Education for Nation Building - Bharathidasan University Convocation Address, Dec 2021

 

Education for Nation Building

 

Convocation Address, Bharathidasan University, Trichy,

Dec.9, 2021

Prof.P.Kanagasabapathi

Chairman in charge, Indian Council for Social Science Research,

New Delhi

 

At the outset, let me congratulate all the achievers, rank-holders, medal- winners and the new doctorates, post-graduates and graduates of this major university in our state of Tamil Nadu. 

Ours is an ancient civilization with a very long history. National poet Subramania Bharathi noted:

 

தொன்று நிகழ்ந்த தனைத்து முணர்ந்திடு

       சூழ்கலை வாணர்களும் - இவள்

என்று பிறந்தவள் என்றுண ராத

        இயல்பினளாம் எங்கள் தாய்

 

(The greatness of our motherland is such that even those experts who find out everything about antiquity are not able to comprehend her period of origin)

Such a civilization could not have continued so long without strong fundamentals. Evidences show that we remained a powerful nation with higher levels of prosperity and achievements of the highest order, since the ancient periods.  

Education is always considered essential for life in our tradition and hence it was emphasized as the most precious wealth. One of the greatest sons of Tamil Nadu, the philosopher-poet Thiruvalluvar wrote:

கேடில் விழுச்செல்வம் கல்வி யொருவற்கு

மாடல்ல மற்றை யவை

(Education is the only wealth that cannot be destroyed; All other things do not have that much significance)

Hence our forefathers created institutions and made arrangements to impart education from the earlier times. Takshashila university established around 2700 years ago is considered to be the oldest in the world, with students from distant lands of the world. Nalanda university was a very prestigious institution much sought after by students of different countries, particularly from the Asian region. Radha Kumud Mookerjee notes: “The success of Nalanda as a seat of learning is singularly demonstrated by the demand of foreign countries for the services of its trained scholars.”1

School education must have remained strong and widespread for higher education to flourish.  Quoting the surveys undertaken by the British between 1820s-30s, the noted Gandhian Dharampal in his book The Beautiful Tree mentions that every village had at least one school and even in 1800, Indian schooling was ‘extensive.’ 2 As a result, the educated population was very high.  Makkhan Lal and Rajendra Dixit note: “Literacy was widespread; it was probably as high as 75 per cent at the beginning of the eighteenth century. In the contemporary world, no other country had such a high percentage of literate population.3

Thus India was a pioneer in education and hence we excelled in diverse fields of knowledge. Wide spread and quality education enabled India towards all round progress and development. British economist Angus Maddison who documented the economic history of the world during the past two thousand years, notes that India was making the highest contribution to the global GDP with an astonishing share of 32.9 per cent. 4                                 

We were the wealthiest nation in the world with almost one- third of global GDP before 2020 years. The figures provided by Maddison clearly prove that India and China were the two major economic powers, with India dominating the majority of the time, for over 85 per cent of the period during the previous two millennia. India continued to maintain her supremacy to a large extent, over several centuries in spite of severe disturbances.   

The entry of the Europeans into India completely altered the situation. The British replaced the time-tested native education system with a new one, based on Macaulay’s Minute dated Feb.2, 1835. With the result, the field of education witnessed drastic changes. The literacy levels declined continuously over the years. American historian Will Durant noted in 1930: “Only 7% of the boys and 1.5 % of the girls receive schooling, i.e. 4% of the whole. Such schools as the Government has established are not free, but exact a tuition fee….”5 Besides, the new system began creating a wide gap between the educated and the society. 

Distressed by the impact of British education on India, Mahatma Gandhi openly declared in London in 1931 that the Indian education system was like a “beautiful tree” before the arrival of the British, but they saw to it that it perished. To quote: “I say without fear of my fingers being challenged successfully, that today India is more illiterate than it was fifty years or a hundred years ago, and so is Burma, because the British administrators, when they came to India, instead of taking hold of things as they were, began to root them out. They scratched the soil and began to look at the root, and left the root like that, and the beautiful tree perished.” 6

There are strong reasons to believe that the ancient Indian education system was deeply connected to the local societies at the micro levels and the nation states at the macro levels. With the result they were constantly engaged in contributing to the nation-building process. The destruction of such an education led to the decline in other fields of activities. Besides the other critical sectors such as agriculture, industry and trade were also targeted by the British systematically. Thus India suffered losses on multiple fronts.

