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Wednesday, February 03, 2016

Two Indian institutions among best small varsities


Indian Institute of Technology Guwahati has been ranked 14th globally, followed by Savitribai Phule Pune University in 18th place. Small universities are defined by having fewer than 5,000 students and teach and research across more than four disciplines from arts/humanities, medicine/clinical, engineering/technology, physical sciences, life sciences and social sciences. Only 20 small universities in the world are world-class (included in the Top 800 World University Rankings), according to the ranking.
California Institute of Technology, US, has been ranked number one on the list followed by two French institutions – École Normale Supérieure and École Polytechnique in the second and third place, respectively.
Phil Baty, Times Higher Education rankings editor, says: “When it comes to universities, size matters. For some students big is best, but for others, a small university is the right option. Small universities can potentially offer students a more intimate environment, with more support and attention from lecturers, and – let’s be honest – more of a chance for students to spend time with the star professors who in bigger universities may simply be too busy. The smaller university can also offer a greater sense of collegiality and community, where students are less likely to get lost in the crowd.”
Commenting on Indian institutions, Baty says, “India’s institutions are well represented in the World’s Best Small Universities Ranking 2016. Alongside Caltech, they demonstrate the world-class offering available at smaller institutions, no matter their ­location.”
Source-Hindustan Times, 3-02-2016
Death at My Doorstep


We do not talk of death lightly -it is regarded as tasteless, ill-mannered and depressing.But death is an essential fact of life that makes no exceptions: it comes to kings as well as beggars, to the rich and poor, to saints as well as sinners, the aged and the young. It is best to prepare yourself for it and when it comes, welcome it with a smile on your lips.Being a rationalist, I do not accept irrational, unproven theories of life-death-rebirth in different forms as an unending process till our beings mingle with God and we attain nirvana. I do not accept the belief that while the body perishes, the soul survives. I do not know what the soul looks like; neither I, nor anyone has seen it. Nor do I accept the Hebrew, Christian and Islamic belief in the Day of Judgement -heaven and hell.
I have never subscribed to the belief that nothing bad should be said about the dead.If people were evil in their lifetimes, death does not convert them into saints. Such falsehoods may be condoned when inscribed on tombstones but not in obituaries that should be without bias, and truthful.
Memento mori -remember you must die. Without brooding over it, be prepared for it.The poet Asadullah Khan Ghalib put it beautifully , “Age travels at a galloping pace Who knows where it will stop? We do not have the reins in our hands We do not have our feet in the stirrups.“
 How About Celebrating The Small Joys?


We often desperately wait for splendid moments, big festivals, and huge victories in order to be ebullient. People may spend days, months, years and even a whole lifetime in the hope of experiencing staggering joy . For a majority, happiness does not exist in the present but seems to be distantly encapsulated in an idealised future. No wonder that almost everyone finds life to be encumbered with relentless misery and pain. But joy can be found easily provided we change our mental attitude.Firstly, we often believe that bliss is dependent on ideal external circumstances and if we can manage to reach there we will be ecstatic. But the truth is that external reality rarely fulfils our wishful fantasies. In order to be joyful, a dependence on external circumstances is likely to make us frustrated. Happiness can only be found within by focussing on deeper goals and making deeper connections with everyone around us.
Secondly , we erroneously think that till the time we continue to have problems we cannot be happy . But happiness is a matter of choice; we can choose to rise above all the pain and difficulty by enlarging ourselves. With practice, we can inspire our mind to be ecstatic by focussing on positive aspects of our selves and the world around us.
Thirdly , we ridiculously equate happiness with materialism and its big, grand and larger-than-life entities. The fact is that materialism only gives us excitement and a sense of short-lived achievement but not happiness. A recent research published in the journal Psychological Science found that big money impairs the ability of people to savour everyday positive emotions and experiences, and therefore paradoxically tends to make them unhappy .
Let us face it, big joys are hard to come by and involve a lot of effort and huge costs. If we were to just sit and wait for those isolated peak moments we will end up creating room for a lot of negativity and misery in our lives. In order to be positive, we must find joy in small things. This can be done easily by opening ourselves emotionally to abundant goodness that life offers every day and cultivating gratitude for it.
Sri Aurobindo reasoned that our inability to experience the full delight of existence derives from the mind's hedonistic currents of pain and pleasure. On the contrary , for the universal soul, all things and their experience carry rasa, the essence of delight.Because we ignore this essence and just focus on how things affect our hedonistic currents, we are cut off from abundant joy .
The Mother emphasised that all of us potentially carry the inner sun.Because we strongly identify with our separateness and do not regard ourselves as fluid and malleable, we are unable to transform. Once we overcome this faulty identification, the inner sun of divine laughter will manifest within and its radiance will dissolve all sorrows.
Whether it is basking in the warmth of the sun, listening to a soothing melody , having a heart-warming conversation with someone close, seeing small children explore the world, getting some support when we are in need, feeling inspired by an ideal, helping others go about their lives and doing run-of-the-mill tasks creatively ­ there is a lot that life offers us.
All we need to do is to overcome our sense of separateness and hedonism so that we can get connected to the cosmos and experience bliss in all its manifestations. This will enable us to be continuously nourished by the small joys we have in abundance.
(The writer is a clinical psychologist.)
Wanted: Ambedkar 2.0


