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Thursday, April 09, 2015

India made big gains in child edu: UN
New Delhi:


Enrolment In Pre-Primary 58% In 2012
India has made significant strides in the pas 15 years, but remains far from reducing adult illiteracy .A Unesco global education report that human resource development minister Smrit Irani would release on Thurs day has revealed this.
The report said gross en rolment ratio in pre-primary education touched 58% in 2012, compared to 19% in 1999. Primary education ne enrolment ratio reached 99% in 2012. India has reduced its out-of-school children by over 90%. Globally 52% of countries including India achieved universal enrol ment in primary education.
India is predicted to be the only country in South and West Asia to have an equal ratio of girls to boys in both primary and secondary education this year. Unesco's Global Monitoring Report (GMR) director Aaron Benavot praised India for making exemplary progress in helping children gain access to pre-primary and primary education since the global education goals were set in 2000.
“India's example clearly shows that with sufficient political will and resources the world can step up to meet the new education targets by 2030,“ said Benavot.
For the full report, log on to http:www.timesofindia.com

Wednesday, April 08, 2015

Mainstream, VOL LIII, No 15, April 4, 2015

SPLIT IN THE COMMUNIST MOVEMENT — A HISTORIC NECESSITY OR A BLUNDER?

Sunday 5 April 2015
by Tika Ram Sharma
The Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M) celebrated the 50th anniversary of its foundation last year. While for the CPM the split was a matter of ‘celebration’, for others in the Left it was a disaster. There have been statements from the CPM leaders about the achievements and failures of their movement of these fifty years. According to the CPI-M, the split in the movement in India was a ‘historic necessity’. As per the ideological document of the 2012 Congress of the CPM and also the special issue of their paperPeople’s Democracy (P.D), the split saved the communist movement from revisionism. However, most Left leaders differ from it and are of the opinion that the split was unwarranted and uncalled for and perhaps the biggest blunder in the history of the communist movement. The split in Communist Parties at the behest of Maoist China was a worldwide phenomenon as the Communist Party of China gave a call to the ‘true and revolutionary Communists’ to split from the so-called ‘revisionists’ and set up ‘genuine’ Communist Parties. The united and strong CPI also became a victim of this Maoist split. The split in the Communist Party of India in 1964 was an ideological assault of Maoism on the Indian progressive forces. Some people try to blame S.A Dange for the split, but even the PD and CPM documents do not mention him. Though the split took place in October-November 1964, efforts were on for it since early 1961 as the process of forming a parallel organisation had already been started by the splitters. Ajoy Ghosh, the then General Secretary of the party, was somehow able to avert the split but his untimely death complicated things. So 32 members walked out of the 101-member strong CPI National Council on April 11, 1964.
According to the split-away group, the main way to bring revolution in India was through armed struggle, and peaceful methods like the parliamentary democratic system were condemned as hoax, while they tried to present a ‘revolutionary’ line of total opposition to the bourgeoisie. They criticised the main line of the CPI and of the documents of the CPSU’s 20th Congress as well as of the world communist movement (WCM). Later they held their conferences in Tenali (AP) and subsequently at Kolkata in October 1964.
But suddenly the newly formed ‘Communist Party of India’ decided to take part in the parliamentary elections of 1967. This swing could not be understood by many in their party. The militant group within the party then broke away from it to establish what has come to be known as the Naxalite formation. Indeed right or wrong, this group started armed struggle in many parts of the country including Naxalbari, West Bengal, wherefrom it got its identity as Naxalites. When Sundarayya, one of the topmost leaders of the CPI-M, was trying to explain to T. Nagi Reddy, a prominent Communist leader from Andhra Pradesh who joined the CPI-ML four years after the CPI-M had been formed, as to why the promised armed struggle had not commenced, the latter caustically responded that Sundarayya was telling him in poor English what Dange had already said in good English four years ago! He had left the CPI because Dange had not convinced him and he was now leaving CPI-M because Sundarayya was neither honest nor convincing.
Despite being anti-Congress, the CPI-M supported the minority Government of Indira Gandhi when there was a split in the Indian National Congress on the issue of support to the independent presidential candidate, V.V. Giri, as against the Congress’ official candidate, Neelam Sanjiva Reddy. It supported bank nationalisation halfheartedly and was a bitter critic of the public sector. The CPM has not explained this vacillation.