Dadabhai Naoroji mentions the non-economic losses, including the loss of wisdom, and the weakening of the society as a whole. To quote: “India also suffered non-economic losses, such as the moral loss, the loss of wisdom, experience and capacity and the stunting and emasculation of the entire people.”7 As a result India had to lose her superior status, with societies becoming weaker and millions of people losing lives due to poverty and hunger.      

Hence at the time of Independence, we were a poor, under- developed and less- literate country. Maddison notes that by 1950, India’s share of global GDP was reduced to a mere 4.2%8. Experts note that of all the different fields attacked by the British, the impact of their influence on education was so severe that it affected the thought process of Indians over many generations, leading to loss of their originality and higher contributions. 

Over the last seventy plus years after independence, India has been moving ahead in different fields, in spite of difficulties and limitations. The literacy rate of India had already crossed 74% during 2011, while that of Tamil Nadu was more than that of the national average, with more than 80% of the literate population 9. An increasing number of graduates of our universities are occupying the top positions at the international level in academics and the corporate world.

The economic development of India after independence has been significant, though there is a long way to go. International Monetary Fund notes that India is the third largest economy in the world with a GDP of above $10.2 trillion in PPP terms 10. There is no other country in the world that has made such a U turn from being an under-developed to the third largest in a period of just seven decades in contemporary history. Besides, many of the international agencies and research bodies acknowledge India as the most potential nation in the world. Few years back, London Business School had estimated that India had about 85 million entrepreneurs, perhaps the largest number in the World.

The major reason for many of our developments at the economic, social and other fronts remains our inherent strengths. It is these strengths such as the family system, community orientation, social capital, higher levels of entrepreneurship, self-dependent nature and the age-old culture that have been driving us to move forward, in spite of problems and challenges.

We possess a higher resolve to manage even the serious challenges efficiently. Since 2020, the nation has been able to successfully manage COVID. With the result, India has the highest number of vaccinated persons in the world. Besides, we have helped many nations during this pandemic, as a true friend in times of difficulties.

Thus as a society and nation, we have several advantages that most other countries do not have. The higher number of youth population is another advantage of our times. We have to make use of all the positive factors to build our nation as a much better one. In this connection, education plays the most crucial role. Based on our experiences, it is our duty to take corrective steps and make it more meaningful.

The purpose education is basically two- fold. The first one is what Swami Vivekananda called ‘man-making.’ We should see that the education system enables students to inculcate higher value systems and develop a healthy body and sound mind. The second purpose is to help them to bring out the best out of each of them for their personal and national progress.  

For education to be meaningful, it has to be nation-centric. It is time that the education system is connected to the ground realities. Many of the social science theories that are taught in our class rooms are not really suitable to the local conditions, as they originated in distant countries based on the situation prevailing in their societies several decades ago. Societies are different and dynamic. Each nation has its own unique characteristics. Hence much of the ‘universal models’ developed in the West have proved to be failures and they need not be taken as the guiding paths in the Indian situation. 

Tamil Nadu is an economically and industrially advanced state. We have many well-functioning industrial and business centres, called clusters, performing at the national and international levels. The share of clusters such as Sivakasi, Coimbatore, Namakkal and Sangakiri are very significant at the national levels, while the clusters such as Tirupur and Karur are internationally known with ready markets around the world. 

Most of these clusters are self-made, with the ordinary sections of the society taking the lead to promote them. It is due to their enormous entrepreneurial abilities and the innate economic wisdom, they have built these centres. To achieve their objectives, they develop systems and innovate mechanisms, based on the local resources. When finance was not easily available earlier, the entrepreneurs from the southern parts of the state developed a native mechanism called mahamai, using their relationship base. It is a unique method that propelled them and the region to emerge economically, ultimately leading to the development of the state and the nation.  

Studies show that it is the success of these clusters, comprising of the micro, small and medium enterprises, that enable that states such as Tamil Nadu, Gujarat, Punjab and others to grow industrially. Their development models are localized and native-centric. No existing theory could explain their functioning and success. But do we take steps to study such ‘functioning models’, understand and discuss them in class-rooms? They are happening right in front of our eyes, but we tend to ignore them.   

This is just an example. There are wide areas that remain to be studied in different fields of social sciences. The hiatus created by the British between the educational system and the society has widened over the decades. As a result, we are not able to look at our localities, state and the nation from objective points of view even now. It is pertinent to note here that already the foreign universities have started studying the Indian systems, societies, business practices and even the cultural festivals. Some of them are setting up India centres.

