The Star Malaysia

Roaring from China to India

Indian mothers also earn their stripes as tigers these days.

- By MARK MAGNIER

STAY-AT-HOME mum Swati Rastogi watched her daughter Krisha playing with plastic monkeys as son Dhruva lined up model cars in their two-bedroom apartment surrounded by Hindi and English alphabet posters.

Three-year-old Dhruva asked whether Pakistan is part of India. He was informed that it’s not.

“I don’t know where that comes from,” his mother said, watching attentivel­y.

That’s a rarity for Rastogi, who leaves little to chance when it comes to her children’s education. Although China and its diaspora receive lots of attention for hyper-parenting since last year’s publicatio­n of the book Battle Hymn Of The Tiger Mother, Indians aren’t exactly wallflower­s in the child-rearing department.

At a January literary festival in Jaipur in the eastern Rajasthan state, Tiger Mother author Amy Chua told adoring audiences that Indian tiger mums may outnumber China’s.

“The crowd went gaga over almost anything she said,” said Shobha De, a writer, socialite and mother of six.

“I don’t think she’s seen such a positive reaction elsewhere in the world.”

Indian tiger parents feature in Indian TV series, reality shows, books and magazines in a society that is willing to do almost anything for its children’s future, even sometimes before they’re born.

“Looking for sperm donors,” read a recent Chennai advertisem­ent.

“Must have graduated from a top technical institute.” As millions of Indians migrate from villages to cities, expanding India’s middle class, parents increasing­ly view education as their family’s ticket to higher social status and material wealth.

In one survey, parents said they spent half their take-home pay on education. Experts say, the sacrifices, monetary and otherwise, made so children could learn English and won’t have to work on a farm, lead to a frequent mantra: With all I’ve done for you, why aren’t you getting perfect grades?

“It’s become very crass,” said Shayama Chona, former principal at prestigiou­s Delhi Public School.

The drive to succeed is filling the world’s top hospitals, universiti­es, multi-national companies and start-ups with people of Indian descent. Given the growing competitio­n from Chinese and Indian youngsters, American students must raise their game, US President Barack Obama warned in May.

“In Indian culture, parents say: ‘You’re going to do engineerin­g, not music, and you’re going to be first. No excuses,’” said Indian-born University of Houston Chancellor Renu Khator.

Rastogi, who rates her intensity as average for an Indian parent, quit her software industry job to raise her children, enrolling both in pre-nursery school at age two, supplement­ed by home instructio­n.

When her daughter turned three, Rastogi and her travel executive husband Aakash applied to 15 nursery schools, scouring their circle of connection­s to find one who was a board member at Delhi Public School, then charming his secretary for a recommenda­tion letter. Covering their bases, they also prayed to deceased guru Sai Baba.

“It was divine interventi­on” when Krisha got in, Rastogi said.

Rastogi then focused on Dhruva, showing up every other day at Krisha’s school so teachers and administra­tors wouldn’t forget her and making cut-out tree props for school assemblies. Dhruva was also accepted.

“If you want relaxing weekends, enrol elsewhere,” the school principal told parents at orientatio­n. “If you’re ready to work weekends helping your kids study, you’re in the right place.” Despite being taught the firstgrade syllabus in advance, Krisha is struggling in Hindi and English penmanship, so she and her mother practise at home.

“I give her a deadline, not a very tight one, just 10 minutes,” Rastogi said. “She’s more interested in distractio­ns than the blackboard.”

Recently, Rastogi backed off teaching Krisha herself – sending her instead to thrice-weekly tutoring – after realising she was losing her temper, occasional­ly slapping her daughter, when progress lagged. Krisha’s also doing twice-weekly art and dance classes for relaxation.

A government survey released in early March found that 99% of Indian children had been either slapped on the face or hit with a cane at school, and 81% had been told they were incapable of learning.

“Hitting, slapping and forcing kids, which is quite common in the Indian context, are traits of tiger parenting,” said Mumbai’s DNA newspaper.

“Such parenting behaviour would have child rights groups up in arms in the West.”

Some mothers consciousl­y reject the parental arms race. Novelist Namita Devidayal, a self-avowed “slummy mum”, teaches her

children yoga. “India used to be more holistic,” she said.

“We’re trying to be like China, but we’re not even getting there. Hopefully, this will balance out.”

The pressure carries costs: In 2010, there were 2,479 suicides in India committed by students who had failed school tests, compared with 1,571 in 2001. Chennai’s Sneha hotline, one of India’s first such counsellin­g programmes in a nation where mental health treatment still carries a stigma, fields up to 450 calls daily from anxious students.

In search of offspring perfection, some parents wield guilt, anger, feng shui and time-management strategies, pushing teenagers to study as much as 10 hours a day outside classes, after cancelling cable TV subscripti­ons and banning parties.

“My mum went insane,” said Kavita Mukherji, a recent graduate who now works in the publishing industry. “She locked me in, delivering food to my room, so I wouldn’t leave the house.” At a temple one day, her mother made her walk around an auspicious idol for luck.

“If I do 100 rounds, will I score 100% in every subject?” Mukherji asked her mother. “She got offended and never took me to a temple again.”

That said, most Indian tiger mums believe they’re less fanatical than their Chinese counterpar­ts, perhaps tempered by a more tolerant culture and core spirituali­ty.

“Tiger mums in India are not as fierce,” author De said. Back in her living room, Rastogi told her children to pick up their toys.

“I’m not a tiger mum, I’m just doing my role. Working would be selfish. It would just leave more work for the grandparen­ts.” — Los Angeles Times/mcclatchyT­ribune Informatio­n Services

 ??  ?? Tamer version: Swati Rastogi, with her daughter Krisha, six, rates herself average-intensity for an Indian parent. She’s not a tiger mum, she says, and is only doing what any concerned and loving parent would do.
Tamer version: Swati Rastogi, with her daughter Krisha, six, rates herself average-intensity for an Indian parent. She’s not a tiger mum, she says, and is only doing what any concerned and loving parent would do.

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