The Dalit leadership has failed young Ambedkarites like Rohith Vemula
The politically correct felicitations of B R Ambedkar on his 125th birth anniversary were rendered somewhat meaningless by the suicide of Hy derabad Central University student Rohith Vemula. Netas descended in quick succession on HCU. From Rahul Gandhi to Chirag Paswan, Mayawati to Arvind Kejriwal, there were familiar expressions of sympathy but little evidence of just how the political class intends to address the core issue of realising the Ambedkarite vision for 21st century India. Particularly heartless were the utterances of Union ministers who questioned Rohith's caste without an ounce of empathy , even as they've been busily trying to appropriate Ambedkar.When Ambedkar is only a political token, how can his modern progressive vision ever be realised? By challenging Rohith's caste status, BJP might save its minister Bandaru Dattatreya from the SCST Act but it hardly provides for a political reach-out to those who now see Rohit as a symbol of a brutally unequal order. Nor can this be Rahul Gandhi's Belchi moment: having treated its Dalit leaders as marginal representatives for decades, it will require more than a one night vigil to convince Dalit groups that Congress is willing to share power.
The Paswans and Mayawatis may have benefitted from their caste status, but their politics has revolved around selfaggrandisement, hardly the radical change in the power structure that Ambedkar envisioned, nor the idea that political power was to be sought for the larger goal of social equality . Perhaps reservation in constituencies plays a part here; forever imprisoned in the reserved trap, a competitive Dalit leadership of intellect and stature has not emerged.
Ambedkar believed a political democracy that does not work towards an egalitarian society was meaningless. In Annihilation of Caste, he provided a trenchant critique of “enlightened high caste reformers who did not have the courage to agitate against caste“. For Ambed kar, upper caste leadership of Dalits was abhorrent, he rejected both Hinduism and the caste system as well as the claims of any upper castes to represent Dalits.
But his legatees in the post-Independence era, from Paswan to Mayawati to Ramdas Athavale, have rushed to form alliances with different mainstream upper caste political parties, enamoured as they are of political power for its own sake. Ambedkar's urgent mission of creating a Dalit counter-narrative to caste, to Hinduism and to the dominant forms of Indian culture, to mount a full scale socioeconomic transformation of Indian society , has been forgotten by those who act in his name.
The fiery Athavale and his Republican Party of India have sought favours from whoever has been in power. Ram Vilas Paswan holds the distinction of being in virtually every cabinet since the United Front government of the mid-1990s. For a while it looked as if Kanshi Ram and Mayawati would break out of the deadening cycle of mainstream politics particularly in their BAMCEF years. A BAMCEF bulletin declared in 1976: “Educated persons from oppressed communities are trapped in government services ... their cowardice, selfishness, inherent timidity and lack of desire of social service to their own creed ... makes them useless.“ But BAMCEF failed at an intellectual awakening. Kanshi Ram and Mayawati set up BSP in 1984 and unleashed a political revolution in UP.
Yet BSP not only created its own power elite but today has become almost unrecognisable from any other political party , particularly after Mayawati declared her mission was Sarvajan Samaj.While this made political sense, ideologically the Ambedkarite mission was somewhat betrayed. Educated Dalits may have formed entrepreneurs' groups and pressed for change in the private sector. But in the public realm, the Dalits today lack their version of an Asaduddin Owaisi. Love him or hate him, Owaisi is emerging as the political voice of the Indian Muslim, by offering a robust and reasoned counternarrative (unlike his more outrageous brother) on debates ranging from terrorism to the Uniform Civil Code. Where is a similarly argumentative Dalit leader offering a genuine alternative template?
As the scholar Kancha Ilaiah writes: “The tragedy is every young Dalit intellectual's ambition is to be a civil servant ... an administrative slave of Hindu Brahmanism ...the Dalit community has not produced a powerful socio-spiritual philosopher.“
In Homo Hierarchicus, Louis Dumont argued that the caste system is a system of ideas in which the Dalit by his very existence violates the brahmanical obsession with personal hygiene and purity . While the menstruating woman or the bereaved can escape their pollution, the Dalit is “unclean“ from birth. Reservations have created a Dalit middle class, but what about the mission to smash the “purity“ versus “pollution“ system of ideas altogether? When Ambedkar burnt the Manusmriti, launched a movement to drink water from tanks, he took his place with Jyotirao Phule and E V Ramaswami Naicker who had not just anti-Brahmin, but anti-caste and anti-birth based social hierarchy in their overarching agenda of action.
Where is such a Dalit leader today?
Rewriting the Purusa Sukta, a hymn that places castes in a hierarchy of the Divine's Being's body parts, was a demand once voiced by Dalit intellectuals as a crucial first step in a spiritual renaissance of Hinduism; they believed this would make Hinduism more modern and egalitarian.But there is no Dalit political leader who is able to frontally challenge the idea of Dalitness in caste Hindu minds. The Dalit Panthers of the 70s have faded away , their radical poetry either co-opted or forgotten.Youth like Rohith Vemula search for answers, try in vain to make sense of the discrimination they face, yet the modern Dalit leadership continues to fail them.
Source: Times of India, 3-02-2016

