Chandan Gowda: Keep party politics out of textbooks!

In use since 2017, the existing set of school textbooks in Karnataka were certainly in need of revision: many of the chapters in sociology were outdated, the discussions in economics, political science, history and geography drab and listless, and typographical and grammatical errors were found in the hundreds in the social science books.  But the protests over the textbooks slated to replace them showed that the Karnataka Textbooks Review Committee (KTRC) had other aims to pursue.  

The writings of Kannada writers, AN Murthy Rao, P Lankesh, Sara Aboobaker were dropped from the 10th standard Kannada textbook (first language) to make way for writings by Bannanje Govindacharya, a scholar of Sanskrit and Kannada, K.B. Hedgewar, the founder of RSS, and Shatavadani Ganesh and Charavarthy Sulibele. Whatever else their talents might be, the latter two right wing ideologues are simply not the people to go to for essays on Indian values and for historical profiles of Shivaram Rajguru and Sukhdev.  Since Hedgewar’s vision of establishing the primacy of Hinduism in India is incompatible with the Indian Constitution, which views the country as multi-religious, a debate is needed before including even his ostensibly non-political essay on how ideals matter more than individuals in a school textbook.

Angered at how major writers had been taken off the school books, Devanur Mahadeva, the distinguished Kannada writer, asked that his essay featured in the same book also be removed. The indifference of the primary education minister made a few other Kannada writers and poets also withheld permission for using their writings in the textbooks. This was truly a sad moment for Kannada culture.

Doubts about the credentials of Rohith Chakratirtha had indeed surfaced when he was made the chair of the KTRC committee last September.  But his distasteful remarks made in the print and social media in the past that surfaced recently revealed him as wholly unfit for the work of overseeing textbook revisions.

Making a forceful intervention, Sri Nirmalananda Swamiji, the head of the Adichunchunagiri Matha, conveyed to Chief Minister Bommai his displeasure at how someone who had disparaged Kuvempu, the great Kannada writer, and his poem that is Karnataka’s state song (nada-geethe), could ever become the Chairperson of KTRC.

In another critical gesture, Sri Panditaradya Shivacharya Swami, the head of the Sanehalli Matha, alerted the Chief Minister to the distortions in the profile of Basavanna found in the revised 9th standard social science textbook.  It was wrong to describe “the founder of Lingayat dharma,” he wrote, as “a reformer of Veerashaiva dharma.” He also objected to the omission of the details of Basavanna casting off his sacred thread in his pursuit of a new dharma and to how his use of simple Kannada made his movement people-oriented.

Other problems with the revisions exist too.

In the revised 8th standard social science textbook, a chapter formerly titled, “Geographical Features and Prehistoric India,” and now retitled, “Bharatvarsha,” makes an outlandish claim: “India shares its boundaries with Pakistan, Afghanistan, China, Nepal, Bhutan, Bangladesh and Myanmar. Earlier all these areas were together called as Bharathavarsha, Bharatha Khanda, Sindhudweepa, Akhandabharatha and Greater India too.”  Among other untenable claims: India has descended from “Sindhu Saraswathi” civilization, and not Harappan civilization; the Vedas are “the world’s oldest available literature.” The revised 9th standard social science textbook retitles a chapter titled, “Christianity and Islam,” as “Western Religions.” Why the two religions which originated in Asia are being called Western is bizarre.

In a display of political conservatism, a chapter in the revised 10th standard social science textbook formerly titled, “Social Movements,” and now retitled, “Collective Behaviour and Protests,” retains the sections on environmental and women’s movements but drops those on farmers’, workers’ and anti-untouchability movements. 

Alas, reasons of space make it difficult to go over the numerous other difficulties with the textbook revisions. Two days ago, Chief Minister Bommai offered to seriously examine the charges made by the Swamijis and also issued clarificatory remarks in defence of the controversial revisions.  The spirit of the protests though was asking for something more: only the most responsible scholars and teachers must be in charge of education and any kind of party politics be kept out of the classroom.

https://www.deccanherald.com/opinion/keep-party-politics-out-of-textbooks-1115376.html


The essay by AK Ramanujan censored by DU's Academic Council


A K Ramanujan works dropped from new DU syllabus


Sambhaji Brigade vandalised the Bhandarkar Institute in Pune in 2004


Javed Anand: What is at stake in the hijab issue


Ramachandra Guha: Gandhi said RSS was ‘communal with a totalitarian outlook’ – and that’s still true


Anushka Baruah - What Ramjas teaches // MSU Baroda Cancels Workshop on Caste citing Ramjas incident: Protest by Indian Cultural Forum Collective


Javed Anand - Ms Wadud, we are ashamed


Suspension of academic in Kerala because he talked about fascism and Sangh Parivar


Stephen Alter - The right of the reader


STATEMENT BY ASHOKA UNIVERSITY FACULTY - March 18, 2021


Ashoka University: Pratap Bhanu Mehta’s letter and my comment DS


Founders made clear I was political liability for Ashoka University: Pratap Bhanu Mehta


Ashoka University: Correspondence on Professor P. B. Mehta's Resignation



Popular posts from this blog

Third degree torture used on Maruti workers: Rights body

Haruki Murakami: On seeing the 100% perfect girl one beautiful April morning

The Almond Trees by Albert Camus (1940)

Rudyard Kipling: critical essay by George Orwell (1942)

Satyagraha - An answer to modern nihilism

Albert Camus's lecture 'The Human Crisis', New York, March 1946. 'No cause justifies the murder of innocents'

Goodbye Sadiq al-Azm, lone Syrian Marxist against the Assad regime