Hindustan Times (Delhi)

JNU V-C likened to Hitler, Mussolini

- HT Correspond­ent htreporter­s@hindustant­imes.com

Slamming the Jawaharlal Nehru University authoritie­s’ request for a tank and the building of a war gallery on campus, retired JNU professor and Sahitya Akademi Award winner Chaman Lal likened the university’s vice chancellor to Hitler and Mussolini.

“The war gallery is a blot on JNU. No university anywhere in the world has a war gallery. Not even Pakistan. They have peace galleries... A war gallery can only be the idea of someone like Hitler, Mussolini or our V-C. No educated person would come up with this,” said Lal.

He was addressing a public meeting organised by the JNU students’ union on Friday where speakers, including former JNU faculty member and historian Harbans Mukhia, economist Prabhat Patnaik and ex-student and journalist Urmilesh spoke on ’The idea of a university: democracy, resistance and future challenges.’

Lal went on to allege that the authoritie­s were using tanks to attack ideologies.

“JNU is a symbol of thought, and they want to crush it... They are trying to fight thoughts and ideas with tanks. Thoughts can only be fought with other thoughts. If you bring swords to this, it shows that your thought doesn’t have merit,” he said.

Patnaik said, “It is a very depressing experience coming to universiti­es these days and seeing the animosity between the students and the administra­tion to the point that one cannot hold meetings here. The attempt to import vigilantis­m and lumpenism that we see outside is not acceptable.”

In what was termed as further attempts to impede the meeting, the lights outside the administra­tive block, where the meeting was held, were also switched off, leaving the students and speakers to interact in the darkness after sunset.

“Questionin­g is essential to the advancemen­t of knowledge, not just of others but yourself and that is the role assigned by society to university, especially in an environmen­t when we are told that questionin­g is unpatrioti­c,” said Mukhia.

Terming the switching off of the lights as an attempt to silence the meeting, Urmilesh also alleged that there was an attempt to destroy JNU “as we know it”.

“The administra­tion is in coalition with the government, and they are trying to destroy the university,” he said.

Lal suggested that the students form a Save JNU Committee.

HT’s attempts to contact the JNU V-C went unanswered.

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