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Thursday, December 31, 2015

Hindu way to resist Hindutva


Amidst the noisy debate on intolerance that marked the political discourse this year, one voice has been conspicuously absent — that of the Hindu obviously steeped in the tradition. Of course, a large number of Hindus, at least nominal Hindus, have spoken out against the growing climate of bigotry and chauvinism — Nayantara Sahgal, Kailash Satyarthi, P.M. Bhargava, N.R. Narayana Murthy, Raghuram Rajan, Admiral Ramdas and now the new Chief Justice of India T.S. Thakur, to name a few. However, none of them appears to be a tilak-sporting, shloka-chanting, bhajan-singing, puja-performing, pilgrimage-going, observant Hindu. Rather, they are exactly the sort of urban,
secularised, English-speakers that the proponents of Hindutva scorn as “inauthentic” in terms of their Hindu roots.
Indeed, most of India’s liberal Hindus would confess that they are Hindu, if at all, mainly in a vaguely spiritual and philosophical sense and have little understanding of Hinduism’s history or scriptures and no truck with its many rituals, symbols and observances. Their liberal sentiments are rooted largely in their own cosmopolitan
experience and, at best, a homegrown understanding of the Hindu tradition absorbed from the family milieu rather than anchored in the texts and tenets of Hinduism. Of course, the more eclectically read can trot out a supportive quotation or two from the Gita, but their plural and tolerant understanding of Hinduism is instinctive rather than intellectual.
Sadly, however, this well-meaning guff is simply not going to cut it. The misguided rants of the RSS, Sangh Parivar and the rest of the Hindutva brigade have to be delegitimised from deep within Hinduism — by wielding the texts, idioms, history and practices of the Hindu tradition, rather than the liberal and secular values of the European Enlightenment. Hindutva can only be countered by showing it up as “un-Hindu”.
This is easier said than done. No Hindu religious leader of any consequence — not one of the hordes of gurus and mahants supposedly immersed in the tradition and, therefore, able to authoritatively represent its core values — has spoken out against the rampant distortions of Hinduism that are currently being propagated. On the contrary, many have implicitly condoned or are explicitly riding the Hindutva bandwagon. Sadly, there is no Swami Vivekananda around to once again articulate an ecumenical vision for Hinduism — “a religion which has taught the world both tolerance and universal acceptance”, as he memorably put it at the World Parliament of Religions in Chicago in 1893. What, then, are liberal Hindus to do?
What, then, are liberal Hindus to do?
Gandhi provides a model. This London-educated barrister saw the profound social, cultural, intellectual and political influence exerted by Hindu religiosity and spirituality on Indians and understood the importance of expressing his political ideals — be it ahimsa, satyagraha, or sarvodaya — in a Hindu idiom to mobilise the masses. He realised that Hinduism was too important to be left to Hindu religious leaders. Instead of looking to them, Gandhi engaged with the texts and traditions himself. He was thus able to draw credibly on the Isopanishad, which he interpreted as endorsing “universal brotherhood” and “the doctrine of equality of all creatures on earth”, the Bhagavad Gita, of which he published a Gujarati translation and commentary, the Tulsi Ramayana and his family’s Vaishnava heritage to articulate a vision of an independent India based on religious pluralism. Equally, by his knowledgeable references to the Sermon on the Mount and the teachings of the Buddha and Mahavira, or his use of the Surah Fatiha from the Quran in his daily prayer services, or by popularising the version of Raghupati Raghava Raja Ram that included a reference to Allah, Gandhi was able to walk his secular talk while remaining a devout Hindu throughout his life.
Equally, by his knowledgeable references to the Sermon on the Mount and the teachings of the Buddha and Mahavira, or his use of the Surah Fatiha from the Quran in his daily prayer services, or by popularising the version of Raghupati Raghava Raja Ram that included a reference to Allah, Gandhi was able to walk his secular talk while remaining a devout Hindu throughout his life.
Of course, Gandhi’s moral sway waned in his latter years and he was viewed by many Muslims as having gone overboard in his use of Hindu idioms such as Ram rajya and Bharat mata and in his enthusiasm for cow protection. Ultimately, the horrific communal massacres that blighted Partition made a mockery of what Gandhi had stood for, but there is no question that his pluralist stance was critical in creating acceptance within the Hindu majority of an inclusive, non-sectarian ethos within the independence movement and post-Independence India.
Ultimately, the horrific communal massacres that blighted Partition made a mockery of what Gandhi had stood for, but there is no question that his pluralist stance was critical in creating acceptance within the Hindu majority of an inclusive, non-sectarian ethos within the independence movement and post-Independence India.
After Independence, however, the prevailing Nehruvian ethos of secular modernity meant that Hinduism found no place in the country’s mainstream political or intellectual life. Neither the Congress nor the Left had the inclination or cultural confidence to follow Gandhi’s lead and integrate Hindu idioms and ideals into their discourse, while the Hindu tradition was left out of school curriculums and not taken seriously by universities (unlike, say, Christianity, whose doctrines and development are rigorously researched and critiqued in theology departments at the best Western universities, be it Oxford or Harvard).
Educated, urban Hindus gradually lost their connection with the tradition. Few have read the core Hindu scriptures and fewer know even the barest facts about the tradition’s historical evolution or the sources of its practices. Hinduism, for them, has become nothing more than an incoherent jumble of ungrounded and unintelligible
rituals, observances and superstitions leavened by the occasional pleasures of celebrating a Diwali, listening to a Meera bhajan or reading the Hanuman Chalisa. How many times have we seen supposedly observant Hindus looking thoroughly bored or confused with the rites at their own wedding, let alone other religious occasions?
An environment in which even educated Hindus don’t know their Hinduism (in a critical and intellectual sense), even as the Hindu faith retains its pre-eminent sway over the masses, has become fertile ground for fanatical bigots.
Under the garb of saffron-clad, tilak-sporting piety, which ostensibly accords them the legitimacy to speak for Hindus, they can run around railroading the simplistic, monolithic pieties of Hindutva — whether on the cow, the role of women, or Rama — in support of a majoritarian political agenda.
Countering this poisonous discourse will require India’s liberals today to, like Gandhi, learn their Hinduism. Hinduism matters too much socially and politically to remain the preserve of sadhus and swamis and so-called Hindu leaders.
Secular Hindus need to engage seriously with Hinduism’s history, texts and living practices to articulate from within it an ethic of pluralism and tolerance that resonates in today’s India. Fundamental to this engagement is recognising the manifold variants of the tradition — the “Three Hundred Ramayanas” celebrated by the late poet and scholar A.K. Ramanujan in his essay that hardline Hindu groups succeeded in getting dropped from the history syllabus of Delhi University.
Exactly this sort of uninformed homogenisation of Hinduism leads, in a lighter vein, to my north Indian friends wishing me a happy new year on their Diwali, little realising that as a Tamil, I not only celebrate my new year in April but even my Diwali is celebrated according to a different calendar on a different day from the typical north Indian, and for a totally different reason (to mark the killing of the demonic Narakasura by Krishna’s consort, Sathyabhama, rather than the return of Rama to Ayodhya after defeating Ravana).
In sum, India’s liberals need to recognise that secularism and tolerance in a nation whose social and cultural fabric is woven largely from the multiple strands of the Hindu tradition is best protected by engaging with the majority religion rather than bypassing it. The diversity built into Hinduism’s very structure is itself the most sustainable underpinning for a plural polity that accommodates differences between the majority faith and other religions of the land, just as it accommodates enormous variations within Hinduism.

