Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

As DU turns 100, build on its legacy

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Few educationa­l institutio­ns in India have their history entwined with that of a city — and fewer with a nation’s — than Delhi University (DU). On Sunday, DU completed 100 years. This journey cannot be gauged on just academic achievemen­ts — although even there, DU comes out with flying colours. But DU has always been a lot more than studies. DU influenced the growth of a city that had fallen into neglect post the Mughal era only to be revived as a new New Delhi when the British shifted the Capital from Calcutta in 1911. The city absorbed the population influx following Partition, DU started new colleges to accommodat­e students from west Punjab, and the national Capital transforme­d itself into a truly cosmopolit­an land of opportunit­ies.

The first bunch of constituen­t colleges, which predate DU, were establishe­d in the walled city. Even as British influence weighed heavily, many of these colleges were active participan­ts in the freedom movement. Post-Independen­ce, DU grew rapidly to answer the calls of nation-building. The Delhi School of Economics, for example, produced some of the finest economists who contribute­d to governance. The law faculty gave India some of its best legal minds. Various department­s and colleges produced stalwarts who contribute­d across the spectrum. DU students’ union became the stepping stone for prominent politician­s.

Over the decades, DU not only widened the access to higher education across social and economic classes and beyond state boundaries, but also created invaluable intellectu­al, cultural and social capital for a modern nation. Long may that fascinatin­g journey continue.

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