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Tuesday, April 19, 2016

Ambedkar against nationalism


For Ambedkar, human dignity mattered more.


Was B.R. Ambedkar anti-national? While we are celebrating Ambedkar Jayanti today, the question sounds absurd as it relates to an Indian statesman who showed constant dedication to the wellbeing of his country and who contributed more than anyone else to the drafting of its Constitution — arguably one of the best in the world. But this is a time of absurd questions, it seems, and the responses may be eye-opening.
The first reason why Ambedkar may be accused of being anti-national has to do with his attitude towards the freedom movement, beyond his antagonistic relationship with Mahatma Gandhi. During the first session of the All-India Depressed Classes Congress (AIDCC), on August 8, 1930, at Nagpur, he opposed the project of India’s independence, which the Congress had promoted a few months before, in December 1929, during its Karachi session, under pressure from Jawaharlal Nehru. The AIDCC argued that “The depressed classes welcomed the British as their deliverers from age-long tyranny and oppression by the orthodox Hindus”.
Ambedkar felt strengthened in these views after the Congress won the 1937 elections and started to rule eight out of 11 provinces, and passed conservative bills, including the Industrial Dispute Bill that made strike illegal under certain conditions in the Bombay Presidency. In 1939, Ambedkar made his stand clear in the legislative council of this province: “Whenever there is any conflict of interest between the country and the untouchables, so far as I am concerned, the untouchables’ interests will take precedence over the interests of the country”.
But by saying such a thing, Ambedkar was not anti-national. First, like Jyotirao Phule, he did not think that India was a nation: “How can people divided into several thousands of castes be a nation?” he asked. For him, the national movement was dominated by an elite, of which the masses were the first victims. For, as he said in 1943 before trade union activists, the working classes “often sacrifice their all to the so-called cause of nationalism. [But] they have never cared to enquire whether the nationalism for which they are to make their offerings will, when established, give them social and economic equality”.
During World War II, Ambedkar continued to collaborate with the colonial power in exchange for concessions to Dalits and the working class at large. In July 1941, he joined the Defence Advisory Committee that had been set up by the viceroy to involve Indian leaders in the war effort and to give to this forced participation of India in the conflict a greater legitimacy. In 1942, he entered the executive council of the viceroy as labour member. In this capacity, he worked relentlessly to develop social legislation. One of the most significant bills that he managed to have passed was the Indian Trade Unions (Amendment) Bill, making compulsory the recognition of a trade union in every enterprise under certain conditions. He also introduced the Payment of Wages (Amendment) Bill and numerous Factories (Amendment) Bills — which were all passed. In fact, many of the labour laws independent India was to elaborate upon after 1947 have been initiated by Ambedkar under the British. He also obtained a larger recruitment of Dalits in the army and, in particular, the reinstatement of the Mahar battalion.
However, Ambedkar, during WWII, had decided to cooperate with the British for another reason. Like Nehru, he thought that the Nazis, the Italian Fascists and Japan were more dangerous than the British. Opposing Mahatma Gandhi’s decision, in August 1942, to launch the Quit India Movement, he declared that the “patriotic duty of all Indians” was rather to prevent such movements from creating “anarchy and chaos which would unquestionably help and facilitate the subjugation of this country by Japan”.
For Ambedkar, there was an “ism” above nationalism: Humanism, with its values of equality and liberty. Hence his collaboration with the British to promote the cause of the Indian plebe and to fight the Axis pow-ers — hence also his conversion to Buddh-ism. While Hinduism tends to be conside-red as the national religion of India par excellence today, Ambedkar looked at it as disrespectful of human dignity, in contrast to Buddhism.
While he considered that religion was “absolutely essential for the development of mankind”, his vision of religion was overdetermined by social considerations.
He rejected Hinduism because he thought that the caste system was co-substantial to this religion, whereas equality was inherent in Buddhism.
He said: “By remaining in the Hindu religion nobody can prosper in any way. In the Buddhist religion 75 per cent bhikkshus were Brahmins. Twenty-five per cent were Shudras and others. But Lord Buddha said, “O bhikkshus, you have come from different countries and castes. Rivers flow separately when they flow in their provinces, but they lose their identity when they meet the sea. They become one and the same. The Buddhist Sangh is like an ocean. In this Sangh all are equal”.
There is probably no better metaphor of the nation that is supposed to be made of peer citizens paying allegiance to the same encompassing body politic, without any intermediate entity.
On October 14, 1956, while he converted to Buddhism in a grand ceremony in Nagpur, Ambedkar said: “By discarding my ancient religion which stood for inequality and oppression today I am reborn”. And one of the 22 oaths that he took on that day, and even asked those who converted like him to take, was: “I thereby reject my old religion, Hinduism, which is detrimental to the prosperity of human kind and which discriminates between man and man and which treats me as inferior”.
Certainly, Ambedkar may be seen as anti-national because of his opposition to the leaders of the freedom movement in the 1930s and ’40s and because of his rejection of the religion that tends to be officially presented today as the embodiment of the Indian way of life, as new laws (including those pertaining to “beef bans”) suggest. But he discarded these brands of nationalism in the name of higher values, arguing that nationalist leaders can also be oppressive and showing the world that human dignity matters more than anything else — including for the making of a proper nation.

