threatening to sue the poor senior, much
to the horror of Chatterjee and his classmates, the guy aggressively
walked up to her, only to break into peals of laughter. Before
Chatterjee even knew what hit him, the seniors announced that this was
a prank played on the hapless freshers. The aggressive ‘junior’ was in
fact a histrionically-blessed senior, who was planted among them. “I
don’t think we were ragged. On the contrary, I believe it was an
innovative way of breaking the ice,” claims Chatterjee.The horror
stories of ritualistic physical and psychological abuse of freshers in
colleges and institutes are slowly but surely giving way to genial
“breaking ice” sessions. Ragging in city colleges, it seems, is
redefining itself as a novel way of socially inducting newcomers into
the group.“With the strict anti ragging UGC circular making rounds of
colleges, most colleges have coined their own rules. We believe that
healthy relationship between the seniors and juniors should be
encouraged,” claims Mamata Ray, principal, Presidency College.Father PC
Mathew, principal of St. Xaviers College, agrees. “Young men and women
who walk in through the gates of a college are mostly confused and
scared. To exploit their confusion by subjecting them to mental and
physical abuse is criminal. I believe that interaction between juniors
and seniors builds a healthy and fruitful relationship, which is
mutually beneficial.”It is this very spirit that has encouraged
institutes like Satyajit Ray Film And Television Institute (SRFTI) to
organise programmes like ‘Fresher’s Orientation Night’. “Every year we
have an elaborate orientation with our juniors. In such sessions we
encourage the juniors to talk about themselves and their reasons for
joining the institute. In a specialty institute like ours, we need to
have a dynamic relationship between students. We also need to find out
if they are serious about their future here. The programme therefore is
more of a counseling session,” asserts Avishek Ghosh, a second year
student of SRFTI. However, a little bit of fun is involved, where the
“seniors playfully tease the juniors,” adds Ghosh.Indian Institute of
Management, Kolkata, takes things a step forward. The country’s premier
management institute has a systematic approach to ragging, it seems.
“The whole process of orientation is initiated before the semester.
Through online forums like Orkut and Yahoo, a healthy relationship
between the seniors and juniors is forged. By the time the students
finally join the institute, they have ‘mentors’ who take them under
their wings and help them tackle day-to-day problems,” claims Sugato
Dutta, a second year student of IIM Kolkata. The healthy relationship
is formally solemnised with a grand “freshers welcome feast” which
include “games, food and lots of fun,” adds Dutta.The current situation
in many of these colleages is a far cry from the power politics that
defined the senior-junior relationship in Bengal Engineering and
Science University at Shibpur even a decade ago. “We were subjected to
bizarre forms of torture. I remember a particularly burly senior who
would terrorise me everyday into copying pages and pages of notes for
him. If that was not enough, we were made to perform ridiculous tasks
like finding a pregnant mosquito or stand on one leg in a filthy tank,”
states Rajarshi Nandi, a former student who passed out in the early
1990s.Nandi’s successor by a decade and a half, Rohit Murarka, a 3rd
year student of BE College, has a different tale to narrate. “I was
aware of the dubious reputation of the college when I joined it. To my
utter surprise I found things quite to the contrary. We were welcomed
warmly by our seniors and there was no hostility. The only bit of
ragging that we were subjected to was random requests to sing,” says
Murarka.Nandi sums up. “We were told that the rigorous ragging we were
subjected to was to toughen us for the big bad world. Today things are
different. People are more conscious, aware and sensitive. Things have
taken a turn for the better. Wish we were spared the suffering though.”

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Posted By Ragging News to Ragging News from Indian Colleges -
www.noragging.com at 7/12/2007 06:30:00 PM

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