How to Indianise Education?

From understanding history and the foundations of modern India, to studying issues on how to build the future, one should ensure that he or she doesn’t get caught up in some divisive story and focus on making the country a better place, says Gowda; one idea of India should not become dominant and result in academic apartheid, advises Ganguly

CHENNAI: There could probably be no disagreement on the fact that education shapes minds and ideologies. But with all the recent demands for the ‘Indianisation’ of education, the question really is what does ‘Indianisation’ mean? Should students be ripped of the chance to understand their history, conflicts that arose, and foundations of modern India?  These were some of the questions debated at the ThinkEdu Conclave.

“There are issues about the foundations on which you build the future, what are those foundations, how did we get there, was there exploitation, injustice and violence in the past, how was it perpetrated and how was it justified. All those questions need to be answered before we can go forward. At the same time, we should also make sure that we don’t get caught up in some divisive story about something that happened thousands of years ago. We have to focus on what do we do to make India a better place, how do we make education come alive in such a manner that people can relate to the world in which we live,” says Rajeev Gowda, MP.

He adds, “Too often, because our higher education has not been Indianised enough, we haven’t got enough of an understanding of our context, and conflicts. If we talk about urban planning today and don’t understand that villages were built in segregated ways, that some communities had issues about not getting enough access to facilities, all that is necessary to build newer cities. So there is a need for some amount of historical knowledge.”

Anirban Ganguly, Director, Dr Syama Prasad Mookerjee Research Foundation, says the problem is not when there are too many different ideas, but when one idea continues to dominate and leaves no room for other ideas to develop.

He says, “The problem is when one idea of India dominates and practises academic apartheid. And when that idea is no longer dominant, it accuses others of being intolerant. There has to be a certain amount of balance. You cannot practise academic apartheid for decades and not allow a certain conception of India to come out. Academic apartheid has made a very selective reading of thinkers. There should be centres where we study the history of the communist party in India, where you study Dr Syama Prasad.”

Related Stories

No stories found.

X
The New Indian Express
www.newindianexpress.com