Written by Christophe Jaffrelot | Published:April 14, 2016 12:01, Indian Express

The truth about Chinese unemployment


Leaders are confronted with a difficult choice: higher near-term unemployment or slower long-term growth

Since 2002, China’s economy has undergone significant changes, including a shift from acceleration to deceleration of gross domestic product (GDP) growth. Yet, the official urban unemployment rate, jointly issued by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) and the Department of Labor and Social Security, has remained remarkably steady, at around 4-4.1%. Since 2010, it has stood at precisely 4.1%. This is surprising, to say the least—and has led some to ask whether the NBS could be fudging the numbers.

The NBS is not lying; it simply lacks data. The unemployment rate that the NBS provides reflects how many members of the registered urban population have reported to the government to receive unemployment benefits. But China’s piecemeal unemployment insurance and underdeveloped re-employment programmes weaken the incentive for people to seek assistance. As a result, the NBS figures are far from accurate.
China’s government has moved to remedy this, by carrying out urban unemployment surveys. But, despite having been collected a decade ago, those statistics have yet to be released.
In lieu of convincing official figures, some economists have taken matters into their own hands, using data from the urban household survey (UHS) to estimate the unemployment rate. Extrapolating from UHS data gathered in six provinces, Jun Han and Junsen Zhang, for example, concluded that, in 2005-06, Chinese unemployment stood at around 10%. Using UHS data from almost all of China, Feng Shuaizhang, Hu Yingyao, and Robert Moffitt calculated an average urban unemployment rate of 10.9% from 2002 to 2009 —the highest estimate ever produced.
But these estimates are just that— estimates. Because UHS data are not freely available, different people obtain results for different years and provinces from the various sources they could access. This has caused considerable frustration for researchers, and has resulted in estimates with ranges so wide as to be statistically insignificant.
In our own research at Fudan University in Shanghai, my two PhD students, Liheng Xu and Huihui Zhang, and I managed to obtain a reasonably broad supply of official statistics: the 2005-12 data for four provinces, the 2005-09 data for three provinces, and monthly data for 2010-12 for four of these seven provinces. While the sample is technically small, the provinces for which we acquired data represent the coastal, inland and northeast regions. With the right adjustments and processing, we were able to infer the unemployment rates in different kinds of provinces and municipalities, thereby estimating the real nationwide unemployment rate.
We found that, although China’s urban unemployment rate was probably quite high in 2005, standing at 10.7%, it has most likely dropped over the past decade, reaching 7% in 2012. That puts the annual average for the 2005-12 period at 8.5%. (These and our other findings correlate with a cross-sectional analysis of the official data, meaning that the data for registered unemployment, subjected to such an analysis, might serve as a proxy for the real unemployment rate.)
Moreover, while rapid GDP growth contributed to falling unemployment in, say, 2007, unemployment continued to decline even after the global financial crisis of 2008 began to weaken economic performance. Most economists would assume that declining unemployment amid falling GDP growth is related to a decline in labour-force participation. But our calculations, based on the UHS data, show that labour-force participation in China actually increased slightly after 2008, as the proportion of workers exiting the labour market decreased. This can be explained partly by an ongoing structural shift in the Chinese economy, from a manufacturing-driven growth model to a services-led model that empowers private innovators. And, indeed, as UHS data show, this shift led to continuous job creation in the services sector from 2005 to 2012.
What has not happened is significant destruction of jobs in the state sector and manufacturing industries, especially since 2009. As the UHS data suggest, the average time it takes an unemployed worker to find a job in the services and non-state sectors is shorter than in the manufacturing and state sectors. If the manufacturing and state sectors do begin to lay off more employees, urban unemployment rates are bound to rise.
The reason that hasn’t already happened is that the government has, to some extent, been propping up these sectors since the global financial crisis, by implementing massive stimulus packages focused on investment in infrastructure and real-estate development. This has sustained the rapid growth of the secondary sector, which has thus been absorbing large numbers of low-skill workers. In fact, upon closer examination of the UHS data, we found that the least-educated workers largely accounted for the decline in overall unemployment.
This stimulated infrastructure and real-estate construction boom has also led to the expansion of heavy industry, including state-owned steel, cement, chemicals, glass and other enterprises, causing employment growth to accelerate from 2005 onward. The NBS data show that the employment growth rate in the state sector was negative before 2009, when it turned positive.
The fact that the unemployment rate is declining while GDP growth slows suggests that labour productivity is actually worsening—a trend that is likely to lower China’s long-term potential growth rate. Since the effects of the stimulus obviously cannot last, the sectors that were being propped up will soon begin to shed more workers, causing the unemployment rate to rise. Only further government intervention could prevent this outcome; but that might mean delaying structural reforms that are needed to sustain productivity growth. China’s leaders are thus being confronted with a difficult choice: higher near-term unemployment or slower long-term growth.

