Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Emphasis on Indian culture reflects RSS sway on policy

- Smriti Kak Ramachandr­an letters@hindustant­imes.com ■

NEW DELHI: The renaming of human resource developmen­t (HRD) ministry as education ministry, and the emphasis on Indian arts, languages, and culture reflect the Rashtriya Syawamseva­k Sangh (RSS)’s influence on the New Education Policy (NEP).

The Union Cabinet on Wednesday approved NEP, which also seeks to increase public spending on education to nearly 6% of GDP from around 4%, cap fees, expand access to higher education and achieve universal adult literacy before 2035.

An RSS functionar­y said the Sangh approves of the language NEP uses to describe its vision. It speaks of curriculum and pedagogy developing a “deep sense of respect towards the fundamenta­l duties and Constituti­onal values, bonding with one’s country, and conscious awareness of one’s roles and responsibi­lities in a changing world”, the functionar­y added. “The policy refers to the need to instil a deep-rooted pride in being Indian, not only in thought, but also in spirit, intellect, and deeds, which is what we have been stressing on.”

The RSS, which is the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party’s ideologica­l fount, has been pushing for a review of the education policy to Indianize it further . It has also sought rewriting of History textbooks from what it calls an Indian perspectiv­e. RSS affiliates such as the Bharatiya Shikshan Mandal (BSM) and the Shiksha Sanskriti Utthan Nyas (SSUN) that are involved in areas such as education and culture submitted a slew of recommenda­tions to the Narendra Modi government months soon it was voted to power at the Centre in 2014.

RSS offshoots have long sought the renaming of the HRD ministry. The issue resurfaced at a BSM conference in 2018, where Modi and then HRD minister Prakash Javadekar were among those in attendance.SSUN secretary Atul Kothari said NEP fits well with the recommenda­tions made by his organisati­on . “Within days of the coronaviru­s pandemic, we wrote to the PM [Modi] and the HRD minister to ensure the new policy should also give attention to online methods of teaching. We are happy that it has been included in NEP.”

RSS chief Mohan Bhagwat in August last year hoped NEP would make individual­s self-respecting, self-sufficient and independen­t, and rooted in the country’s ethos and culture. He lamented the delay in finalising NEP in 2018 during a threeday lecture series in New Delhi. Bhagwat stressed the need for value-based education and expressed concern over the falling standards of pedagogy and research.

NEP’s vision for an education system “rooted in Indian ethos” dovetails with RSS’s demand for an India-centric policy. RSS has sought education to be imparted in the mother tongue and based on a system that borrows from the ancient texts and cultural practices. RSS has long advocated teaching in the mother tongue, and implementa­tion of the three-language formula to promote multilingu­alism. NEP addresses this too.

BSM has also welcomed the move to establish a National Research Foundation.

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