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Thursday, August 27, 2015

Owning Ambedkar sans his views

The Gujarat government cannot selectively impart the ideas and legacy of Dr. B.R. Ambedkar.

Earlier this month, on August 12, several media outlets reported that the Gujarat government’s Department of Social Justice and Empowerment withdrew four lakh copies of a Gujarati textbook meant for students of classes VI to VIII, titled Rashtriya Mahapurush Bharat Ratna Dr. B. R. Ambedkar. The book, authored by Dalit scholar P.A. Parmar and published by Surya Prakashan, Ahmedabad, was selected and assigned by the same government department to mark the 125th anniversary of Dr. Ambedkar (1891-1956), starting from his birthday on April 14, 2015 and continuing for one year.
According to a statement given to members of the press by K.D. Kapadia, the Director of Scheduled Caste Welfare, “The publisher added some things in the book that were seen as sending a wrong message to the impressionable mind of primary school students… Some matters pertaining to religious conversion that are there in the 22 vows of Dr. Ambedkar were added by the publisher, which were seen as going against the message of national integration. Government’s action will be in the interest of the public.”
The withdrawal of this book — which had been printed in huge numbers and had arrived at various district headquarters for further distribution — raises the obvious issue of the necessity and propriety of book bans in a democratic culture. It also reminds us of the unwarranted interference by government bodies that are, strictly speaking, not meant to be dealing with education policy or implementation, in matters of syllabus creation, textbook content and socio-political “messaging” that targets young students, to use Mr. Kapadia’s language.
Conflict over textbooks
The banning of books and the continuous conflict over school and college textbooks are problems that have come up repeatedly in Indian public life, across States, and political parties, from the Left through the Centre to the Right. These actions are not “in the interest of the public”, although they are invariably sought to be justified on these grounds.
More worrying in this case is the stated reason for the withdrawal of the book. Dr. Ambedkar announced his decision to convert to Buddhism, took a formal diksha from Buddhist monks and, in turn, led the conversion of close to half a million people on October 14, 1956, in Nagpur.
He called the faith Navayana or the New Way, a protestant Buddhism based on his reinterpretation of classical Buddhism, his re-reading of its canonical texts, as well as his reorganisation of its central doctrines, tenets, practices and institutions. In the last year of his life, he wrote a massive work titled The Buddha and His Dhamma, to make the teachings of the Buddha accessible to modern readers. As part of the public ceremony of joining this new religion, followers collectively took 22 vows, written by Babasaheb himself.
In the weeks following the Nagpur initiation, and the months following Dr. Ambedkar’s death on December 6, 1956, close to four million people, mostly Dalits, (predominantly Mahars from Maharashtra), adopted this faith.
The purpose of Ambedkarite Buddhism is to liberate Dalits from untouchability and other forms of social exclusion and humiliation, all of which flow from the low status assigned to them in the orthodox Hindu caste system. Dr. Ambedkar’s vows are meant to both induct converts into a genuinely egalitarian society and enable them to leave behind modes of living, thinking and believing that were hierarchical, violent and humiliating.
It is clear that the vows serve the dual purpose of discarding the old and adopting the new. They help Neo-Buddhists reject the Hindu way of life that had oppressed them for centuries, and, at the same time, assert their adherence to an emancipatory creed.
Dr. Ambedkar’s Buddhism was as much an indictment of Hindu varna dharma as it was a modern statement of equality, intended to deepen the vision of the Constitution while also recalling the original critique of the Buddha against Vedic orthodoxy. When the laws and promises contained in the liberal statute books proved inadequate, he tried to place vulnerable communities on an equal footing by endowing them with a positive identity and a separate programme of action.
Left to himself, Dr. Ambedkar might have preferred a “civic religion”. For him, Buddhism supplemented the new republic’s guarantees of equal citizenship, universal adult franchise, fundamental rights, reservations, freedom of religion and a secular state that he had struggled to establish. But the main difficulties of Dalits stemmed from the very structure of Hindu society, which did not change much despite Independence and the Constitution. As he said in a speech to the Constituent Assembly, the political revolution was not accompanied by a social revolution. He also recognised that ordinary people in India, across castes and communities, drew strength from traditional religious faiths of various kinds. Babasaheb hoped that the Navayana would have the two-pronged effect of addressing both the problem of inequality and the desire for a religion — one that generated self-respect and a distinct identity — among his followers.
Distinct purpose
In arranging the vows in a particular order, Dr. Ambedkar seems to have wanted to first clear the ground, ensuring that ample distance is created between the Hindu faith (and along with it, the outcaste status) that the seeker was born into and the new Dhamma that is going to be embraced. The condemnation of Hinduism is unequivocal, and takes precedence over the utterance of Buddhist vows.
The break amounts to a “rebirth”, as is stated in no uncertain terms in the penultimate vow (Vow 21: “I believe that I am having a re-birth”). The Gujarat government official’s words call this “going against the message of national integration”, but obviously, it’s the rather more forceful refusal of the Ambedkarite Buddhist to remain integrated within the Hindu fold that has caused the discomfort and led to a withdrawal of the textbook in question.
The government in Gujarat and the Centre want to appropriate the legacies of modern historical figures like Sardar Patel and Dr. Ambedkar even though this makes little ideological sense, given the values these stalwarts espoused and their lack of congruence with Hindutva politics. The BJP also has cynical designs on Dr. Ambedkar with the aim of capturing a share of Dalit votes. The government-sponsored celebration of his 125th anniversary — but the inability to actually stomach his critical views on the caste system or on Hindu deities, rituals and beliefs — is an excellent illustration of the hollowness of the Hindu Right’s claims to speak in favour of Dalit rights, national integration or the public interest.
Mr. Parmar, the book’s author, went on to tell journalists that he would rather that the textbook have a few blank pages or contain more photographs of Dr. Ambedkar, than that the publisher, one Dharmesh Kothari, include the vows of his own accord, without consulting with him. Withdrawing the book seems like a defensive ploy on the part of an implicitly Hindu — and Hindu majoritarian — government to shield what Mr. Kapadia called “the impressionable mind” of the student reader just as it is about to encounter the radical force and fiercely anti-assimilationist tendency of the Navayana doctrine.
This is unacceptable. Students in Gujarat and elsewhere must be allowed to learn how Babasaheb sought to make a better, more equitable India. If to achieve this goal, he had to attack the worst aspects of society, religion and politics, whether “Hindu” or Indian, so be it. Our young, the future citizens of this country, have to be made aware of the courage it took Dr. Ambedkar to seek to annihilate caste.
(Ananya Vajpeyi is with the Centre for the Study of Developing Societies, New Delhi.)