Source: Indian Express, 31-12-2015

Union Cabinet given Ex-post facto approval for signing of MoU among BRICS countries on BRICS Network University 
Thursday, December 31, 2015


New Delhi: The Union Cabinet, chaired by the Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi, has given its ex-post facto approval for signing of Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) among BRICS countries on BRICS Network University. The negotiations were held on this during the 3rd BRICS Education Ministers meeting and Senior Officials meeting in November, 2015 at Mosco, Russia. 

The MoU will help in developing pro-active cooperation among the BRICS nations for the purpose of enhancement of scientific research, higher education, information exchange, analysis and implementation of best practices, joint research programmes, and mobility of students, researchers and educators. 

Source: http://www.indiaeducationdiary.in/shownews.asp?newsid=37052

NIIT IFBI’s Certificate Programme to Build Pool of Bank PO 


NIIT Institute for Finance, Banking and Insurance (IFBI) announced the launch of its first batch for Certificate Programme in Banking Sales and Marketing (CPBSM) in association with Catholic Syrian Bank (CSB). CPBSM is an exclusive programme that aims to build a pool of probationary officers (PO) with marketing skills.
The one-month certificate programme is designed for training and recruitment of PO to be posted in sales and marketing of various deposit, loan, insurance products of the Bank under various functional verticals. This programme is a blend of core domain knowledge and usable skill-set requirements like sales and marketing, technology familiarity and customer handling. To start with, the programme will be available in select locations including Thrissur, Trivandrum and Coimbatore, as per immediate requirements.
Speaking on this significant partnership, Bimal Jain, President NIIT IFBI said, “As pioneers in the BFSI industry in India, NIIT IFBI has been working towards creating professionally trained workforce for the BFSI industry. This strategic partnership with the Catholic Syrian Bank has been tailor-made to create a large pool of industry-ready talent who would be offered challenging career opportunities with the Bank.”
According to a press release, this programme has been specifically designed to develop and empower graduates with robust skill sets and vital insights needed to undertake marketing banking business as a PO in banks. Graduates/post graduates with minimum of 60 per cent marks in their graduation and less than 28 years of age can apply for this course. On successful completion of the programme, students will be placed with CSB.
The selection to the programme will be through in-house screening process with final interview by CSB officials. After successful completion of the probation period of two years, the PO will be absorbed as Assistant Manager (Grade-1) and will be awarded with the programme certificate.



Sense on Financial Inclusion from RBI


The Mohanty committee offers good advice
The RBI committee on financial inclusion headed by Deepak Mohanty has done well to take a systemic approach, instead of confining itself to banking channels.This, of course, runs the risk of converting the report into a broad narrative of needed reform across the real economy , and being added, with nods of weighty approv al, to the shelf of expert reports that need to be acted on sometime this century . But it has the benefit of bringing out the interconnectedness of popular access to formal finance with institutions and practices relating to the real economy , whether land records and agricultural subsidy or the tax treatment of securitisation vehicles. The Supreme Court stands to gain much clarity on the utility of Aadhaar as it ponders the legitimacy of its use in assorted government schemes, if it were to glance through just the summary recommendations of the panel.While the report deserves broad endorsement, some specific recommendations stand out. The panel wants to remove the eight-percentage-point maximum mark-up on the interest rate charged to the end-borrower by financial intermediaries over their cost of borrowing from a bank. This would encourage inclusion of remote areas and communities. The recom mendation to liberalise the norms for banking correspondents, while streamlining their regulation, and use mobile technology to cover the last mile, instead of asking banks to open yet more unviable rural branches, is hugely welcome. The focus should be on smartphones and their applications, as these will replace feature phones even in rural areas with remarkable speed not anticipated by the committee.
The committee does well to endorse direct cash transfers to administer subsidies. The use of Aadhaar to tag bank accounts of the beneficiaries will help reform the country's subsidy administration and cut graft. The panel's recommendation to link Aadhaar to each individual credit account and share the information with credit rating agencies makes sense. However, India must enact a robust privacy law to prevent any abuse of Aadhaar.
Source: Economic Times, 31-12-2015
Hope Is For Tomorrow, Not Today


I would like to have peace of mind.