Indira Gandhi came to power with a thumping majority in the parliamentary elections of 1971. The Indo-Pak war took place during this period and ended with the formation of a new country, Bangladesh. It was indeed a defeat of American imperialists who were backing Pakistan in the war. As a result they started to destabilise our country by encouraging and supporting the JP-led movement, the so-called total revolution. The Bharatiya Jana Sangh, Swatantra Party and Socialist Party were totally involved in it. Unfortunately, the CPI-M, the party claiming itself to be revolutionary, supported that movement and participated in all the meetings and rallies linked to it with their cadres and flags. According to one eyewitness, when JP was holding a rally in Patna, participants belonging to the RSS, Socialist Party and CPI-M were holding their flags. JP shouted “Ye Bhagwa, Lal Jhanda Niche (Put down saffron and red flags)”. Immediately all the flags were taken down.
In order to tackle the so-called total revolution, Indira Gandhi imposed the Emergency on June 26, 1975. The CPI-M, on its part, neither supported nor opposed the Emergency, according to Jagjit Singh Lyallpuri, one of the important founder members of the CPI-M and later a rebel from it, has written in his book My Life, My Time: ‘It is obvious that the CPI-M leadership adopted a very pessimistic stand during the onslaught of Emergency rule, adopted a defeatist position and sought to avoid confrontation with the Congress rulers led by Indira Gandhi by distancing themselves from the JP movement. The resolution released soon after the declaration of Emergency was in a way conveying its stand of keeping away from the JP movement to Indira Gandhi.’ (page 183)
He further says: ‘And conspicuously while Congress rule did not spare militant party workers, the PB (Polit-Bureau) leaders enjoyed freedom during the entire period of Emergency.’ (page 184)
The party won a good number of parlia-mentary seats and formed its own government in West Bengal in alliance with other Left parties like the Revolutionary Socialist Party, Forward Bloc etc. which together formed the Left Front Government with Jyoti Basu as its Chief Minister. The party had its dominant position in the Left Front and ruled the State continuously for 34 years. The achievements of the government in the period are meagre. According to the census of 2001, the West Bengal’s literacy level was 18th in the country, on the nine-year school education it lagged behind the national average. In the matter of land reform successive Left Front governments after the initial land reforms effectively preserved the remaining survival of feudalism in the State. The government’s actions in Singur and Nandigram are well known to the public and proved the Waterloo for the CPI-M in the last Assembly elections.
In 1989, in order to defeat the Congress party in the parliamentary elections, the party had indirect alliance with the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) which had only two MPs in the then Lok Sabha. V.P. Singh became the Prime Minister with the support of the BJP and Left. The BJP utilised this opportunity to increase its mass base and on the issue of the Ram temple in Ayodhya, L.K. Advani started rath yatra from Gujarat and covered most areas of the Hindi heartland. The government could not complete its full term and mid-term elections were held in 1991. The BJP succeeded in increasing its tally from 2 to 86 in the Lok Sabha. This step of the Left, dominated by the CPI-M, provided oppor-tunity to the BJP to expand its mass base countrywide.
Political opportunism and blunders of the CPI-M became clear on several major issues. For example, some believe that not allowing Jyoti Basu to become the Prime Minister of India was a Himalayan blunder of the CPI-M while others believe the withdrawal of support from the United Progressive Alliance (UPA-1), and that too on an issue difficult to explain to the public, was a historic blunder and the discussion is still going on.
The need of the hour is that there should be unification of the communist movement. The CPI and other groups of the Left Front are in its favour. The CPI has passed resolutions to this effect repeatedly. But the CPI-M has adopted an indifferent attitude and there is no resolution of any kind from the CPI-M as far as merger or unification is concerned. In spite of being a well-organised party, the CPI-M is losing its strength and mass base day by day. In West Bengal, where the party was in power for 34 years, its graph is falling drastically. Its cadre is shifting towards the Trinamul Congress and BJP. It is reported that ex-Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjea is not attending Central Comm-ittee meetings as a protest. In Kerala, the situation is no better. Hundreds of its cadres have joined the BJP. Veteran Achuthanandan and party secretary Pinari Vijayan are not on good terms. Due to this, some political experts believe, the Left Front has lost the last Assembly elections. In the recent Central Committee meeting, according to the newspaper reports, an alternate draft submitted by Sitaram Yechury, as against the General Secretary’s, got overwhelming support from CC members. Today there are three CPI-Ms in Punjab.
Does this state of affairs help Left unity?
The Party Congress of the CPI-M is scheduled shortly. How the party will come out of its infighting and what will be its future political tactical line will be clear soon.

