I don't like repeating my articles or publishing them retrospectively, but you have to indulge me this one time, and I would never bother unless I was convinced that the issue deserves far greater attention than it is currently being accorded in the national media-which it does, especially if you compare it with the initial outrage the issue had raised.
So the Thorat committee formed by the H.R.D. Ministry to look into certain 'objectionable' political cartoons in N.C.E.R.T. social science textbooks for class IX to XII has already submitted its report within forty-five days of its formation, which is an aberration in a polity where the setting-up of committees by the Union Government are almost always formed with a single-minded purpose: to serve as dilatory measures. In all likelihood, the H.R.D. Ministry will order the implementation of the report, which not only affirms the Ministry's stance on the seminal issue of concern(which I elaborate on further) but also further seeks the deletion of as many as twenty-two other cartoons from the N.C.E.R.T. Social Science textbooks for the Central Board of Secondary Education; in particular, the cartoons in the political science textbooks for Class XI and XII have been singled out for chastisement This, ladies and gentlemen, is nothing short of preposterous. The cartoons that have so been construed as profane are purely vehicles of inclusive and constructive pedagogy, and there is not a scintilla in any of them that could possibly cause affront to any community in this beautifully diverse country. The only silver lining is that Mr. MS Pandian, a member of the committee formed under the chairmanship of SK Thorat(the President of the Indian Council of Social Science Research Institute) cared to add a note of dissension to the final copy of the report. However, despite my best efforts I have not been able to ascertain which twenty-two cartoons have further been removed, otherwise I would have given a rebuttal in defence of each of the cartoons in question. However, I had written a very impassioned(by admission) piece on the unsavoury incident which originally thrust the contentious issue into the limelight, and which can justifiably be called the casus belli for the formation of the aforementioned committee. The issue relates to a cartoon in the eleventh grade political science book in a chapter on the drafting of the constitution of India-a book that the writer happened to study for a year.
What follows is an essay from the 12th of May, 2012:
So the Thorat committee formed by the H.R.D. Ministry to look into certain 'objectionable' political cartoons in N.C.E.R.T. social science textbooks for class IX to XII has already submitted its report within forty-five days of its formation, which is an aberration in a polity where the setting-up of committees by the Union Government are almost always formed with a single-minded purpose: to serve as dilatory measures. In all likelihood, the H.R.D. Ministry will order the implementation of the report, which not only affirms the Ministry's stance on the seminal issue of concern(which I elaborate on further) but also further seeks the deletion of as many as twenty-two other cartoons from the N.C.E.R.T. Social Science textbooks for the Central Board of Secondary Education; in particular, the cartoons in the political science textbooks for Class XI and XII have been singled out for chastisement This, ladies and gentlemen, is nothing short of preposterous. The cartoons that have so been construed as profane are purely vehicles of inclusive and constructive pedagogy, and there is not a scintilla in any of them that could possibly cause affront to any community in this beautifully diverse country. The only silver lining is that Mr. MS Pandian, a member of the committee formed under the chairmanship of SK Thorat(the President of the Indian Council of Social Science Research Institute) cared to add a note of dissension to the final copy of the report. However, despite my best efforts I have not been able to ascertain which twenty-two cartoons have further been removed, otherwise I would have given a rebuttal in defence of each of the cartoons in question. However, I had written a very impassioned(by admission) piece on the unsavoury incident which originally thrust the contentious issue into the limelight, and which can justifiably be called the casus belli for the formation of the aforementioned committee. The issue relates to a cartoon in the eleventh grade political science book in a chapter on the drafting of the constitution of India-a book that the writer happened to study for a year.
What follows is an essay from the 12th of May, 2012:
I don’t usually raise my voice on social issues of concern,
not because I don’t have a view but simply because I believe there are people
of much greater experience and calibre in the most consecrated of institutions
in our democracy to discuss them: those sitting in Parliament. But I couldn’t
allow myself to not speak up this time, simply because it is the outrageous
behaviour of these very people that has caused a deep sense of anguish in me,
and it is these actions I seek to excoriate. I believe it would amount to gross
dereliction, as a student and as someone who is directly affected by the
events, to not express my sense of indignation at the completely mindless act
of protest by our parliamentarians on Friday, forcing parliament to be
adjourned over an issue which is predicated on the most ridiculous of
arguments, and I find it shocking that not one sane M.P. had the temerity to
stand up against the despicable and uneducated behaviour of certain members.
