Monteiro blasts communalism, calls for independence in scientists PANJIM, Feb 7: Trade unionist, maths educator and mathematical physicist Dr Vivek Monteiro lambasted communalism, called for scientists to think independently, and stressed the need to meet the basic living needs of the poor here this evening.
Dr Monteiro, a son of Goa but settled in Mumbai, was delivering the fourth day's talks in the D.D. Kosambi festival of ideas series at the Kala Academy. US-educated Monteiro, secretary of the CPI(M)-affiliated CITU Maharashtra State Committee, said: "Kosambi has been a very prominent influence on every young student in India who proceeds towards the Left." He acknowledged the influence of the Miramar-based Dhempe College in shaping him in the sixties -- including professors Joe Menezes, Nadkarni, Kantak, Parbhudesai, and others at St Xavier's Mumbai. He also had a good word for his colleagues Frank Braganza and Nitan Kenkre, and his parents maths teacher Sophia and engineer-armyman (Brig) Innocencio Monteiro. He said India's biggest problem was "836 million people being denied their basic needs" and said science could not ignore this. Some 92% of the workforce belonged to the unorganised sector in INdia, he noted. "Science is the long history of learning how not to fool yourself," said Monteiro. "It is not always convenient to be scientific," said Monteiro, stressing how some scientists shirked their social responsibilities and acted as if politics was completely another world. "DD Kosambi was a scientist who never compromised with his scientific values. He worked in the TIFR and was critical of nuclear energy, so he was out on early retirement. During his life, he never attained the status of a scientific star," said Monteiro. He pointed to Kosambi's view that modern science was the "creation of the bourgeosie" and was "no longer independent". Monteiro spoke about the scam of the Enron plant at Dhabol "not far from Goa", and said India's intelligentsia, including the IITs, had failed to challenge this. Monteiro lambasted the "communal propaganda" built up prior to elections, and said science is an "ideology that is fundamentally opposed to communal ideology and obsfucation". "Religious terrorism" should be used as a category whenever people were killed because of their religious identities, he said, and not just depending on the religion of the killers. He stressed the need to take quality math education to the common schools of India, and cited to experiences in Sanguem which showed this was possible. Monteiro's NavNirmit trust is devoted to universalizing elementary science and mathematics education. He pointed to the work of the All India People's Science Congress, and how 10,000 "decent homes" had been built at Solapur the cost of just two plush apartments in the costliest part of Mumbai. Later, in a Q&A session, he fielded questions on whether Marxism had created freedom of thought ("it's an issue socialism has still to resolve"), "scientific terrorism", the misuse of science, his views on Gandhi, and from some who appeared keen to contrast whether communal riots caused more deaths than human exploitation. Speaking earlier, environmentalist Dr Claude Alvares, whose Dutch doctorate is in the history of science, said Monteiro had "disappeared from my life for at least 30 years". Like him, Alvares noted, Monteiro was also "a creature of the 1960s" when college youth battled the reality of poverty in India and took part in rural development camps. Alvares praised Monteiro for sticking to his vision and opting for trade unionism which was "not a sexy job". People with US doctorates went in for the "universities, corporations and the heart bypasse at the apt age."