Consultative Committee Meeting held to discuss ‘National Education Policy’

Consultative Committee of Parliament for the Ministry of Human Resource Development was held recently to discuss the “National Education Policy”. The Union HRD Minister Smriti Irani welcomed the members attending the Parliamentary Consultative Committee Meeting. Upendra Kushwaha, Minister of State for HRD also attended the meeting.
JS, Ministry of HRD highlighted the need for formulating the New Education Policy. The presentation brought out the fact that since technology has evolved and MOOCs, Distance Learning and on line courses are the emerging areas today in the educational scenario, there is a greater need to work out a New Educational Policy. The New Education Policy aims at meeting the twenty- first century challenges – globalization and liberalization.
Thirty-three themes- thirteen under school Education and twenty under Higher Education have been identified for the consultation process of the New Education Policy. The rationale and objectives for the consultative process is a time-bound, grass-root consultative process; and an on-line consultation and complete transparency of consultation process through MyGov.in; Under Grassroot Consultative process, around 2.5 lakh meetings will be held at village level; approximately 6600 meetings at the Block level, 676 at the District level and 3700 meetings will be held at the Urban Municipal Bodies level.
States/UTs could hold more than one meeting at the State level involving various stakeholders. Thematic Consultations through experts’ workshops will also take place from April-September 2015. The entire consultations will continue till December, 2015.
During the meeting the emphasis was laid on the fact that lower primary level education and primary level education needs to be strengthened; learning outcomes need to be improved; moral education needs to be emphasized; and the problem of scarcity of teachers at all levels needs to be tackled. Some members raised the issues like need to review the no retention policy up to eighth standard in schools, skill development and life skills; and measures to check absenteeism of teachers in schools, especially in rural areas.

DU’s UG admissions may go fully online


The application process for undergraduate admissions for the academic session 2015-16 of Delhi University could go completely online. The university has formed a 23-member committee to work on the admission policies and according to sources many are of the view that after the postgraduate admissions, the registration for undergraduate admissions should also be completely online.
Although the university introduced online centralized registration forms for the first time in 2012-2013, it also continued with the offline centralized OMR registration forms.
The recommendations of the committee on admission is very important since the university is likely to introduce certain changes because of the proposed Choice Based Credit System. Discussions on the Common eligibility criteria are also likely. The admission committee comprised deans from faculties of science, commerce and arts, nine college principals and members from the executive and academic councils. The dean of students’ welfare is the convener of the committee.
The admissions will start from May. DU admits 54,000 undergraduate students in various courses across colleges. Centralized online application process for PG courses has already started.

Harvard’s international office soon in Mumbai

The prestigious Harvard University is going to open international offices in India, China and South Africa.The University, which wants to further aggravate research and academic work with its affiliates, is presently awaiting consent from the Indian government to set up their School of Public Health Office in Mumbai.
Apart from setting office in Mumbai, the university has taken authorized consent to set up international offices in Cape Town and Beijing. Each of these offices are in different stages of development and would soon begin functioning. The Indian office’s proposal is in its nascent stage of development compared to that of in China or South Africa. The university is hoping that the Indian government’s approval over the office would come by this summer and they could start working on the same in the country.
It may be mentioned that previously, Harvard University President Drew Faust had visited India and China to expand the reach of Harvard and its possibilities to the rest of the world and its associate nations.
he speaking tree - Drop Your Seriousness And Turn Playful


