http://www.indianexpress.com/full_story.php?content_id=10244
Gujarat and value education
V. K. TRIPATHI
Saturday, September 28, 2002
The Supreme Court had a limited issue before it — to examine whether the National Curricular Framework (NCF) violated the secular character of our constitution or not — in the PIL filed by Aruna Roy and others. It has ruled that the NCF proposal on value education does not violate it. The judges, however, have issued a word of caution that the programme be implemented in a spirit of equal respect for all religions. This implies that value education has the danger of being misused for reinforcing sectarianism.
Gujarat has posed the most serious challenge to secularism. We require
an equally powerful prescription to clear our minds of prejudice and prepare
us to protect the lives and dignity of people, without distinction of religion.
Merely telling students that all religions are equal or giving them a superficial
exposure to various religions is not going to help. The existing school
books already have lessons on Buddha, Kabir, Nanak, Tulsi, Mira, Gandhi
and others, who represent the best of the Indian spiritual tradition. Then
we have religious practices in the family and discourses at religious shrines
and on TV. All these have a cumulative
effect on our thinking. Any more emphasis on them will be futile.
Communalism attacks the right of people to live in the country, branding
some as aliens. It distorts the perception to the extent that even educated
people seek to avenge the past by targetting whole communities. During
the temple movement, the slogan that caught the imagination was ‘Babur
ki auladon se badla
lenge’. The people who raised this forget that the ancestors of the
poor Muslims sought to be targeted were exploited labourers even at the
time of Babur. More recently, at the height of the Gujarat violence, VHP’s
Praveen Togadia stated on TV that Hindus were a non-violent people — as
if killing Muslims in
large numbers was not violence. We, therefore, need a genuine sense
of self inquiry so that students can turn into thinking individuals, with
the ability to perceive the agony of their fellow beings without prejudices
of caste or religion. Teachers can help students in this.
The proponents of value education have no concern for liberating the
mind from prejudice. They are driven by the conviction that ancient Indian
culture is superior to all others and that we must take pride in it. Changes
envisaged by NCERT in the social sciences curriculum, especially, is driven
by this. It is fallacious on
two counts. First, pride is a function of authority — 70 per cent of
Indians live lives of hardship. They cannot feel pride just because their
religion had a great culture. Second, pride doesn’t foster understanding.
That comes through a process of self inquiry.
Take the controversy over history. The study of history has two purposes
— to develop an objective understanding of the processes that determine
social and political dynamics, and to help us understand the fundamental
contradictions between the rulers and the ruled. History then becomes a
way of confronting past
myths, prejudices and oppression. The new syllabi — comprising two
history books for Class XI, one on Ancient India and the other on Medieval
India — emphasise the glories of ancient India and suppress its in-built
contradictions. Caste, for instance, has been a dominant factor in Indian
society over millennia
yet it finds only a marginal mention in the syllabus. There are special
units on Vedic culture and philosophy of Upanishads but very little mention
of the Sufi-Saint movement that influenced Indian social life immensely
for centuries. The preamble to the new syllabus says that its focus shall
not be on rulers but the syllabus for ‘Medieval India’ has nothing but
the rulers — invasions by Turks, Arabs, Mughals and other Muslim rulers
and the rise of rebellion against them is seen as the dominant history
of that period. When coupled with silence on Muslim artisans, faqirs and
Sufis, the picture that emerges is that of Muslims as aliens who are oppressive
and violent.
The most serious drawback of the NCF and other initiatives of the ministry of human resource development has been their neglect of the genuine educational needs of students. The ratio of the number of students in primary and upper primary schools to the total population of the relevant age group has declined in the last seven years; 70 per cent children drop out from schools at or before eighth grade and high school results in many government schools is below 20 percent. It is in these areas that reform is called for, most of all. The ministry would have done a great service to the nation if it had focussed of these issues.
(The writer is a professor of physics at IIT, New Delhi)
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