Source: Mintepaper, 19-04-2016
Schools for Tribal Kids or for Horror?


The death of nearly 900 children, between 2010 and 2015, in state-run residential schools for tribal children is a matter of deep sorrow and shame. Their parents sent these children, belonging to the most marginalised segment of Indian society , to these schools in the hope that education would liberate them from poverty and want. Instead, lack of basic facilities -drinking water, sanitation, healthcare, poor nutrition -and an excess of administrative callousness killed that hope. Those responsible must be punished. More to the point, institutions must be put in place to prevent recurrence of such tragedy .Accountability is clearly missing. The residential schools in question, the Eklavya Model Residential Schools, patterned on the Navodaya Vidyalayas catering to children in class VI to XII, and ashram schools set up as part of a centrally spon sored scheme under the tribal sub-plan, are under the ministry of tribal affairs, unlike other state-run schools, which are overseen by the ministry of human reso urce development and state education departments. The tribal affairs ministry and its outposts in the states are ill-equipped to run these schools properly . As a result, tribal residential schools are monitored and held to account far less effectively than other state-run schools. Improved administrative oversight must be complemented with increased community participation through school committees comprising parents, district officials and school administrators. Community participation in states like Nagaland has resulted in substantial reduction in teacher absenteeism.
There are no easy answers to how and how fast tribal communities join the mainstream. Taking their brightest children out of their homes and away from their culture, only to maim or kill them, is certainly not one of them.

Source: Economic Times, 19-04-2016
Pranayama & Creativity


Pranayama means taking control of `life' and it includes not just physiological but also the internal aspects, the intellect and beyond. It is food for all our five physiological systems.Prana is responsible for the beating of the heart and breathing; it enters the body through breath and is sent to every cell through the circulatory system. Prana is also responsible for the system that controls all sense perceptions of seeing, hearing, touching, tasting and smelling.
Apana means `eject', respons ible for the elimination of waste products from the body through the lungs and excretory systems. Vyana is the power by which nourishment received through digestive forces is circulated to all parts of the body through the blood stream.
Samana is for the expansion and contraction processes of the body , the voluntary muscular system. It regulates digestion. It is responsible for digestion and the repair and manufacture of new cells and growth.Samana includes the heat-regulating processes of the body .Auras are projections of this current. With meditation, one can see auras of light around every being. Yogis who do special practice on samana can produce a blazing aura at will.
Udana stimulates the internal functions of the body including the escape of prana (death). It represents the conscious energy required to produce vocal sounds corresponding to the intent of the being. Hence, control on udana gives the higher centres total control over the body. This prana helps one progress to higher realms.

Friday, April 15, 2016

e-UGshala: An X’mas gift to graduates

Come Christmas, and the Santa will bring in goodies for aspiring graduate students this year, as per the Union Minister of Human Resource Develoment, Smriti Irani.
A technological tool called as e-UGshala initiative, which will help enable access to the digitised contents to the higher education institutions will be launcehd during the merrier time of the year, December 25th. “We have 29 undergraduate texts, visuals self-assessment sheets and books in social science, science and languages. I will dedicate e-UGshala to the nation on December 25,” informed Union Human Resource Development Minister Smriti Irani.
After digitisation of the undergraduate level content, the next step is a e-PGshala for post graduate education, she said.
The minister also talked about making the e-pathshala available on mobile phones to enable access to children in remote areas.
Talking about ‘Swayam’, India’s maiden indigenous massive online open courseware (MOOCs) for students, Irani said that after students attain certificates in the chosen virtual course, they will be eligible to enroll in physical universities and institutes.
Source: Digital Elearning, 15-04-2016
The Essence of Rama