The protest in parliament relates to a cartoon in the
eleventh grade N.C.E.R.T. Political Science book on the slow and calibrated
process that was the drafting of our constitution. The cartoon shows Dr.
Ambedkar mounted on a snail (in trademark western attire), which is marked
clearly in bold as the ‘CONSTITUTION’, holding the reins to the snail in one
hand while carrying a crop in the other; an ostensible metaphor for his
constant endeavour of completing the constitution on time. Seen behind him is Pandit Nehru, also
carrying a crop in his hand while the people of India look on. This is followed
by a caption which talks of the “snail’s pace” at which the constitution was made. The sole objective of the cartoon was to
convey the difficulties that Babasaheb Ambedkar faced in his duty as chairman
of the Drafting Committee; bringing together diverse shades of opinion that
existed at the time; and giving expression to the ideals, aspirations and
identities of every section in our incredibly dissimilar and diverse country.
This is the obvious meaning of the cartoon and this was the meaning we
interpreted while studying the book last year, and is the meaning all
sound-minded students of our country have interpreted for the past six years,
as is re-enforced by the fact that not one incident of antagonism on this
cartoon has been reported since its introduction in 2006; but
the good men sitting in parliament thought otherwise, and since they believe
they have the absolute right to disrupt parliament whenever they want, they
ensured that parliament was adjourned twice on the same day and that no serious
business could be conducted. The obvious semantics of the cartoon would be
apparent to any reasonable-minded student of political science, but
unfortunately the MPs instead chose to interpret this as a belittlement of the
great man that was Babasaheb Ambedkar, with reference to the fact that he was
seated on a snail and being ‘whipped’ to work by Pandit Nehru. It is ludicrous for one to accept their view
that the cartoon is a symbol of dominance of one community over another, or
even that it disparages Dr. Ambedkar’s role in drafting the constitution; or is
derogatory to the community he belonged to.
The cartoon was made in 1949 by the celebrated cartoonist K.
Shankara Pillai and it was adopted by the C.B.S.E for a greater contextual
understanding of the text and it is the various cartoons in the book that
provide respite from the monotony of the overly factual text, a view which I
share with most of my class-mates. Not
once, as some of the parliamentarians fallaciously claim, has Dr. Ambedkar been
as much as mildly criticized in the text in his role as the architect of our
constitution. The chapter only talks about the formation of the constituent
assembly, the challenges that came with writing a constitution, the various
ideals and objectives behind it, the
affirmative role played by a few prominent leaders of the freedom struggle in it,
and also a brief mention of why the drafting was such a laborious and tardy process. It does not contain a
letter which denigrates Babasheb’s great contribution or undermines his stature
or the community he belongs to. It is at this point that I would like to quote
the only sensible thing our H.R.D. minister said in Parliament, that
Babasaheb’s contribution in the making of the constitution does not belong to
any one community, but to the nation as a whole.
I feel ashamed that such intolerant and nescient individuals
have been elected to parliament by the people of India; and I also feel
insulted that my class-mates and I were considered as having the same divisive
tendencies that some of the MP’s showcased on Friday. I am sure that if Dr.
Ambedkar was alive to this day, he would take umbrage at the way certain MPs
are behaving in the name of protecting his legacy.
The incident is also symptomatic of the growing intolerance
in our country towards matters of academic interest, which certain elements
consider as profane; as is evident in the issue of A.K. Ramanujan’s purportedly
tendentious essay on the Ramayana being removed from the History course at Delhi
University and this ongoing issue over the Ambedkar cartoon. What is also
disheartening about this situation is that members chose to raise the issue
during the budget session of parliament, and at a time when there are a number
of vital legislations that need to be discussed and passed in this critical
phase of our country’s history.
I am only seventeen years old, but I have a firm conviction
that our society must measure each article of academic interest in terms of its
effects on rational and thinking individuals, not on hyper-sensitive
individuals who worship expediency.
I'm awaiting reply of an RTI I filed to the HRD ministry seeking details of the censored material from the school social sciences textbooks. Let's see what comes back.
ReplyDeleteGreat work!
ReplyDelete