UG: When do you expect to have it? It is always tomorrow, next year. Why? Why does tranquility, or quietness of the mind, or whatever you choose to call it, only happen tomorrow; why not now? Perhaps this disturbance ­ this absence of tranquility is caused by the very sadhana (practice) itself.
Q: Whatever i do seems meaningless. There is no sense of satisfaction. I feel that there must be something higher than this.
UG: Suppose I say that this meaninglessness is all there is for you, all there can ever be for you. What will you do? The false and absurd goal you have before you is responsible for hat dissatisfaction and meaninglessness in you. Do you think life has any meaning? Obviously you don't. You have been told that there is meaning, hat there must be a meaning to life. Your notion of the “meaningful“ keeps you from facing this issue, and makes you feel that life has no meaning. If the idea of the meaningful is dropped, then you will see meaning in whatever you are doing in daily life.
Q: But we all have to have an idea of a better, more spiritual life.
UG: Whatever you want, even the so-called spiritual goals, is materialistic in value. What, if I may ask, is so spiritual about it? If you want to achieve a spiritual goal, the instrument you use will be the same which you use to achieve materialistic goals, namely thought. You don't actually do anything about it; you just think. So you are just thinking that there must be some purpose to life. And because thought is matter, its object ­ the spiritual or meaningful life ­ is also matter. Spirituality is materialism. In any event you do not act, you just think, which is to postpone. There is simply nothing else thought can do.
That instrument called thought, which you are employing to achieve your so-called spiritual goals, is the result of the past. Thought is born in time, it functions in time, and any results it seeks are bound to be in and of time also. And time is postponement, the tomorrow. Take, for example, the fact of selfish ness. It is condemned, while selflessness, a pure creation of thinking, is to be sought after.
Its realisation, however, lies always just ahead, tomorrow.
You will be selfless tomorrow, or the next day , or, if there is one, in the next life.
Why is it not possible for you to be totally free from selfishness now, today? And do you really want to be free from selfishness?
You do not, and that is why you have invented what you call selflessness, in the meantime remaining selfish. So, you are not going to be selfless at all, ever, because the instrument which you use to achieve that state of selflessness or peace of mind is materialistic in value.Whatever you do to be free from selfishness will only strengthen and fortify it. I am not saying that you should therefore be selfish, only that thinking about its abstract opposite, which you have called “selflessness“, is useless.
You have also been told that through meditation you can bring selfishness to an end. Actually , you are not meditating at all, just thinking about selflessness, and doing nothing to be selfless. I have taken that as an example, but all other examples are variations of the same thing. All activity along these lines is exactly the same. You must accept the simple fact that you do not want to be free from selfishness.
Sex ratio dips, Jains & Sikhs buck trend


Two religious communi ties of India, Sikhs and Jains, have turned the corner on child sex ratio while all others showed further dips, as did the national average, according to fresh Census 2011 data released on Wednesday .Child sex ratio is the number of girls aged 0-6 years for every 1,000 boys in the same age group. It is a crucial measure for India where preference for sons and smaller families has driven the number of girls ­ and women ­ to unnaturally low levels in the past several decades. The child sex ratio for the whole country now stands at 918, dipping further from 927 in 2001, and reaching the lowest level since 1961.
Among Hindus, who make up nearly 80% of India's population, the child sex ratio declined from 925 in 2001 to 913 in the latest Census data. This is the biggest decline -of 12 points -among all religious communities and a chilling reminder for the continuing need for much more robust action to save the girl child.
The child sex ratio among Christians declined from 964 to 958 while among Muslims it declined from 950 to 943. The turnaround among Sikhs and Jains is a silver lining in this rather bleak scenario because these communities had the worst sex ratios despite being generally better off and better educated.
It reflects a growing consciousness about the issue created in part by considerable public campaigns in Punjab where most Sikhs live.However, the ratio is still dangerously low in both communities.
As reported by TOI earli er, Christians have the best population sex ratio, with 1,023 females for every 1,000 males, way ahead of all other communities and the national average of 943. Hindus and Sikhs have the worst sex ratios, at 939 and 903 respective ly. At 951, Muslims have a better sex ratio than Hindus and Sikhs but lagging behind Buddhists (965) and Jains (951). The latest Census data also sheds light on the growth of literacy among various religious communities. Muslims, who showed the lowest literacy rate of 59% in 2001, recorded the biggest increase and reached 69% in 2011.
Although still short of the national average of 73%, and still the lowest among all religious communities, the gap is rapidly closing. Jains continue to have the highest literacy rate, at 95%, followed by the Christians who are now at 85%. All communities are showing a much higher rate of growth of female literacy than male literacy . Overall, across India, female literacy jumped from 54% to 65% while male literacy rose from 75% to 81%.
Times View
The data shows that for all the efforts thus far, the child sex ratio continues to fall for most communities except those in which it was already at abysmally low levels. This must be reversed. Strict enforcement of government controls on sex selection tests is one part of what needs to be done, but cannot be the sole answer. That must be combined with more vigorous campaigns for awareness about discrimination against the girl child being a social evil and with incentives for people to have daughters. Some tax breaks already exist, but there needs to be more thought given to devicing more such incentives.

Source: Times of India, 31-12-2015

Wednesday, December 30, 2015


Recommendations of Deepak Mohanty Committee on Medium-term Path on Financial Inclusion


The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has released the Report on Medium-term Path on Financial Inclusion submitted by 14-member committee headed by RBI Executive Director Deepak Mohanty. RBI had constituted the committee in July 2015 to examine the existing policy regarding financial inclusion and the form a five-year (medium term) action plan. It was tasked to suggest plan on several components with regard to payments, deposits, credit, social security transfers, pension and insurance. Key recommendations Augment the government social cash transfer in order to increase the personal disposable income of the poor. It would put the economy on a medium-term sustainable inclusion path. Sukanya Shiksha Scheme: Banks should make special efforts to step up account opening for females belonging to lower income group under this scheme for social cash transfer as a welfare measure. Aadhaar linked credit account: Aadhaar should be linked to each individual credit account as a unique biometric identifier which can be shared with Credit information bureau to enhance the stability of the credit system and improve access. Mobile Technology: Bank’s traditional business model should be changed with greater reliance on mobile technology to improve ‘last mile’ service delivery. Digitisation of land records: It should be implemented in order to increase formal credit supply to all agrarian segments through Aadhaar-linked mechanism for Credit Eligibility Certificates (CEC). Nurturing self-help groups (SHGs): Corporates should be encouraged to nurture SHGs as part of Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) initiative. Subsidies: Government should replace current agricultural input subsidies on fertilizers, irrigation and power by a direct income transfer scheme as a part of second generation reforms. Agricultural interest subvention Scheme: It should be phased out. Crop Insurance: Government should introduce universal crop insurance scheme covering all crops starting with small and marginal farmers with monetary ceiling of Rs. 2 lakhs. Multiple Guarantee Agencies: Should be encouraged to provide credit guarantees in niche areas for micro and small enterprises (MSEs). It would also explore possibilities for counter guarantee and re-insurance. Unique identification of MSME: It should be introduced for all MSME borrowers and information from it should be shared with credit bureaus.


