Hi!

Here is a piece I wrote on the death of Aman Kachroo consequent on ragging.  It 
will appear in Vaartha daily in Telugu.


kalpana



The murder of nineteen-year-old medical student Aman Kachroo is deeply 
saddening.  Ragging has been rampant in the country, especially in colleges of 
professional education for at least four decades now.  As a child, I remember 
my teenaged uncle discontinuing engineering in Bhopal in the mid 1970s unable 
to bear the humiliation of ragging. We have no count of the number of young 
students, mostly young men, who have lost their lives, taken their lives or 
made a choice between a professional education and staying alive and sane.  It 
is certainly not a recent phenomenon.  While we have a law in place now, it is 
hardly surprising that the law only comes into operation when there is a 
serious violation – like this one -- where the gravity of the offence puts it 
within the purview of criminal law.

The term “ragging” itself is problematic because it masks the fact that the 
acts it refers to are harassment and battery aimed at diminishing the dignity 
of those who enter the institution at a time when they are powerless and 
vulnerable.  Fresh out of school, several moving out of the secure confines of 
home for the first time, groping to find their feet in the world after gaining 
entry into institutions that will transport them to their dreams, these 
youngsters are rudely awakened to the fact that violation of dignity and person 
is a defining trait of the world of their dreams.

The “sporting” way of dealing with it, we are told, is to grin and bear it.  
There are several that do.  But does that mean they do not experience 
humiliation?  How does that experience condition their behaviour and 
personality in their lives ahead?  It is impossible that targeted violence will 
not leave scars.  How many have actually been able to tell their stories?  When 
they have, how many of us have heard them carefully and acted diligently – as 
parents, teachers and peers?

There are others, like Aman Kachroo, who refuse to submit themselves to such 
humiliation.  And they, the human rights defenders in institutions of higher 
learning, face the hostility of a negligent, callous and thereby complicit 
administration on the one side, an indifferent faculty on the other and a 
murderous mob closing in on them.  This mob, of course, needs no reason to be 
murderous.  It is not violence that needs any justification or rationalization. 
 While all freshers are vulnerable, those who come from vulnerable social 
backgrounds are doubly targeted.  In Aman’s case, he came in through a quota, 
and yet he dared to stand up and speak.  A little understood dimension of 
campus violence is that it reproduces the exclusions and silencing outside.  
And because campuses are closed spaces, insulated from the world outside, the 
normal protections that may be claimed and that might operate outside, are 
rejected in favour of non transparent conciliatory processes within that are 
simply incapable of tackling the gravity of these situations.

The use of the term “ragging” to describe these attacks that range from verbal 
to physical abuse and murder, aggravates the problem by detracting attention 
from its seriousness – teachers, parents, friends, in general all those in 
touch with victims, generally share the view that this is a rite of passage 
which will pass.  The question we need to ask ourselves, however, is, even if 
it is a rite of passage, even if we are certain it will pass, why must we 
tolerate or condone intentional humiliation and battery?

This is scarcely the time for us to distance ourselves from the problem by 
saying it does not happen in our institutions.  We need now to take 
responsibility for a systemic failure that has had tragic consequences, for 
which we are, as teachers especially, collectively responsible.  I have 
personally heard the head of an institution tell freshers that while ragging is 
prohibited, before they lodge a formal complaint, they must also remember that 
it is the seniors who will eventually guide them through their academic work.   
It is not true either that it is only the “lumpen” elements among students who 
indulge in this behaviour.  The brightest, most high performing students figure 
as kingpins in the lynch mob, providing intellectual grist to the “ragging” 
mill.

There are those that participate actively, and others who buy their peace and 
inclusion by being passive participant-spectators in these orgies.  The 
participation in violence dehumanizes both equally.  Can it be argued that 
having participated in an orgy of this kind, these students will be able to 
just move on and get their star grades, make it in life, be good teachers, 
friends and parents, and make peace with themselves?  It is not my intention 
here to essentialise negative character traits or behavioural patterns as never 
changing and evil.  Rather, what I do wish to suggest is that participation in 
willful violence against a group perceived as powerless, has a far-reaching 
impact on the perpetrators.  We have not even begun to grapple with this 
because we have defined murderous violence down to flippant “teasing” that does 
not penetrate the surface of consciousness. Perhaps we need to think of how 
this bearing of witness as violators will influence their response to similar 
violence against those in their care a generation later?

If it is possible for students in an academic environment, to use the fact of 
belonging to the institution to inflict harm and suffering on an unimaginable 
scale on younger colleagues, it is time for us to reflect critically on the 
kind of education we impart and the students we are turning out.  What does it 
tell us about the character of the institutions we have built?

Most urgent of all, it is time for students who are troubled by this violence 
to come together and form a national coalition against campus violence, making 
it known and clear to all parties on campuses across the country that there 
will henceforth be zero tolerance for any infringement of the right to dignity 
and education in an environment of freedom.  It is only this exercise of 
associational freedom that will call into account all parties responsible for 
providing and safeguarding fundamental rights of students in vulnerable 
situations in educational institutions.

[Professor, NALSAR University of Law, Hyderabad]

--
Kalpana Kannabiran
"nivedita"
314 St 7 East Marredpalli
Secunderabad 500 026 AP

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