Hindustan Times (Patiala)

From a regal institutio­n to rural feeder college

Set up to provide free education almost 150 yrs ago when the region was educationa­lly impoverish­ed; today, the college continues to offer quality yet affordable education

- Yojana Yadav yyadav@hindustant­imes.com

PATIALA: Driving through the gates of Government Mohindra College, Patiala, takes you back to the 19th century. Since 1875, the colonial heritage building flanked by two stately towers has stood tall in its glory, leaving generation­s in awe. The pride associated with being a Mohindrian is understand­able.

“I was also awestruck when I walked into the campus for the first time as a 16-year-old with my father,” says principal Sangeeta Handa, who passed FSc (intermedia­te in science) in 1978. She went on to pursue English literature and joined her alma mater as a lecturer in 1983. “This is home ever since. I feel like Tiresias, the blind prophet in TS Eliot’s The Waste Land, who has seen it all – the past and the future,” she says, elegantly attired in a cream sari that matches the college milieu.

“When I studied here, we were about 2,000 students but there was cohesion. Teachers were close-knit. In the postmodern­ist scenario, we have 8,300 students but I observe they live in isolation thanks to cell phones. Individual­ism is dominant. We rarely stand up for each other. I want to change this mindset. Today’s youth has potential but is challenged by distractio­ns,” she says.

PAST PERFECT

Walking up to the white marble foundation stone of the college building that The Earl of Northbrook, the then viceroy of India, laid on March 30, 1875, the principal says the college was a gift of the then Maharaja Mohinder Singh (1852-76) of Patiala to his state subjects. It cost Rs 9 lakh to build the college in nine years. When viceroy Lord Ripon performed the opening ceremony on March 17, 1884, the college was affiliated to Calcutta University. It was the only institutio­n of its kind from Lahore to Delhi.

Initially, the institutio­n was open only for state subjects but because of the demand, students from as far as Sargodha and Karachi (now in Pakistan), Lucknow and Asansol (in Uttar Pradesh and West Bengal) also came here to study. To start with, the college imparted education in Sanskrit, Persian and Arabic. Teaching in English and mathematic­s began after that and in 1880 intermedia­te classes were started. To commemorat­e the golden jubilee of Queen Victoria’s reign, the college was upgraded to BA standard and affiliated to Punjab University, Lahore.

For more than half a century no fee was charged. The college emerged as a nursery for the state’s recruits.

Former president S Radhakrish­nan and English novelist EM Forster visited the college on occasions, showing it had occupied the pride of place among educationi­sts. “Though Forster does not name the college in A Passage To India, those familiar with this institutio­n can find references to it in his novel,” says Handa.

She shares another interestin­g anecdote of how the second principal, Dwarka Das, was the best friend of freedom fighter Lala Lajpat Rai and was appointed for two years in 1886 on his recommenda­tion.

During World War 1, the FSc course or science classes were introduced. A botanical garden and a museum were also set up. After Independen­ce, the college became a symbol of hope and aspiraence­s, tion for youngsters who couldn’t afford expensive education in private institutio­ns . “Mohindra College was set up to provide free education as the region was educationa­lly impoverish­ed. A century and a half on, it is still a draw for quality yet affordable education. It’s a rural feeder college,” she says.

CUT TO PRESENT

Students engrossed in last-minute revision before the exams sit huddled under the lone ages old banyan tree in the lawn in front of the hall of the main building. Though classes are still held in the old building, the hall, which is locked till restoratio­n, has wood flooring with a high ceiling and is lined with full-length windows. A painting of college founder Maharaja Mohinder Singh is mounted at the centre and also that of the fifth principal and educationi­st TL Vasvani, who served the institutio­n from 1915-19.

During principal Joginder Singh’s tenure from 1982-87, the hall was converted from a reading room to a badminton hall. Today, paintings of different facets of the college made by members of the fine arts department adorn the walls of the hall, which opens into a courtyard where inter-college youth festivals used to be held. “Singer Gurdas Maan would perform here in the late ’70s when we were students,” recalls Handa.

The architectu­ral grandeur of the institutio­n draws film units till date. “The recent Alia Bhatt-starrer Raazi was shot here last September. It’s a hospital scene set in Pakistan. Then the shooting of Punjabi film Nikka Zaildar was also done here,” she says.

The college has kept pace with time and facilities on offer include the central library, department­al libraries, wi fi computer centre, law moot court, gymnasium, two auditorium­s with a seating capacity of 600 and 250, and sports infrastruc­ture, including a 400-metre track for athletics besides venues for football, basketball, volleyball, hockey and swimming.

The Higher Education Institute Society (HEIS), an extended arm of the college, is involved in the pursuit of running profession­al (self-financed) courses, including business management, computer science, applied sciences such as biotechnol­ogy and agricultur­e, basic sci- law and journalism.

PROUD ALUMNI

Alumnus PS Sidhu, 77, who also served as principal of the college from 1996-99, recalls how five players in the men’s hockey India team in 1956 were from Mohindra College. Harnek Singh was the Asian record holder in the decathlon event, while Gurang Ditta Singh Brar was an Asia record holder in discus throw. Sidhu makes special mention of Dr Amarjit Marwaha of Faridkot who built an auditorium in memory of his mother-in-law, Kartar Kaur, a physical education teacher at the college. Sidhu says she taught him during his stint as a student in the college from 1954-62.

NEXT: AS HIGH SCHOOL, KHANNA

 ?? PHOTOS: BHARAT BHUSHAN/HT ?? MAGNIFICEN­T MONUMENT: Establishe­d in 1875, Government Mohindra College, Patiala, is the oldest institutio­n of contempora­ry learning in north India. The grand colonial structure, shaped like an ‘M’ in honour of its founder Maharaja Mohinder Singh, is a...
PHOTOS: BHARAT BHUSHAN/HT MAGNIFICEN­T MONUMENT: Establishe­d in 1875, Government Mohindra College, Patiala, is the oldest institutio­n of contempora­ry learning in north India. The grand colonial structure, shaped like an ‘M’ in honour of its founder Maharaja Mohinder Singh, is a...

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