Gujarati litterateur Raghuveer Chaudhary selected for 2015 Jnanpith Award

Eminent Gujarati litterateur Raghuveer Chaudhary has been selected for the 51st Jnanpith award. Mr. Chaudhary is the fourth Gujarati litterateur to bag this prestigious award after Uma Shankar Joshi (1967), Pannalal Patel (1985) and Rajendra Shah (2001). About Raghuveer Chaudhary Born: 5 December 1938 in Bapupura near Gandhinagar, Gujarat. He is novelist, poet, critic and a Gandhian and his talent has been influenced by works of Gowardhan Ram Tripathi , Kaka Kalelkar and Suresh Joshi.

His work: He has authored more than 80 books and some of his notable novels include Amrita, Venu Vatsala, Purvarang and Laagni Samjyaa Vinaa Chuuta Padvanu. He also had worked as a columnist for numerous newspapers such as Sandesh, Janmabhumi, Nirikshaka and Divya Bhaskar. He was a teacher at the Gujarat University until his retirement in 1998. Awards and Honours: He has received numerous accolades including Sahitya Acadmi Award for his novel Trilogy Uparvaas in 1977. About Jnanpith Award Jnanpith Award is one of the prestigious literary awards in country and its name has been taken from Sanskrit words Jnana and Pitha which means knowledge-seat. It was instituted in 1961 and is presented annually by Bharatiya Jnanpith trust founded by the Sahu Shanti Prasad Jain family that owns the Times of India newspaper group. It is bestowed upon any Indian citizen who writes in any 22 official languages of India mentioned in VIII Schedule of Constitution of India. Prior to 1982, the award was only given for a single work by a writer. But after 1982, the award is given for lifetime contribution to Indian literature. Award Carries: Includes cash prize of 11 lakh rupees, a citation plaque and a bronze replica of Saraswati.


Research Institute of Homoeopathy and Unani at Navi Mumbai -

Shripad Yesso Naik, Minister of State (Independent Charge) for AYUSH, laid the foundation stone for the construction of Research Institute of Homoeopathy and Unani under the Central Council for Research in Homoeopathy (CCRH) and Central Council for Research in Unani Medicine (CCRUM) respectively at Kharghar, Navi Mumbai in Maharashtra. These organisations are apex bodies for research under the Ministry of AYUSH. This Institute will be a premier institute in the state of Maharashtra engaged in research activities in Homoeopathy and Unani medicine.
Speaking on the occasion, the Minister said that high quality research in Homoeopathy and Unani medicine is essential for the growth, further development and their scientific usage in health care systems. He emphasised that the Ministry of AYUSH is committed for the strengthening of all existing research institutes. This upcoming institute is a significant step of the Government for inculcating research aptitude in students of various colleges already functional in Maharashtra.
The Minister assured full cooperation of the Central government in the development of AYUSH systems in Maharashtra. He emphasised that Government of Maharashtra should utilize provisions of centrally sponsored schemes and establish Homoeopathic and Unani colleges in the Government sector. There is need to give employment to Homoeopathic and Unani doctors at primary health care, the Minister added.
These regional institutes of Homoeopathy and Unani Medicine will be completed within 18 months. When these institutes will be fully operational, there shall be provision of world class Homoeopathy and Unani treatment, apart from undertaking research in incurable diseases like HIV/AIDS, Cancer, chronic skin diseases like psoriasis, vitiligo etc. These institutes shall have state of the art laboratories and investigation facilities where patients can be given treatment with modern outlook.

Nothing free or basic about it


We need to provide full Internet at prices people can afford, not privilege private platforms. This is where India’s regulatory system has to step in

The airwaves, the newspapers and even the online space are now saturated with a Rs. 100 crore campaign proclaiming that Internet connectivity for the Indian poor is a gift from Facebook which a few churlish net neutrality fundamentalists are opposing. In its campaign, Facebook is also using the generic phrase “free, basic Internet” interchangeably with “Free Basics”, the name it has given its private, proprietary platform. This is in blatant violation of Indian rules on advertising, which forbid generic words being used for brands and products. This is from a company which, in spite of having 125 million Indian subscribers, refuses to be sued in India, claiming to be an American company and therefore outside the purview of Indian law. Nor does it pay any tax in India.

The Free Basics platform is a mildly tweaked rehash of the controversial internet.org that Facebook had floated earlier. Facebook and Reliance, the sixth-largest mobile service provider in the country, have joined hands to offer it as a platform for free data services restricted to a few websites. The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) has stopped this service for now, pending its public consultation on the subject. Facebook’s campaign is essentially to influence the outcome of such a consultation.

Data as commodity
Evgeny Morozov, one of the most insightful commentators on technology, has written extensively on how Silicon Valley seeks to subvert the state, promising to give the people connectivity, transport and other facilities, if we only hand over our data to them. Instead of people demanding that the state provide access to various services — from drinking water to transport and communications — people are being led to believe that a few capitalists from Silicon Valley will provide all these services. We will have Internet connectivity instead of education, and Uber will provide private taxis, instead of public transport. To paraphrase Marie Antoinette, let the people have cake instead of bread. This is the Internet monopolies’ agenda of hidden and mass-scale privatisation of public services.

By accepting the Silicon Valley model of private services, we pay the Internet monopolies with our data, which can then be monetised. Personal data is the currency of the Internet economy. Data as commodity is the oil of the 21st century. Facebook and Google’s revenue model is based on monetising our personal data and selling it to advertisers. Facebook generates an estimated revenue of nearly $1 billion from its Indian subscribers, on which it pays no tax.