Rama is a symbol of sacrifice, a model of brotherhood, an ideal administrator, a warrior unparalleled. The term Rama Rajya stands for the mostexalted concept of a welfare state. Rama was not only divine, he was invested with the highest values of an enriched tradition started by Raghu. The essence of Rama is, therefore, the essence of excellence in every pursuit.As an avatara, Rama had to enact his `leela' in human form. As a child he let Kaushalya enjoy the divine pleasure of treating him as a child. But he wanted her to share a cosmic vision of his real self. Goswami Tulsidas describes that once Kaushalya bathed and fed Rama and placed him in his cradle. Then she prepared prasad and offered it to the Kuldevata in the puja room.She went and checked if the child was sleeping. He was. She went to complete the puja and found Rama there, eating the prasad. Kaushalya ran back to the cradle to find the child asleep. But when she returned to the puja room, he was there, eating the prasad. She was dumbfounded.
Then Rama revealed to her his swarupa, the universe itself, where birth and death, time and space, causality and effect were a seamless one. A bewildered Kaushalya, like Arjuna, was given a glimpse of the infinite.Rama's reign in Ayodhya, it is said, “...was such that no suffering of mental, bodily or physical nature afflicts its citizens.There is no animus and everyone is conscious of his duty . The forests are lush and the ecosystem healthy“.

Soon, get blood tests done without the needle prick

Four engineering students from Zakir Hussain College of Engineering and Technology, Aligarh Muslim University, have developed a unique prototype using electrical properties of the blood cells that will help count the red blood cells (RBC) and white blood cells (WBC) without a needle prick.
The innovative model will give the blood cell count using a laser when placed on superficial veins, especially the lower lip. The students also claimed that it is the first time that such a blood test will be conducted without a needle prick.
B Tech students Rohan Maheshwari, Simran Kaur, Somya Agarwal and Vani Dayal Sharma took around four months to build the device. While Rohan and Simran are from electrical engineering, Somya and Vani are pursuing computer engineering.
Their digital solution for domestic health check-up also won these students Rs 10 lakh prize money at the GE Edison Challenge 2016, an open innovation challenge for the university student community in India.
The event organised by the GE India Technology Centre (GEITC) was held recently wherein they received an award of Rs 2 lakh and incubation grant of Rs 8 lakh for their university.
Talking about the significance of their innovation city gynaecologist Dr Jyotsna Mehta said, “Increase in the WBC count is indicative of acute bacterial infection. The prototype can be of great help in detecting such infections.”
“Once the data is collected it will be transferred to a software that analyses and compares the blood cell count with the standard data. Using the concept of cloud computing, the software will send a text message to the patient’s phone. If it detects some considerable deviation, the doctor concerned will receive the acquired data. The doctor will be able to treat the patient from home and notify the pharmacy about the prescribed medicines that have to be delivered to the patient’s home,” explained Rohan Maheshwari, a second year student of electronic engineering.
According to these engineering students the physical, chemical, structural and other properties of the blood have been studied in detail but not the electrical properties. “So we tried to explore this particular property,” said Simran.
During their research they visited paediatricians and pathology labs to which they referred their patients for blood tests. Simran said, “We found that only few patients actually go to the laboratories recommended by doctors to get these tests done. We decided to solve this problem. It took us four months to complete the research.”
After winning GE Edison, the students are now working on the execution of their concept.
“The competition was tough because the second engineering students competed with India’s finest technical minds. We also got the opportunity to prove our mettle before senior scientists and engineers from GE, as well as innovation leaders from the industry,” said Somya.
Shukla Chandra, MD, Global Research Centre said: “The team from Zakir Husain College of Engineering and Technology, Aligarh, UP impressed the judges through their digital solution for Domestic Health Check Up. The innovation involves counting blood cells, using only their electrical properties. We are extremely proud of what these young minds have come up with; it has the potential to create a revolution in the healthcare sector. This bears testimony to the kind of talent, platforms like GE – Edison Challenge is able to reap”.
The winners also got an opportunity to visit GE John F Welch Technology Centre in Bengaluru and see the R&D laboratory. They also interacted with GE experts and attended a Predix platform workshop during their visit.
Source: Hindustan Times, 15-04-2016