The original mind exists without any motivation. It exists without any cause, support or any ground. It exists in itself, it has no outward support. It has to be so because the ultimate cannot have any support ­ because the ultimate means the total nothing is outside it. You can think that you are sitting on the earth, and then the earth is being supported by some magnetic forces in the planetary system, and the planets are supported by some other magnetic force of some super-sun. But the whole cannot have any support, because from where will the support come? The total cannot have any grounding to it.I have heard: A lady was seated on a bus with her son. She bought a single ticket. The conductor addressed the boy , “How old are you, little fellow?“ “I am four,“ answered the lad.
“And when will you be five?“ asked the conductor. The boy glanced at his mother, who was smiling her approval of the conversation, and said, “When i get off this bus.“
He has been taught to say something but still he cannot understand the motivation. He has been taught to say `four years' to save a ticket, but he does not know the motivation of it so he repeats like a parrot. Every child is more in tune with the original mind than grown-ups. Look at children, playing, running around: you will not find any motivation in particular. They are enjoying, and if you ask for what, they will shrug their shoulders. It is almost impossible to comm nicate with grown-ups. Children simply feel it almost impossible; there exists no bridge, because the grown-up asks a very silly question: “For what?“ The grown-up lives with a certain economic mind. You do something to earn something. Children are not yet aware of this constant motivation. They don't know the language of desire, they know the language of playfulness.That's the meaning when Jesus says, “You will not be able to enter into the kingdom of God unless you are like small children.“ He's saying that unless you become a child again, unless you drop motivation and become playful ... Remember, work has never led anybody to godliness. And people who are working their path towards godliness will go on moving in a circle in the marketplace; they will never reach. Godliness is playful, and you have to be playful. Suddenly , communion; suddenly , a bridge.
Meditate playfully , not seriously . When you go into the meditation hall, leave your serious faces where you leave your shoes. Let meditation be fun. `Fun' is a very religious word; `seriousness' is very irreligious. If you want to attain to the original mind, you will have to live a very non-serious, though sincere life; you will have to transfor your work into play; you will have to transform all your duties into love. `Duty' is a dirty word; of course, a four-letter word.
Avoid duty . Bring more love to function. Change your work more and more into a new energy which you can enjoy , and let your life be more of fun, more of laughter, and less of desire and motivation. The more you are motivated, the more you will cling to a certain mind. You have to, because the motivation can be fulfilled only by a certain mind. And if you want to drop all mind ­ and all minds are to be dropped ­ only then do you attain to your innermost nature, your spontaneity .It is totally different, a different language from desire.
Sex ratio in Guj kills honeymoon dream
AhmedabadGandhinagar:
TNN


6.29L Men Over 30 & 40 Years Can't Find Brides
PM Narendra Modi may be the most famous `bachelor' from Gujarat, but the state is home to 6.29 lakh unheralded men above 30 and 40 years who are unmarried -according to Census 2011.And the majority of them are not single by choice. The number is a manifestation of the skewed sex ratio in Guja rat, which has 919 women per 1,000 men and only 886 girls per 1,000 boys in the 0-6 age group.At the grassroots level, this imbalance keeps even the most eligible bachelors engaged in the fruitless mission to find brides. Take Haresh Patel, for instance. He is highly qualified and his name is laden with degrees: MSc, MEd, MPhil and PhD.The son of a landed man, Ha resh earns well taking science and maths tuitions for HSC students. In short, he is the perfect bachelor; and may remain so.
“There is no marriage bureau where I have not registered, no mass marriage sammelan that I have not attended,“ says Haresh.
Census data reveals that the number of unmarried men above 30 and 40 is three times higher than the 2.6 lakh figure of women in this age group who have never married. These figures discount the number of unmarried youth in their 20s who are struggling to find wives. “Finding a bride has become a Herculean task.There are 40 bachelor boys on the wrong side of 30s in my village,“ says Bipin Patel (29) of Gadhan village in Prantij, Sabarkantha. Bipin's qualifications -MA, MEd, and MPhil -have thus far not helped him impress anyone in the tiny circle of available brides.
Bipin runs an electronics shop and earns Rs 25,000 per month. Earlier, families would find brides through agents from tribal areas but cheating cases have made many wary. There have been instances of girls running away with jewellery and cash within days of marriage. In Chandrala village in Gandhinagar, Natwar Patel has done the impossible: secure a bride for his 32-yearold son Gaurav, just two weeks ago. “I had no problem in getting my three daughters married, but arranging a match for my son sapped me,“ says Natwarbhai. He is now being hounded by families of 60-odd ageing bachelors in the village which want him to locate bahus.