Free Basics is not free, basic Internet as its name appears to imply. It has a version of Facebook, and only a few other websites and services that are willing to partner Facebook’s proprietary platform.

Today, there are nearly 1 billion websites. If we consider that there are 3.5 billion users of the Internet, 1 out of 3.5 such users also offers content or services. The reason that the Internet has become such a powerful force for change in such a short time is precisely because anybody, anywhere, can connect to anybody else, not only to receive, but also to provide content. All that is required is that both sides have access to the Internet.

All this would stop if the Internet Service Providers (ISPs) or telecom companies (telcos) are given the right to act as gatekeepers. This is what net neutrality is all about — no ISP or telco can decide what part of the Internet or which websites we can access. Tim Wu, the father of net neutrality, has written that keeping the two sides of the Internet free of gatekeepers is what has given a huge incentive for generating innovation and creating content. This is what has made the Internet, as a platform, so different from other mass communications platforms such as radio and television. Essentially, it has unleashed the creativity of the masses; and it is this creativity we see in the hundreds of millions of active websites.

Facebook’s ads and Mark Zuckerberg’s advertorials talk about education, health and other services being provided by Free Basics, without telling us how on earth we are going to access doctors and medicines through the Internet; or education. It forgets that while English is spoken by only about 12 per cent of the world’s population, 53 per cent of the Internet’s content is English. If Indians need to access education or health services, they need to access it in their languages, and not in English. And no education can succeed without teachers. The Internet is not a substitute for schools and colleges but only a complement, that too if material exists in the languages that the students understand. Similarly, health demands clinics, hospitals and doctors, not a few websites on a private Facebook platform.

Regulate price of data
While the Free Basics platform has connected only 15 million people in different parts of the world, in India, we have had 60 million people join the Internet using mobiles in the last 12 months alone. And this is in spite of the high cost of mobile data charges. There are 300 million mobile broadband users in the country, an increase fuelled by the falling price of smartphones.

In spite of this increase in connectivity, we have another 600 million mobile subscribers who need to be connected to the Internet. Instead of providing Facebook and its few partner websites and calling it “basic” Internet, we need to provide full Internet at prices that people can afford. This is where the regulatory system of the country has to step in. The main barrier to Internet connectivity is the high cost of data services in the country. If we use purchasing power parity as a basis, India has expensive data services compared to most countries. That is the main barrier to Internet penetration. Till now, TRAI has not regulated data tariffs. It is time it addresses the high price of data in the country and not let such prices lead to a completely truncated Internet for the poor.

There are various ways of providing free Internet, or cost-effective Internet, to the low-end subscribers. They could be provided some free data with their data connection, or get some free time slots when the traffic on the network is low. 2G data prices can and should be brought down drastically, as the telcos have already made their investments and recovered costs from the subscribers.

The danger of privileging a private platform such as Free Basics over a public Internet is that it introduces a new kind of digital divide among the people. A large fraction of those who will join such platforms may come to believe that Facebook is indeed the Internet. As Morozov writes, the digital divide today is “about those who can afford not to be stuck in the data clutches of Silicon Valley — counting on public money or their own capital to pay for connectivity — and those who are too poor to resist the tempting offers of Google and Facebook” (“Silicon Valley exploits time and space to extend the frontiers of capitalism”, The Guardian, Nov. 29, 2015). As he points out, the basic delusion Silicon Valley is nurturing is that the power divide will be bridged through Internet connectivity, no matter who provides it or in what form. This is not likely to happen through their platforms.

The British Empire was based on the control of the seas. Today, whoever controls the data oceans controls the global economy. Silicon Valley’s data grab is the new form of colonialism we are witnessing now.

Net neutrality is not an esoteric matter, the concern of only a few netizens. It is fundamental to the world, in which the Internet is a source of knowledge, a means of communication, an artery of commerce. Whoever controls access to the Internet will control our future. This is what the current battle over Facebook’s Free Basics is all about.

(Prabir Purkayastha is chairperson, Knowledge Commons, and vice-president, Free Software Movement of India.)

Keywords: Free Basics, Facebook, Silicon Valley, net neutrality

Source: The Hindu, 30-12-2015

Tracing The Ego Back To Its Source


Thoughts have two basic compoT nents: a subjective factor ­ I, me or mine and an objective factor ­ a state, condition or object with which we are associated, like our own body and mind or external circumstances like relationships, possessions or activities.We get so deeply absorbed in the `object' portion that we fail to direct our mind inward to see our true nature apart from these external conditioning influences.The result is that we remain ignorant about our true nature and the pure `I' remains obscure to us.According to Ramana Maharshi, exponent of jnana marga, Atma vichara or Self-enquiry is the method that can help us in detaching from the `object' portion to discover the pure `subject', so that we can become liberated from all external limitations. Self-enquiry is a process of meditation that involves constant reflection on the question, `Who am I?' This repeated enquiry ultimately enables the seeker to take his ego-consciousness (I-thought) back to the Divine `I Am' at the core of one's Being where all sense of duality disappears and true knowledge arises.
The purpose of Self-enquiry is to trace the root of one's thoughts back to the I-thought from which all other thoughts arise and diverge. It is not, therefore, a case of one `I' searching for another `I'. The seeker engaged in Self-enquiry must first, distinguish between the `I', pure in itself, and the `I-thought'. The latter being merely a thought, sees subject and object, sleeps, wakes up, eats and thinks, dies and is reborn. But the pure `I' is the pure Being; eternal existence, free from ignorance and thought-illusion. Second, I-thought or the ego functions as the knot between the Self which is pure consciousness and the physical body which is inert and insentient. The ego is therefore called the `Chit-jada-granthi' ­ the knot between consciousness and the inert body. In one's investigation into the source of I-thought, the seeker is mainly concerned with the essential `chit' (consciousness) aspect of the ego.
Third, the universe exists on account of ego or the `I'-thought. If that ends there is an end of misery also. The per son who exists in sleep is also now awake. There is happiness in sleep but misery in wakeful ness. In sleep there was no `I'-thought, but it is now present while one is awake. The state of happiness in sleep is effortless.
Ramana Maharshi suggests that seekers, in order to be perennially free from suffering, should constantly endeavour to bring about that state even in the waking state. Fourth, knowledge is the light which links the subject to the object, the seer to the seen. Suppose you go in search of a book in the library in pitch darkness. Can you find it without light, although you, the subject, and the book, the object, are both present? You need light. This link between the subject and the object in every experience is `chit' or Consciousness. It is both substratum as well as the witness of the experience, the seer.
When the mind becomes introverted through constant Self-enquiry ­ into the source of ego ­ the `vasanas' (deeprooted desires) become extinct. The light of the Self falls on the `vasanas' and produces the phenomenon of reflection we call the mind. Thus, when the `vasanas' become extinct the mind also disappears, being absorbed into the light of the one reality , the Self, which is beyond all conceivable divisions of time and space, name and form, birth and death. (December 30, 2015 is Ramana Maharshi's 136th birth anniversary).
78,000 of country's beggars are 12th passouts
Ahmedabad