Tuesday, February 02, 2016

95TH ORIENTATION PROGRAMME FOR FACULTY MEMBERS


Dates: From 09 February to 07 March 2016.
Organiser/Venue: UGC-HRDC, JodhpurJNV University (Raj) INDIA.

CONTACT: Dr. Narendra Mishra & Dr. Kshitiz Maharshi
Programme Coordinators, 94th Orientation Programme, UGC-HRDC, JNV University, Jodhpur - 342005
Mobile: +91 - 9829696683 & 7665577777
 

Economic and Political Weekly: Table of Contents

Vol. 51, Issue No. 5, 30 Jan, 2016

Editorials

Commentary

Book Reviews

Perspectives

Review of Urban Affairs

Special Articles

Discussion

Obituaries

Current Statistics

Postscript

50 Years of EPW

Appointments/programmes/announcements 

Letters

Referees

Genes loosen iron casts of Indian castes


Pure castes are a myth.

How old is India's caste system? How many ancestries have made up the mosaic of Indian civilisation?
It was believed that two kinds of people - Ancestral North Indian (ANI) and Ancestral South Indian (ASI) - entered India at different times. These two groups intermingled, but over time, reduced their interaction and then stratified. Thus caste was born
A study - published in last week's Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - finds that this story isn't so neat. There, authors proffer evidence for two more groups - Ancestral Austro Asiatic (AAA) and Ancestral Tibeto-Burman (ATB) that currently constitute much of India's tribes.
In the graphic below, nine caste/ethnic tribe groups of 20, studied by the scientists, are depicted with their rough, geographical location. The four circles represent the four ancestries that have made up mainland India - ANI, ASI, AAA and ATB - and the coloured arches in the chart show the proportion of genes from these ancestries that make them.
Pure castes, thus, are a myth.
Social and cultural characterists of nine population groups
NameDescriptionSample Size
Khatri (KSH)Upper caste/ North/ Indo-European/ Traditionally warrior19
Maratha (MRT)Upper caste/ West/ Indo-European/ Traditionally warrior7
Iyer (IYR)Upper caste/ South/ Dravidian/ Traditionally priest20
Gond (GND)Tribe/ Central/ Dravidian/ Austro-Asiatic/ Agriculturist20
Paniya (PNY)Tribe/ South/ Dravidian/ Austro-Asiatic/ Hunter-Gatherer18
Birhor (BIR)Tribe/ Central/ Austro-Asiatic/ Hunter-Gatherer16
Kadar (KDR)Tribe/ South/ Dravidian/ Hunter-Gatherer20
Ho (HO)Tribe/ Central & East/ Austro-Asiatic/ Agriculturist18
Jarawa (JRW)Tribe/ Andaman and Nicobar/ Ongan/ Hunter-Gatherer19
Mainland India's four ancestral components
The genes that make up castes
The following numbers show approximately the number of generations before which caste groups became endogamous. For instance, 70 generations (22 years for a generation) ago, the Iyers had genes from both AAA and ASI whereas around the same time the HO had genes from three ancestries.
Castes thus began to harden and the upper castes became endogamous only around 1500 years ago.
Key:
Khatri KSH | Gujarati Brahmin GBR | West Bengal Brahmin WBR | Maratha MRT | Iyer IYR | Kadar KDR | Irula IRL | Paniya PNY | Gond GND | Ho HO | Santal SAN | Korwa KOR | Birhor BIR | Manipuri Brahmin MPB | Tharu THR | Tripuri TRI | Jamatia JAM | Jarawa JRW | Onge ONG | Pallan PLN
(Authors: Analabha Basu, Neeta Sarkar-Roy, Partha P. Majumdar. Text: Mohit Rao)
(Graphics: Deepak Harichandran and L Balamurugan)
Keywords: Casteancestors

Source: The Hindu, 2-02-2016