Women live over four years longer than men in India

Biologically, women are considered stronger and their survival tendencies are better than men. But sociologically, women tend to get treated far less than men in India”.

People in India live longer now compared to 1990 as life expectancy has increased by 6.9 years for men between 1990 and 2013 and 10.3 years for women during the same period, notes a study published today in the journal The Lancet.
Increase in life expectancy is more in the case of women than men. In 1990, the life expectance was 57.25 years for men, and 59.19 years for women. This has now increased to 64.16 years for men and 68.48 years for women in 2013. “Biologically, women are considered stronger and their survival tendencies are better than men. But sociologically, women tend to get treated far less than men in India,” said Dr. Nobhojit Roy, surgeon and public health specialist from BARC Hospital, Mumbai
However, healthy life expectancy has increased more slowly with diseases such as ischemic heart disease, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), lower respiratory infections, tuberculosis and neonatal disorders causing the most health loss in India.
The healthy life expectancy has been more for women than men in India. For instance, in the case of men, the healthy life expectancy has increased from 50.07 years in 1990 to 56.52 years in 2013 while in the case of women it has been from 50.15 years in 1990 to 59.11 years in 2013.
In 2013, the top ten causes of disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) in both sexes in India were from ischemic heart disease, COPD, TB, lower respiratory infections, neonatal preterm birth, neonatal encephalopathy, diarrhoea, stroke, road injuries, and low back and neck pain.
For Indian men, the fastest-growing leading causes of health loss between 1990 and 2013 were self-harm, ischemic heart disease and stroke, which increased at rates of 149.9 per cent, 79.9 per cent, and 59.8 per cent respectively. While self-harm did not figure among India’s top ten causes of health loss in 1990, it is ranked tenth in men in 2013. Iron-deficiency anaemia, which was ranked ninth in 1990 in men, is no longer the cause of health loss in 2013.
In the case of women, the largest increases among the leading causes of disability-adjusted life years occurred for ischemic heart disease (69 per cent), depressive disorders (66.1 per cent), and stroke (36.8 per cent). Only ischemic heart disease was among the 10 leading causes of health loss for women in 1990.
Stroke and depressive disorders are new causes of health loss seen in 2013 but not in 1990 in Indian women. “More awareness of mental health issues and better detection and documentation could be one of the reasons for depressive disorders to show up in the list,” said Dr. Soumya Swaminathan, Director-General of the Indian Council of Medical Research.
“The big jump in life expectancy is in keeping with the development of the country,” said Roy. “But the downside is that diseases that were not seen in 1990 are seen now. India is transitioning and inheriting some of the diseases seen in the developed countries. Obesity and high blood pressure are the leading risk factors for heart diseases and stroke.”
On TB continuing to be among the top five leading causes of disease burden in India in 2013, Dr. Swaminathan said: “Globally TB has gone down but not in India. India hasn’t been as successful as it should have been in controlling it. We can’t ignore TB and other infectious diseases just because lifestyle diseases are growing.”
To tackle the disease burden in a better way, the ICMR and the Delhi-based Public Health Foundation of India (PHFI) along with Ministry of Health and Family Welfare are planning to carry out a disease burden study at the State level. “It will help in better health planning, policy framing and fund allocation,” Dr. Swaminathan said. “We will also look at the risk factors for the diseases in the States. This will help each State to know the major diseases and risk factors.”
the speaking tree - Keep Saving In Your Divine Bank Account