India has 3.72 lakh beggars of whom 21% are literate, having at least cleared Class XII. In fact, over 3,000 have professional diplomas, or are graduates and even post-graduates, according to the Census 2011 data on `Non-workers by main activity and education level' released earlier this week.Many of them have turned the adage `beggars cannot be choosers' on its head -especially considering that they made a studied choice to take up beggary after their degrees failed to land them satisfactory jobs.
“I may be poor but I am an honest man. I beg as it fetches me more money , Rs 200 a day.My last job, as a ward boy in a hospital, got me only Rs 100,“ said Dinesh Khodhabhai (45), a Class XII passout with a halfway decent command over English.
Dinesh is part of a motley group of 30 beggars who seek alms around Ahmedabad's Bhadra Kali temple. Before their work begins, they sip hot tea offered gratis by a local.
After he flunked his thirdyear BCom exams, Sudhir Babulal (51) came to Ahmedabad from Vijapur town with stars in his eyes. However, masonry jobs proved erratic, fetching him Rs 3,000 for a 10 hour shift and nothing for weeks on end. “After my wife left me, where was the need to keep a house? I sleep on the riverfront and beg,“ said Sudhir, who averages Rs 150 a day .
Dashrath Parmar (52), who has an MCom degree from Gujarat University , is another pan-handler. This father-of-three, who aspired for government service but lost even the private job he had, today lives off free meals offered by charity organisations.
Ashok Jaisur, who cleared high school from Mumbai and now begs in the Lal Darwaza area, left his job as a security guard after he lost sight due to cataract. He says he begs to ensure better prospects for his family . “I have only one wish: to make my son Raj an animator,“ said Ashok, who feeds his nine daughters and wife from income earned off the streets.
“It's difficult to rehabilitate beggars as they get lured back due to easy money ,“ said Biren Joshi of Manav Sadhana, an NGO working with beggars.“Graduates turning to begging reflects the grim employment scenario. People turn to beggary when they do not get decent jobs and have no social support to fall back on,“ added sociologist Gaurang Jani.

Source: Times of India, 30-12-2015

Tuesday, December 29, 2015

Mahatma of the tribals


Destiny took away Brahma Dev Sharma (B.D. Sharma) from us on December 6, the Mahaparinirvan Din of Babasaheb Ambedkar. While Ambedkar remains the original icon of the oppressed classes, mainly Dalits in Hindu society, Sharma will be remembered for his contribution to the emancipation of the tribals.
Beginning his career as a civil servant, Sharma spent a lifetime in the cause of the marginalised sections. At times acting like a Gandhian or reasoning like a communist, and occasionally positioning himself in a manner that attracted the tag of Maoist, Sharma transcended all isms. He was an original thinker and activist par excellence.
Born in an orthodox Brahmin family on June 19, 1931 at Shahjahanpur, UP, Sharma studied mathematics at the Benares Hindu University and worked at BITS, Pilani as a lecturer. Subsequently, he sat for the civil services examination and entered the IAS in 1956. He understood the calculus of the government machinery and its unholy alliance with big industry. When a scheme to replace the primordial Bastar forests with a pine plantation was proposed during his tenure as district collector (1964-68), he shot it down. He thought the pine plantation, meant to service a matchbox manufacturing MNC, would deprive poor tribals of their natural food resources and jeopardise their very survival. A lesson from an experiment in a Bastar village guided him throughout his life. He had built an “ideal village” with facilities like school and hospital. But no tribal would shift there. He realised it was best to ask the tribals what they needed and make plans accordingly rather than thrust one’s own ideas upon them. While on deputation at the Centre, he helped devise the concept of the tribal sub-plan (TSP), which became a source of dedicated funding for schemes in tribal areas. He took voluntary retirement from government in 1981. Later, the government appointed him vice chancellor of the North-Eastern Hill University (NEHU). In 1986, he was invited to head the SC/ST Commission.
Sharma was part of an informal group, Sahayog, which included many social activists. He was associated with the anti-Narmada dam movement and in 1992, set up the Bharat Jan Andolan (BJA). The BJA had three basic objectives — peasants’ rights, wage entitlement and mainstreaming of the Schedule V of the Constitution to bring tribal areas into the panchayati raj fold. He would recall how farmers were forced to repay loans at over 14 per cent when the original British laws of 1884 provided for 4 per cent interest with a repayment span of 35 years. The BJA organised the famous wage entitlement battle, Zenda Hajeri, in Madhya Pradesh for jobs under the “demand-driven” EGS scheme. The officials found it too demanding. Then chief minister Digvijaya Singh wrote to then prime minister P.V.
Narasimha Rao that the scheme had become a “law and order problem”. Sharma’s greatest contribution was in bringing Schedule V areas under the Panchayat Raj (Extension to Scheduled Areas) Act of 1996 (PESA). The PESA gave an impetus to the tribal self-rule movement and led to the path-breaking Forest Rights Act.
Vested interests were hostile to Sharma’s dogged fight against the usurpation of tribal resources by the government and private entities. While being part of a tribal agitation against setting up private iron-ore extraction units, he was accosted by goons who stripped him naked, put a garland of chappals round his neck and paraded him on a donkey in Mavlibhata village. The gross exhibition of intolerance took place when the BJP was in office in MP. The Sundarlal Patwa government showed no remorse. The exception was RSS ideologue Govindacharya, who apologised to Sharma.
A natural consequence of working in tribal areas was that Sharma had to engage with the Maoists. The intelligence machinery, eager to brand all those working for tribal rights as Maoists or their sympathisers, marked out Sharma as well as a suspect.
However, Sharma’s moral stature helped in securing the release of Sukma district collector Alex Paul Menon and two Italian tourists whom the Maoists had taken hostage.
Sharma lived the life of an ascetic. He grieved that state governments were not framing rules to implement the PESA act in letter and spirit. He was unhappy that he couldn’t contribute to furthering the cause of prohibition. In his last days, he lapsed into a state of dementia. Sharma was, as health activist Abhay Bang described, “the Mahatma of the tribals”.
The writer, a journalist, was an associate of B.D. Sharma for over four decades .
Source: Indian Express, 29-12-2015