For educational institutions to understand ourselves at the local, state and national levels, they have to connect with the local societies. Social sciences have to be studied through the local and nation-centric paradigms for meaningful understanding of subjects. For too long, we have been looking at India from only from the western prisms.   

As educated citizens, it is our duty to contribute to our localities, states and the nation for a better future. When we start studying India objectively, we will be able to understand and appreciate our societies better. Once the educational institutions understand the ground realities, then they will be able to participate in the progress of their regions and the nation, through meaningful interventions. The universities and educational institutions should develop the expertise to contribute to the policy making process, based on their field studies.

As the western theories fail, many of their approaches are increasingly becoming redundant. During the recent periods, we witness the re-emergence of China, India and the Asian region. The time has come to us to develop our own theories and models, based on the realities. Discussing in the context of management models, the noted management expert Chakraborty argues that we may have to challenge the western models and develop new ones based on our civilizational backgrounds.  He states: “India has never been a mercenary or colonial culture like many western nations. Materialistic cultures may be glamorous, but not happy. … Courage is required to go to the root of the matter and construct or re-construct our own models.”11

Impactful Policy Research in Social Sciences (IMPRESS) is a recent   initiative of the Ministry of Education, Govt. of India, being implemented by the Indian Council for Social Science Research (ICSSR). It aims to encourage social science research in policy relevant areas so as to provide vital inputs in policy formulation, implementation and evaluation. Thus it plans to promote coordination between the academics and policy makers. For this purpose, all the major areas such as economy, society, governance, environment, health, culture, technology, media and law have been identified.

I appeal to the young graduates and scholars to start studying India from the native perspectives. You will learn many lessons, as the society is the biggest open-air university. Post- Graduate and Doctoral candidates have to see that they take up the socially relevant and useful themes for their research work, so that they would be useful in the policy making process. Many senior academics complain that a number of the doctoral dissertations during the recent periods are not up to the standard. We have to reverse the trend and set up higher bench marks for our own research works. 

The National Education Policy 2020 envisages an education system rooted in Indian ethos contributing to the transformation of our nation by providing opportunities to all. With regards to higher education, it provides a new and forward- looking vision for taking it to the higher levels. It covers all the areas of higher education namely institutional restructuring, holistic and multi-disciplinary education, optimal learning environment for students, quality and engagement of faculty, equity and inclusion, teacher education, vocational education, quality research through new National Research Foundation, transformation of the regulatory system and effective governance and leadership. Besides, the importance given to the mother-tongue and the Indian languages and commitment of higher funds for education are path breaking steps.  

You are all going out of the university to enter the outside world as young graduates, post-graduates and doctorates. It is going to be challenging as well as fascinating.  India is fast emerging as a powerful nation at the international levels during the recent periods. There are enormous opportunities in front of you. Make use of them to the full extent, work hard and make all of us proud. The way you lead your life is going to decide the future of you and the nation.

On this momentous occasion, let me suggest you to take a resolve to lead a meaningful life, making your families, university and the society feel happy. We are the inheritors of a great civilization that remained as the light-house for societies across the world. Let us all join together to contribute our efforts to make India a global power.   

 

Thank you

 

References

1.    Radha Kumud Mookerjee, Ancient Indian Education, 4th edition, Motilal Banarsidas, Delhi, 1969, p.575

2.    Dharampal, The Beautiful Tree, 2nd edition, Keerthi Publishing House Pvt. Ltd., and AVP Printers and Publishers Pvt. Ltd., Coimbatore, 1995

3.    Makkhan Lal and Rajendra Dixit, Educating to Confuse and Disrupt, 1st edition, India First Foundation, New Delhi, 2005, p.64

4.    Angus Maddison, The World Economy: A Millennial Perspective, Indian edition, Academic Foundation, New Delhi in arrangement with the Organization for Economic Development, Paris, 2007

5.    Will Durant, The Case for India, Simon and Schuster, New York, 1930, p. 44

6.    Gandhi ji quoted in Dharampal, op.cit., p.vi

7.    Dadabhai Naoroji, Poverty and the Un-British Rule in India, 2nd edition, Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, Govt. of India, 1966, p.vii

8.    Angus Maddison, op.cit.,

9.    Census of India 2021, https://censusofindia.com/ Literacy Rate Of India 2021

10.                       World Economic Outlook Database, International Monetary Fund, April 2021

11.                       S.K.Chakraborty, Management by Values – Towards Cultural Congruence, Oxford University Press, New Delhi, 1991, p.16)