There
is a news item in my paper today that says the All India Council for Technical
Education (AICTE) has drawn up a new model curriculum for engineering and
management courses that makes it compulsory to learn a smattering of
Indian/Vedic values. That set me thinking, and several rather disquieting
thoughts came into my mind.
First,
teach ‘values’ to people in college, when, as any psychologist will tell you,
their values have already set hard for life? Don’t you teach values in very
early life, and that too more by example than by precept, if they are to be any
use at all?
Second,
anyone who hasn’t been living under a rock knows what kind of values children
who grow up fixated on engineering and/or management school later in life are
being taught at home, isn’t it? That one gets an education only, repeat only,
to get a job; that engineering and management is the quickest and safest way to
at least a moderately paying job, that to get into those colleges all you need
to learn is a bit of physics, chemistry and math (not much of that either, if
daddy is ready to shell out a goodly sum of money!) – everything else is
useless, language, literature, history, geography, economics, civics, leave
alone something so esoteric and impractical as ‘values’? Don’t they also learn
among values that it is fine to cheat through exams all one’s educational life,
just as long as one doesn’t get caught, and naturally carry on living by those
values for the rest of their lives? Don’t they learn that it is fine to forget
everything one has crammed before exams afterwards, because knowledge is useless,
only the exam scores matter? Don’t most of them condone, or at least quietly go
along with the disgusting practice of ‘ragging’? Don’t they habitually use
dirty language? Such kids will suddenly start learning values like honesty,
hard work, thrift, cooperation, courtesy, punctuality, cleanliness, kindness
etc etc in college? Why on earth should
they? How can they be made to? What
sort of fools expect them to?
And
what exactly are Indian/vedic values? If values are worth the name, aren’t they
supposed to be universal? Are Indian values all very healthy and worth teaching
– extreme forms of patriarchy and casteism, for instance, open defecation,
blind worship of the old, deliberate confusion of myth and history, mindless
cruelty to animals, the tradition of kowtowing to people in power to their
faces and constantly plotting to stab them when their backs are turned,
arranging big fat weddings to show off one’s ‘success’…? (the ‘authorities’
quoted have said that our epics are great sources of good values. Look up my
essay on the Mahabharata in this
context. The Ramayana I won’t even
deign to discuss, and the Arthashastra,
another of these people’s supposed gold mines, recommends that the king spy on
everybody all the time, including his own family members. How’s that for a good
‘value’?) And what kind of rubbish is a sentence like this – ‘Indian culture is
largely focusing (sic) on collectivism where family and work group goals
dominate over individualistic needs and desires’, and that, feel the
authorities, is not only missing in conventional management literature but
sorely needed by our budding engineers and managers. Well, as any semi-conscious
Indian could tell you, as countless writers from Saratchandra Chatterjee to
Arvind Adiga (who in The White Tiger
has famously called the traditional Indian family an asphyxiating,
soul-destroying chicken coop) have shown, the above assertion is pure bunkum: Indians
typically neglect and treat the weak in their families, children, women, the
old and the handicapped, with monstrous cruelty while paying lip service to
family love and mutual obligations, and westerners, who mouth far fewer pious
platitudes far less often, actually show far more collectivism and concern for
the common weal: witness everything from how they keep their surroundings
clean, insist on stern laws to prevent abuse of the weak, and provide social
security to those who cannot fend for themselves. Whom are we trying to fool?
3 comments:
Sir, you rightly reflected the indian values.Most of the indians pretend that they are abiding by the indian values.You also said that most people do not learn value from the early life and when they go to college they start learning values , i also wonder that how is it possible . Also you have mentioned in your post "The Mahabharata" that most men below 30 cannot properly tell the story of The Mahabharata in outline .
These people later claim themselves as learned indians but actually they do not know any indian value .
Yours sincerly
Siddhartha
“Let the hate flow through you”, Emperor Palpatine.
This is exactly what is happening every day, everywhere in our country. Parents teach their children to defecate in the open, grown-ups always teach us to blindly worship the old, no matter whatever happens. The curriculum will just be an extension of these mind-contaminating practices. Even if this curriculum is imposed there would still be many who would not even know a single character from the Itihasa. When would they realise, the problem is with the people?
Yours faithfully,
Swarnava Mitra.
This announcement by AICTE is nothing but one of those stupid ugly appeasement politics to please the communities and people in positions of power who consider themselves as modern prophets of Hinduism. What is far more sad to see is that this ridiculous decision is going to have a severe impact on the mind of youth. Because I am afraid that rather than making our youth aware and sensitive of our Vedas, such a decision will actually make them disinterested in the Vedas. Such a step clearly indicates how little these so-called 'education leaders' (it actually feels so funny to call them so) understand the millennials.
Post a Comment