Hunger brews in Bengal’s tea estates

North Bengal’s tea estates are witnessing an unfolding human tragedy as more deaths of tea garden workers were reported this month from the region. With the industry as a whole struggling from soft prices and a drop in output as climate change affects rainfall and weather conditions across the country’s tea-growing regions, several estates are reportedly being unofficially shut, leaving thousands of hapless workers in the lurch. And even at gardens that are operating, living conditions for the predominantly female workforce are said to be precarious, with access to housing, sanitation, healthcare and drinking water far from adequate. A delegation of the State Assembly’s Standing Committee on Labour that visited four tea estates cited malnutrition as an apparent cause for the recent deaths of workers and said the State government was not doing enough to resolve the crisis. Separately, an international fact-finding mission headed by the Global Network for the Right to Food and Nutrition that visited tea gardens in West Bengal and Assam earlier this month painted a grim picture of extremely low wages driving thousands of families to hunger and malnutrition. With a majority of the labour landless, tribal migrants who have little to no other skills to help them find gainful work, the closures and unpaid wages in many estates are spurring a surge in the incidence of starvation. While West Bengal’s Labour Minister this month told legislators the government was providing jobs under the MGNREGA, medical vans and midday meals to workers at the closed tea gardens, and challenged opposition members to prove the deaths were due to starvation and not natural causes, there is a tacit admission that there is a crisis requiring the State’s intervention. The Minister’s comment that none of the death certificates show starvation as the cause of death is tragically ironic since acute hunger and dehydration leave a person too weak to work or even stir out seeking food or water as alms. The victim ultimately dies of organ failure or an opportunistic infection that the body can’t fight.
The bleak situation of these workers starkly highlights the absence of a social security net for rural workers, and specifically labour in the plantation sector. Unless governments both at the Centre and the State develop adequate mechanisms to safeguard the basic needs of non-unionised workers in vulnerable sectors such as the plantations, all efforts at labour law reform will be quite vacuous and bereft of any meaning to the key factor of economic productivity: the worker. Rising above partisan political considerations, the West Bengal government needs to act urgently to address the crisis and, if warranted, take strong legal action against the managements of tea estates that have landed their workers on the brink of starvation and death. A longer-term rehabilitation and re-skilling package is also required to help labour at the defunct estates find alternative work, and measures must be taken, separately, to rejuvenate this key employment-providing sector.
Source: The Hindu, 29-12-2015

To become empowered, we must train our youth in the Constitution

‘We the people of India having solemnly resolved to constitute India…’ words so powerful that if only we understand its intended meaning, it would pave the way for the empowerment of each one of us. Freedom we attained 68 years ago but empowerment will continue to elude us unless we make an honest effort to understand the ideals and spirit of our freedom movement that culminated in the production of a finest non-religious, yet sacred book: The Constitution of India.
Our founding fathers not only secured us freedom but toiled for three long years in the Constituent Assembly and after prolonged deliberations gave us our Constitution, which not only ensures individual rights but also clearly laid down the principles to build a prosperous India, free of inequity and exploitation.
The biggest disservice that we have done and continue to do so is to pay scant regard to the spirit of the Constitution. This neglectful attitude has produced various problems, especially the sectarian tendency to demand privileges while denying the same to others. If we continue to ignore the wisdom propounded in the Constitution, it would lead us to moral bankruptcy and spiritual paucity.
Our Constitution not only spells out the duties of various organs of the State and basic rights of the citizens, but also charges the citizens with certain duties. The failure on our part would be a moral and spiritual setback.
The Preamble gives a fair idea of what behaviour and conduct is expected of us, the citizens. It was further reinforced by the incorporation of a list of fundamental duties in the Constitution in 1976.
Now we may ask ourselves if our conduct is in conformity with these fundamental duties. The day we can honestly say yes, most of the problems that confront us in the conduct of our national life would disappear and our interests would integrate with the State. In fact, in a landmark judgment the Supreme Court has observed: ‘State is all the citizens placed together and hence though Article 51-A does not expressly cast any fundamental duty on the State, the fact remains that the duty of every citizen of India is the collective duty of the State.’
As citizens we can show our commitment to the Constitution by conscientiously doing our duties and that alone is the most effective instrument to protect our liberty. Today our behaviours are more influenced by the legacy of the colonial rule rather than the spirit of the Constitution. That explains why we are still obsessed with our denominational and social identities, and the focus of political discourse takes no cognisance of the citizen.
We, however, need not despair. We are an old civilisation but a young nation who has laboured under colonial rule for centuries. During this period we developed certain attitudes that do not agree with the letter and spirit of our Constitution. The best method to get rid of that colonial hang up is to train our young minds to become familiar with the Constitution and imbible its spirit.
(Mustafa Arif is an advocate. The views expressed are personal)
source: Hindustan Times, 29-12-2015
The Peace Message


