[<<“It is clear that today’s political environment is strangulating the
constitutional freedom and right to expression and speech and this is also
getting support from the authorities,” Shah claimed in his resignation
letter. Along with Shah, the college’s vice-principal, Mohanbhai Parmar,
also resigned from his post.>>]

https://scroll.in/article/913038/interview-gujarat-college-academics-explain-why-they-resigned-after-jignesh-mevani-controversy?fbclid=IwAR1tLIK-dWtdnOGSvtzhW5Vu-lKiPOYFc6QoAf7RV8hHY3lF5Y2u_rfN9YU

Interview: Gujarat college academics explain why they resigned after
Jignesh Mevani controversy
The principal and vice-principal of Ahmedabad’s HK Arts College quit after
its trustees refused to provide a hall for an event featuring the
independent MLA.
Interview: Gujarat college academics explain why they resigned after
Jignesh Mevani controversy

Principal Hemantkumar Shah (left) and vice-principal Mohanbhai Parmar
resigned from their posts on Monday. | Photo courtesy: Mohanbhai Parmar

11 hours ago

Aarefa Johari

Freedom of thought and expression has been under attack in Gujarat for more
than 15 years, and Hemantkumar Shah believes it is time for academicians to
take a stand.

On Monday, Shah resigned from his post as principal of HK Arts College in
Ahmedabad, a day after the institute’s trustees refused to provide a hall
for an event in which Gujarat MLA Jignesh Mevani was the chief guest. Shah
claims that the trustees had come under pressure from student union leaders
affiliated to the Bharatiya Janata Party, who had threatened to raise a
ruckus at the venue if Mevani entered the campus. Shah was forced to cancel
the event altogether, and submitted his resignation letter soon after.

The event, the college’s annual day festival, was to be held on Monday.
Mevani is an alumnus of the college.

“It is clear that today’s political environment is strangulating the
constitutional freedom and right to expression and speech and this is also
getting support from the authorities,” Shah claimed in his resignation
letter. Along with Shah, the college’s vice-principal, Mohanbhai Parmar,
also resigned from his post.

The Bharatiya Janata Yuva Morcha, the BJP’s youth wing, has denied it had
anything to do with the incident. However, Vanrajsinh Chavda, a former
Gujarat University Syndicate member and HK Arts College alumnus who is
affiliated with the BJP, told the Ahmedabad Mirror that he was against
Mevani being a chief guest because the independent MLA was “ashamed to say
‘Bharat mata ki jai’”.

HK Arts College is run by the Brahmachari Wadi Trust whose trustees include
two Padma Shri awardees – architect Balkrishna Doshi and author Kumarpal
Desai – as well as Jnanpith recipient Raghuveer Chaudhary, a novelist and
poet. The college has had a reputation for promoting liberal thought in the
past, and both Shah and Parmar are known for their progressive views in
academic circles. Before joining HK Arts College as an economics lecturer
in 1998, Shah was a successful journalist, editor and columnist for 14
years.

On Tuesday, Scroll.in spoke to Shah and Parmar about their bold decision to
resign from their posts at the college, and the statement it will make in
the current political atmosphere.

*What drove you to resign from your posts as principal and vice-principal
of HK Arts College?*

Shah: We invited Jignesh Mevani for the annual day function because he was
a student of our college. But four or five students associated with BJP and
Gujarat University came to my office and raised the banner of revolt. They
said Mevani is a socialist, Maoist and a controversial figure. I told them
that he is a former student, and that every politician is a controversial
figure. But those students threatened the college’s Trust members, saying
they would not allow Mevani to speak. So the Trust decided not to allot the
hall to us for the event, and I had to cancel the event. I felt that this
is an attack on democratic rights, freedom of speech and expression. It
hurt my conscience, so I decided to resign.

Parmar: I resigned because as principal and vice-principal, we are together
responsible for instilling in students the spirit of acquiring knowledge.
We felt that as an ex-student, Mevani has reached so far. This event would
not only be a way to honour him, but also an opportunity for him to tell
students about his struggles; to motivate them about leadership and
success. That was our aim.

Some students did not want him to come, but this is a violation of
democracy and freedom. The value of democracy needs to be asserted. As a
teacher, if I do not get a chance to enlighten a student, it is extremely
sad. I felt I should stay away from an institute that knows its educational
role in society but is running away from it.

*Was it difficult to take this stand?*

Parmar: I am not afraid of taking such a stand because we have a social
responsibility, and I am aware of the risks. I know we could be attacked.
But someone has to speak the truth in society. This was about inviting an
ex-student as a chief guest, not about politics. If you look at it from the
political perspective, then in the past, BJP leaders like Narendra Modi and
Maya Kodnani have visited and spoken at our college. So this is not the
first time we are inviting a political figure.

How have your students, colleagues and trustees reacted to your
resignations?
Shah: A day before the event, some of my colleagues said that we should
just obey the trustees. But I said that the Trust was not showing any
democratic spirit, so why should I obey them if I believe in the democratic
right of freedom of speech, expression and thought? My colleagues have
asked me to reconsider my decision, but I feel that they should reconsider
their views.

Parmar: Our students are feeling bad about us resigning. The trustees and
other teachers know of the kind of work we do, but the trustees acted out
of fear. They were afraid that in the future, they might not be able to get
university-level work from the government, and they came under pressure
from BJP-affiliated student leaders. We have been clear that we will not
work in such circumstances. But the trustees have not accepted our
resignations yet – they have called us to meet them in a few days.

*Is this incident reflective of a larger trend in Gujarat and in the
country?*

Shah: There has been a constant effort to attack academic freedom in
Gujarat for the past 15 to 17 years, and yes, it has to do with Modi being
in power [as the Gujarat chief minister between 2002 and 2014 and then as
prime minister]. This has been my experience. Many times, when I have been
invited to give guest lectures or speeches in other colleges, the college
authorities have asked me to take care and not speak anything against the
government. I have been barred from academic staff college lectures.
Previously I used to be invited, but because I have aired certain points of
view, I am not invited now. My name is prohibited from some TV news
channels also. I also used to have a Gujarati column on political affairs
in Sandesh newspaper, which was discontinued some years ago.

Things have not changed since Modi moved to the central government, and
unless academicians raise their voice against suppression of freedom of
thought and expression, things will not change.

Parmar: Universities have students from all parts of society, so what
happens in a university affects all of society. This government has created
an atmosphere in which BJP members can speak anything they want, without
being stopped. But if anyone else speaks anything that is critical of them,
they don’t allow it. When ABVP [Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad, the
students’ wing of the BJP’s ideological mentor, the Rashtriya Swayamsevak
Sangh] students do anything wrong, it is supposed to be tolerated, but if
any other student is seen as anti-BJP, then they are pressured to stop
speaking. The ABVP students openly claim that no one can harm them, and we
have seen them beating up clerks in the university. There is no such thing
as democracy when it comes to them.

All this has increased a lot in the past 10 years. Today, ordinary people
find it difficult to talk. After BJP lost in a few of the recent state
elections, people started talking a little more openly. But even then, this
step that we have taken to resign is definitely scary. They have been
successful at creating an atmosphere of fear. It is a serious situation all
over the country.
-- 
Peace Is Doable

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