When Seth Jamnalal Bajaj, the right-hand man of Gandhiji, met with Ma Anandmayee ­ affectionately referred to as Sri Ma ­ at her ashram in Dehradun in August 1941, she advised that in addition to fighting for the country's freedom, it is important that some time is set apart every day for contemplation; no one knows how long one is permitted to live in this world ­ it may be for six months, or it may be six years.Sri Ma taught that the supreme calling of every human being is to make efforts for realising the Self; all other obligations are secondary . She often said: “To find yourself is to find God, and to find God is to find yourself.“
Sri Ma was an ardent votary of the technique of practising `mantra-japa' or repetition of the Divine Name. She suggested that the seeker could choose any name that appeals to her the most and invoke the blessings of the Supreme Being by repeating the chosen name on a regular basis.
Sri Ma would say that just as there is a definite timetable for work at schools, colleges and offices, in the same way, seekers should set apart some time for contemplation every day ­ preferably during early morning hours. One must make a firm resolve that this little time shall be devoted exclusively to the remembrance of the Supreme throughout one's life.During this period no worldly activity should be allowed to encroach upon the contemplation of God. Over a period of time, this spiritual period of time, this spiritual routine will become such an important part of your nature that you will begin to feel restless if some day you are not able to adhere to your practice. Your earthly pension, said Sri Ma, comes to an end after your demise but the Divine pension continues long after you pass away. Just as worldly people amass money and keep it safe in the bank locker, in the same way , seekers on the spiritual path should reserve a corner in their mind for the Almighty and should keep adding to their divine wealth by engaging themselves in repetition of the Divine Name whenever they find the time.
Sri Ma, while silently repeating the Divine Name during med itation, often experienced a state of divine intoxication and unalloyed bliss, losing body-consciousness in the process. Seeing herself engulfed by the dazzling Light of Consciousness, Sri Light of Consciousness, Sri Ma marvelled how a mantra, composed merely of a few letters, could enable the seeker to gain access to the vast expanses of the subtle realm of Consciousness! A wonderful feature of Sri Ma's teachings was that her ideas were not borrowed from books; these were a direct expression of the Truth based on her spiritual realisation through meditation. Also, her realisation was not merely confined to the time when she was in deep meditation; people close to her were amazed to see that Sri Ma would remain naturally absorbed in a permanent state of God-intoxication even while engaged in household work.
Sri Ma's words bear ample testimony to her sublime state of Godconsciousness: “This body has served the husband, so you may call it a wife; it has prepared food for all, so you may call it a cook; it has done all sorts of scrubbing and menial work, so you may call it a servant; but if you look at it from another standpoint you will realise that this body has served none but God.“

Wednesday, August 26, 2015

India-Australia signs MoU to strengthen education


India and Australia has signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) on cooperation in the fields of education, training and research. The MoU was signed by Smriti Irani, Union Minister of Human Resource Development and Christopher Pyne MP, Minister of Education and Training, Government of Australia after the third meeting of the Australia-India Education Council (AIEC) held in New Delhi.
The MoU will strengthen the partnership between Australia and India in higher education and research, including technical and professional educations, schools, vocational education and training and will open up new and innovative areas of cooperation.
A joint Communiqué was also issued at the end of the AIEC meeting. The Communiqué commended the significant progress made by the Working Groups across the key areas of skills, higher education and research, student mobility and welfare, quality assurance and qualifications recognition, and welcomes the extension of collaborative activity to include engagement in the schools sector. It highlights the development of the credit transfer database, hosted on the Australia India education links website (www.australiaindiaeducation.com ), as a practical way to encourage student mobility between Indian and Australian universities.
The Communiqué emphasises that the Global Initiative for Academic Networks (GIAN), launched by the Government of India, would enable academic interaction to mutual benefit. It further says that GIAN would enable eminent Australian academicians to come to India, to academic institutions and universities and enable an exchange of knowledge and teaching skills, which would help in developing a fruitful relationship between academic communities on both sides for augmenting research capabilities.
Both countries agreed for a total joint financial commitment of up to $1.0 million AUD for various activities under Educational Cooperation. Australian Minister also announced Adam Gilchrist as the Australia-India Education Ambassador, who will help project the quality of Australian education and strengthen the bilateral education, training and research relationships.
The AIEC is a bi-national body established in 2011 as a commitment by the Education Ministers of India and Australia to guide the strategic direction of the education, training and research partnership between the two countries. The AIEC consists of academia, industry and government and meets in conjunction with the annual Australia-India Ministerial Dialogue on Education Cooperation.