Every community that migrates, whatever the reason, contributes to its new region of settlement. In Sindhi culture and literature, the most prominent name is that of Shah Abdul Latif. His spiritual literature is considered very similar to that of Rumi's. He has been the single most influence on the life of the people of Sindh, whether they are Hindus or Muslims.His family had migrated from Herat in Outer Mongolia.He was a third-generation Sindhi who gave to the world the unique religion of Secular Sufism; his work, `Shah Jo Risalo,' is pure spiritual vedanta.It is the most beautiful gift he gave to the world. He enriched the Sindhi language with Persian and Arabic words, so much that today linguists consider Sindhi to be the richest language in the world.
What have Hindu Sindhis given to the world? They have given the world true secularism without any divisions of caste, creed or religion. And the wisdom of education and healthcare that is visible in numerous schools and colleges, as well as hospitals wherever they have settled down, be it India or foreign lands.
Greater than this is their unique peace contribution: peace, which is seen in the 7,000-yearold Sindhu civilisation, one that supported and sustained the great civilisations of Babylon and Egypt.
Not a single war weapon is found in the excavation of Mohenjo-daro, indicating that more things are wrought by cooperation than confrontation. Perhaps the concept of non-violence came from here.
Steady rise in RTI pleas rejected by CIC
New Delhi


Activists Say Move A Ploy To Cut Pendency
Central Information Commission (CIC) returned over 150 cases every day in November over technical defects. There has also been a steady increase in the number of appeals being rejected, from 209 in August to 4,928 in November. In December, the RTI watchdog has returned over 1,492 cases. This is a far cry from an average of 600-650 rejections earlier this year (January-April).The applications have been returned under Section 9 of the RTI Act, which says that a plea “may'' be rejected for lack of information. RTI activists have cried foul at this approach to refuse appeals and complaints saying it is eroding people's faith in the commission.
Initially, the CIC had begun returning petitions following a court order which ruled that applicants must provide photo identity cards. However, after an uproar, the commission reversed its stand and said it would not seek photo identification to register an appeal. In fact, the government even assured Parliament on this count. Despite this, the number of returned cases continues to be high.
“This calculated move to reduce pendency through a statistical approach rather than a humane one has only succeeded in eroding people's faith in the commission,'' Venkatesh Nayak of Commonwealth Human Rights Initiative (CHRI) said.He added that the matter of returned RTI applications was discussed threadbare when the activist, along with members from the National Campaign for People's Right to Information (NCPRI), met the chief information commissioner in November. “We had pointed out that huge expenditure was incurred in returning applications and suggested that the defects may be corrected at the hearing stage,'' Nayak said.
Activist Commodore (retd) Lokesh Batra said he had sought a “defect list'' from the CIC. “The commission can just inform the applicant if one or two documents are not there. It is unfair to reject the whole application,'' he said.
According to government data, 1.54 lakh RTI applications were pending with various public authorities as on September 30.This year, 376,435 applications were received of which 25,792 were rejected.
In 2012-13, 886,681 RTI applications were received by various public authorities of which, 62,231 were rejected while in 2013-14, 962,630 applications were received of which 60,127 were rejected.In 2014-15, 845,032 were received with 63,351 of them being rejected.



Source: Times of India, 29-12-2015
Students break the ice, de-stress at Raj town's `masti ki pathshalas'
Kota Jaipur


Rattled by a spate of suicides by students, the Kota district administration has asked over 100 coaching institutes spread across the city to undertake extra curricular activities on a regular basis to de-stress aspirants preparing for various entrance examinations.Collector Ravi Kumar held a meeting with representatives of institutes on Friday -a day after the coaching hub registered the 29th suicide by a student -and directed that the centres should keep some days for `masti ki pathshala' (extra curricular activities).
Following the directives, the institutes held painting, singing and other such activities in classrooms on Saturday , drawing a huge response from students. Stressing that the masti ki pathshala element would become a regular feature, Kumar told TOI on Sunday: “I have asked institutes to send the feedback and we will also take feedback from students independently to plan our future course of action.This is certain that we will again hold `fun days' with different sets of activities like trekking, movies, exercises etc.“
Much to the surprise of students, almost all coaching institutes distributed crayons and colour paper when classes started on Saturday morning, asking them to paint whatever came to their mind.
The results were amazing.
Sulgna Sinha, a student from Faridkot in Punjab, drew a painting depicting her farm land with a bumper mustard crop, enveloped in morning fog, and her father walking past the crops towards a gurdwara. “It's been four months since I am here. I painted what I was missing the most at my native place. For two hours (while painting) I lived with my family and played on my farm land,“ said an elated Sinha, a medical aspirant.
Two students from Kashmir, Nadia Riyaz and Rifat Bhatt, drew paintings showing chirping birds on chinars and children playing with snow, with an iced stream and a snow-capped mountain in the backdrop. “This is a time when our family spends days together as we hardly have anything to do in winters,“ Riyaz, aresident of Verinag in Anantnag, said. Those who were not good at painting came up with motivational slogans.
Many students took the opportunity to showcase folk songs of their native states. Deba Asem of Manipur, who left the jam-packed classroom spellbound, said after her performance, “It was an ice-breaking moment with my batchmates as they asked a lot of questions about my culture, dress, food etc. I was surprised most of them were not aware I am from a northeastern state.“
In a marked departure, some institutes changed their strategy of showcasing their bright students. In hoardings put up by one institute at sev eral prominent places in the city, pictures of toppers have been replaced with the tagline `happiness' with faces of kids.
Source: Times of India, 29-12-2015
Shift to online admissions: UGC to univs


The UGC has asked higher educational institutions across the country to introduce online admissions for all their courses from the next academic session, reports Pavan M V.This will not only ensure greater efficiency but also promote transparency in the functioning of the institutions, UGC chairman Ved Prakash said on Monday . The step will facilitate students and parents to make informed choices.
Next month, the UGC will review the progress made by institutions such as IIMs, Manipal University and the University of Mysore, which have already implemented the system.
Source: Times of India, 29-12-2015

Monday, December 28, 2015

Economic and Political Weekly: Table of Contents 

Vol. 50, Issue No. 52, 26 Dec, 2015

Editorials

Satire

From 50 Years Ago

Commentary

Review

Insight

Review of Rural Affairs

Special Articles

Notes

Obituaries

Current Statistics

Appointments/Programmes/Announcements

Letters