Hindustan Times (Delhi)

RSS to counter Left ideology at meeting

- Smriti Kak Ramachandr­an smriti.kak@hindustant­imes.com

Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh (RSS) chief Mohan Bhagwat will meet vice-chancellor­s and academicia­ns over the weekend to discuss how social science research in the country should be guided and how to create a “positive national narrative in academics”.

Nearly 500 invitees will attend the meeting ‘Gyan Sangam’ in the Capital where, apart from Bhagwat, senior Sangh functionar­ies will take stock of how the curriculum needs to be revisited, with emphasis on history and social sciences. Suggestion­s will be made on textbook drafting and areas of research that universiti­es can undertake in areas such as foreign policy and constituti­onal matters. Sangh sources said the meeting will review how to prevent campuses from being bastions of Left ideology.

Speaking to HT, a functionar­y said that events such as beef-eating festivals, Mahishasur Shahadat Diwas, and the Kiss of Love campaigns that erupted across university campuses over the past few years are fallouts of Communist ideology foisted on students. The Sangh blames academe for “cultivatin­g” Communist ideology and paving the way for Indian traditions and cultural studies being “questioned and denigrated”.

“Support for such campaigns came from theories evolved by neo-Left academicia­ns who have made Ravana into a hero and question the relevance of goddess Durga,” said a functionar­y. Alarmed by the Communists “capturing the mind space of youth” and to “unfetter campuses from such ideology”, the RSS will set things rolling.

“There is a need to change the way cultural studies are undertaken at universiti­es. We cannot have the concept of nation dismissed as oppressive and authoritat­ive. Like countries such as Switzerlan­d and Australia that realised the dangers of Western interpreta­tion of cultural studies, there is a need to indigenise these,” he said.

Carnivorou­s animals at the Kanpur Zoological Park have been put on a “forced fast” since Wednesday as the zoo administra­tion has run short of meat supply. All four slaughterh­ouses of Kanpur Municipal Corporatio­n (KMC) have been closed, resulting in the suspension of meat supply for animals. The zoo has 70 carnivorou­s animals, including lion Ajay and lioness Nandini. A tiger, Abhay, was brought here in 2010 while the lions arrived in December 2016.

A senior officer at the zoo said a male carnivorou­s animal needed 12kg of meat every day while females required 10kg. “The zoo requires 150kg of buffalo meat every day. The meat is provided by a contractor who supplied it on Tuesday but could not today,” he said. “The pregnant ones are being given chicken but they are not interested. Many of them have not touched food since morning.”

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