Now, students can take loan online


For students who are seeking education loan can now take go to vidyalakshmi.co.in, a website launched by the government recently for the benefit of the students. Five banks IDBI, Bank of India, SBI have integrated their system with the portal.
The portal has been developed and maintained by NSDL e-governance infrastructure limited (NSDL e-Gov) under the guidance of department of financial services, department of higher education, Ministry Of Human Resource Development and India Banks Association. Under the educational loan scheme of Pradhan Mantri Vidya Lakshmi Karyakram (PMVLK), no student will miss out higher education due to lack of funds. The launch of the portal is the first step to achieving the objective. “Vidya Lakshmi portal is the first of its kind portal providing single window for students to access information and make applications for educational loans provided by banks as also government scholarships,” the release issued by the finance ministry said.
The portal will have information on the loan schemes provided by different banks, common educational loan application form for students, facility to apply to multiple banks for educational loans, facility to check the loan processing status, and linkage to National Scholarship Portal for information and application for government scholarships.
Finance ministry has informed that 13 banks have registered 22 educational loan schemes on the portal and five banks have integrated their system with the portal for providing loan processing status to the students.

Matriculation mandatory to contest panchayat polls


To contest the Panchayat Polls, the BJP Government had made it mandatory for the male candidates to have minimum education of class x for filing nomination papers and women and schedule candidates to have minimum qualification till class VIII.
On the mandate issued by the BJP Government, former Haryana Chief Minister Bhupinder Singh Hooda has claimed that 71 per cent of Haryanvis would not be able to contest panchayat polls if the state government’s decision to fix minimum qualification for filing nomination papers was implemented.
According to Hooda, the number will exceed in the schedule castes category. He believes as many as 62 per cent men and 83 per cent women from SCs will not be able to contest the election. He emphasised that people should be informed about the laws 5 years in advance.
The BJP Government had decided to amend the Haryana Panchayati Raj Act, 1994, making it mandatory for candidates for panchayat elections to have basic educational qualification of class

National Workshop on 'Emerging Trends in Information Technology in University Management

Silchar: National Institute of Technology Silchar is organizing a National Workshop on “Emerging Trends in Information Technology in University Management” on August 25-27, 2015 at NIT Silchar, Assam. It is being jointly organized by NIT Silchar, in association with AIU, New Delhi. The workshop is meant for Senior Administrative Officials of Higher Educational Institutes.

The phenomenal growth of information and application of IT in the form of high degree of computerization and transmission of electronic information has changed the basic structure and functioning of university level institutions in some of the developed countries. Even in the developing countries effective functioning of universities in the present era is conditioned by automation and computerization of management. Although projects of automation and modernization through use of computers have tremendously speeded up activities like transactions, management, decision making in corporate sector of India, universities are still lagging behind in this area.  The use of computer and application of IT in the administration, finance, examination, teaching, learning process etc. in the universities are still at initial stages. Time has come when application of IT is inevitable, if the universities have to realize their goals effectively. This requires not only suitable infrastructure but also trained managers in the said areas.
Present workshop will provide opportunities for senior administrators/ managers/ finance officers of university level institutions to learn as well as deliberate on the issues related to use of computer and application of information technology in the administration and management of universities in India. Around 35 Senior Administrative Officials ie. Deputy Director, Registrar, COE, & Finance officers from all over India are attending the programme.
The objectives of the workshop are:

Ø  To sensitize administrators about the recent developments in information technology.

Ø  To train the administrators in the use of computers and application of IT for improving the quality and efficiency of university management and decision-making.

The main themes of the workshop are:

·         Present status of universities in terms of acquisition and use of the recent developments in the information technology (IT) for improving the administration, and teaching learning process.

·         Environment within the universities for accepting the challenges arising out of the application of information technologies in administration, and academics.

·         Planning for application of information technology in realizing the goals of the university.

·         Assessment of training needs for various uses of computers and application of information technologies in administrative, pedagogical and research activities of universities and software requirements thereof.

·         Use and application of IT in the university management and administration.

 

Methodology for the Workshop is:
Participants will be given the benefit of both theory and practical training during three days of the programme.  Every day a theory session will be followed by instructor led session and hands-on practical session in the computer lab.

It is expected that this three day training, will make the participants well versed in use of computers and application of other information technologies required for modernizing the functioning and effective management of their universities and their work