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Faculty reservations manifestly anti-dalit

EducationWorld June 18 | EducationWorld
Chandrabhan Prasad is a well-known Dalit public intellectual, slayer of orthodoxy and an individual unafraid to challenge mainstream thinking in the Dalit movement on capitalism, globalisation and liberalisation. After having played a mentor’s role in the creation of the Dalit Indian Chamber of Commerce and Industry (DICCI, estb.2005), he now publishes an attractive new monthly magazine titled Dalit Enterprise. It features successful first-generation businessmen from the Scheduled Castes, many of them photographed with their super-expensive cars. (Yes, today not all Dalits are poor or downtrodden, much less ‘untouchable’.) The magazine’s motto makes his ambition clear: to create ‘a 100 Dalit billionaires’. He believes that Dalits should be job givers, not mere job seekers. May his dreams come true. In a recent interview with him in Delhi, I asked Prasad, “What are your plans for the future?” Pat came the answer: “I would like Dalit children to excel in physics, mathematics and English.” English, I could understand, because Prasad has been a longtime votary of English medium education for Dalits. He even erected a temple for the ‘goddess’ of English in Uttar Pradesh! He regards the English language, together with capitalism, as a combination which will liberate the new generation of Dalits. But why physics and mathematics? Prasad, a perspicacious spotter of new trends in society and science, explains that the next-gen enterprises in India and around the world will be driven by revolutionary new digital technologies. Although I didn’t discuss it with him, the question Prasad’s interview planted in my mind is important. True, there should be lakhs of successful Dalit entrepreneurs, big, medium and small, all confidently competing in the competitive domestic and global market. India should also produce world-class Dalit scientists, inventors and innovators for the emerging digital age. But how can Dalit or non-Dalit students outperform the global best if their teachers are recruited, and also promoted, on the basis of caste quotas, disregarding quality, competence, commitment and accountability? Questioning faculty caste quotas in publicly funded schools, colleges and universities has become a great hazard for social activists, policy makers and politicians. (I am strongly opposed to faculty reservations, whereas I support reservations for SC-ST students with some caveats). No politician questions faculty quotas because of vote bank considerations, although, in private conversations, they, including some enlightened SC-ST-OBC leaders, are critical of the many wrongs perpetrated in the cause of reservations for Dalits. Similarly, very few academics and public intellectuals publicly express their frank views on this subject for fear of being denounced as anti-Dalit.  But the time has come to forthrightly discuss this taboo subject, and bring it to the centre-stage of a national debate and policy review. This must be done, first and foremost, for the benefit of Dalit students themselves. Don’t they — and non-Dalit students, as well — deserve the best teachers capable of developing their all-round personality, especially at a time when government jobs are shrinking and competition is rising for employment and entrepreneurship opportunities in the private sector? Why should tens
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