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From: Radhakrishnan Nerur Ramanathan >
Date: Tue, Mar 8, 2016 at 3:45 PM
Subject: Fwd: GOVERNMENT SHOULD TAKE THIS CHANCE TO SHUT DOWN JNU



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From: B P Arawak <>
Date: Sat, Mar 5, 2016 at 6:25 AM
Subject: GOVERNMENT SHOULD TAKE THIS CHANCE TO SHUT DOWN JNU
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GOVERNMENT SHOULD TAKE THIS CHANCE TO SHUT DOWN JNU
FRIDAY, MARCH 04, 2016 BY INDIANDEFENSE NEWS
<https://plus.google.com/110604715679570898932>


*by Dr. Chandan Mitra*

<https://3.bp.blogspot.com/-0eHtYZXMkvY/VtlVMTFfUGI/AAAAAAAAo2g/3njRe1u6oiQ/s1600/Dr_Chandan_Mitra.jpg>
Given the ongoing battle between the Indian state and a section of JNU
students, it is clear that there is a need for a "radical" solution (pun
unintended). JNU, the brainchild of Indira Gandhi and her Sancho Panza
Education Minister Syed Nurul Hasan, was floated on the lines of colonial
Britain's Hailesbury College to produce and train, what she believed, would
form the core of a "committed bureaucracy", committed primarily to her
persona and idealism with a Leftist hue, not quite Red in thought and
belief, but a deep shade of "pink".

But within a few years of its formation, Mrs Gandhi's fond dream went
horribly wrong. Despite dollops of state subsidy (an estimated 3.5 lakhs is
currently paid by the government of India per year for every JNU student),
alumni of the institution turned a deep shade of Red thanks to the
curricula and faculty carefully chosen by Prof Hasan from his pool of
pro-CPI teachers.

For some years, this served Mrs Gandhi's purpose very well. In the initial
years, JNU was peopled mostly by products of "elite" institutions like
Delhi's St. Stephen's College who volubly mouthed "revolutionary" slogans,
but in practice served the Indian state's objectives with full gusto by
joining the civil services in hordes. But the churning of the polity
leading to the proclamation of Emergency and Mrs Gandhi's spectacular
defeat in the 1977 elections jolted JNU out of its complacency.

The Janata Party government led by the arch-conservative Morarji Desai and
his equally right-wing Education Minister, Triguna Sen, had no time for
long-haired, jhola-carrying agitators that JNU produced aplenty. Janata
leaders were aghast to discover that almost each and every member of the
university's faculty was a card-carrying Communist or worse. Professor
Hasan's dominance over the university faculty recruitment system throughout
the country, especially in prestige national institutions, ensured that new
recruits to the teaching community consisted primarily of those who failed
to get selected to the civil services, but made for excellent cannon fodder
in the Left's war against the Janata Party regime.

Since the Jana Sangh was the only ideological component of the Janata Party
(the rest being motley woolly-headed socialists), a clash was inevitable
between the JNU's founders and the Janata Party establishment. This clash
often spilled over onto the streets, especially over the Desai Government's
determination to revise curricula and replace Marxist historiography with a
nationalist variant.

When Mrs Gandhi returned to power in 1980, she assiduously worked to
restore JNU's Leftist DNA. A dissipated and rudderless Opposition collapsed
before her aggressive dismantling of the education system that the Janata
Party had tried to put together as an alternative to the Congress-Left
structure. Although mid-way through the Emergency, Sanjay Gandhi launched a
war on the Communists (despite the erstwhile Soviet Union's mealy-mouthed
support to the Congress), the "Lefties" were back in favour after his
untimely death. The subsidies returned, and the system of patronage and
favours in the education hierarchy was restored. And the system was
relatively undisturbed over the next few decades.

This background is important to understand the pathological hatred of the
BJP by the JNU establishment. When it realised that old-style Leftism had
lost its appeal globally and the Soviet system had crumbled in the 1990s,
the malcontents that JNU systematically bred had to look for other issues
to oppose. Having been groomed by an atmosphere of anti-statism, JNU
products drifted towards anything that smelled of anti-Establishment
activity.

But it is the rise of the Right in the early 90s, symbolised by the Ram
Janmabhoomi agitation and the demolition of Babri Masjid, which disoriented
JNU completely. So much so that the ABVP, the student wing of the RSS,
began to sprout roots in this "revolutionary" university. The authorities
meanwhile tilted JNU's admission system to excise the "elite" and started
inducting students from backward regions with great fervour. The
implementation of the Mandal Commission Report and subsequent Mandalisation
of the Indian polity further spurred this process. While other universities
began to reorient their curricula and teaching methods to cater to the
needs of market economics, JNU drifted back to the ideological Stone Age.
The futility of raising outdated Marxist slogans was never accepted on its
sprawling campus. JNU's standing among India's educational institutions
fell dramatically; while the IITs, IIMs and even private universities
excelled in turning out students who catered to the job bazaar's needs, JNU
relegated itself to a deep crevice of unemployability.

With state-sponsorship for JNU products which had earlier enabled them to
get employed in the university system gradually receding, its students
stared at a bleak future. They had to depend on official doles received by
way of UGC scholarships to eke out a marginal subsistence. But the more
they became unemployable, the greater their radicalism grew. Fed on the
mantra of anti-capitalism, anti-marketism, they continued to spout the same
antiquated philosophies while students of other universities shot past them.

Aspirational India, the great contribution of Prime Minister Narendra Modi
which is poised to refashion India's youth and their dreams, has by-passed
JNU. The university's students are living in a make-believe, retrograde
world where everything came free or subsidised, and with heated ideological
debates over the finer points of Marx, Lenin, Mao Zedong enjoying the
primacy of intellectual space without the realisation that the world has
passed them by. In other words, most JNU students and faculty have become
ideological vagabonds, virtual flotsam in a stagnant pool of their own
digging.

Frustrations emanating from JNU students, once respected for their
intellectual caliber, have led them to reside in an unwanted Jurassic Park,
housing creatures the world forgot or would at least like to forget. What
we are witnessing in Delhi for the last few days is a futile rebellion of
the subsidy-deprived. They have been led to believe that only if their
tin-pot agitation succeeds in dislodging Modi, everything will be back to
being "normal": Subsidies would return, they can stay on in hostels eating
highly-subsidised food till they are old enough to be grandparents, and the
Left's patronage network will eventually get them a job, at least by the
time they become pensioners.

The few meritorious students who still slip through the university's
exclusionist, anti-merit admission policy, must be aghast at what the JNU
has become. But where mob mentality rides roughshod, logic and reason fall
by the wayside.

Is there a solution to this? Of course there is, but a radical one. The
self-destructive agitation at JNU has given the government the best
opportunity to shut it down for ever, cut its financial losses, and get rid
of a factory that produces only spongers and malcontents. But what about
the huge campus in the heart of the National Campus? Will it fall to rack
and ruin? Not necessarily. The JNU Campus was originally built to be
India's Lal Bahadur Shastri National Academy of Adminstration to train
civil service probationers. The Academy can now be relocated from
Mussoorie. These will be the best and most productive outcomes of a
meaningless agitation born of frustration and anti-BJP vitriol.

*Dr. Chandan Mitra is a journalist, currently Editor of The Pioneer Group
of Publications. He is also BJP MP of the Rajya Sabha*

Source>>
<http://www.ndtv.com/opinion/government-should-take-this-chance-to-shut-down-jnu-1278181>


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