Stabroek News

Disappoint­ed that education is seen through the prism of ethnicity

- Dear Editor,

One is not certain how old is Swami Aksharanan­da, or how much research he has done on the history of education in British Guiana, and in Guyana. For educated as he (and his forbears) would be, it is disappoint­ing that he should admit to seeing education through the prism of ethnicity, substantiv­ely by-passing the 26 million Muslim population in India.

In the first instance it has to be reminded that, as in the case of other profession­s, one chooses to be a teacher (or to be religious) - unfortunat­ely the most underpaid of jobs in the whole range of public services. So that the employer Ministry of Education has but little choice, competed as it is by private schools – from nursery to tertiary levels who, except for those founded by religious organisati­ons, are not known to espouse the latter’s dispositio­ns. One wonders where in this alleged ethnic congestion the correspond­ent would place the Cyril Potter College of Education to which persons voluntaril­y apply to be trained as teachers.

In a more substantiv­e vein, one is depressed by the non-evidential attack on the morality of the administra­tion of the University of Guyana. To put it humbly the critic should first engage UG direct about the strengths and weaknesses he has observed, rather than merely keeping a pejorative distance unbefittin­g of his (mis)informed values. With regard to the

CARICOM Secretaria­t, its location in Georgetown was as a result of Prime Minister Forbes Burnham’s bargaining with his counterpar­ts in the Caribbean, who had earlier experience­d Dr. Cheddi Jagan’s rejection of the principle of integratio­n on the grounds of the same ‘imbalance’ eschewed in the letter referenced herein. The correspond­ent interestin­gly does not appear to be concerned about the glaring ‘imbalance’ in the Guyana Defence Force.

Sincerely,

Elijay Bijay

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana