Professor Emeritus Resigns from JNU
From:
Amit
Bhaduri, Professor Emeritus, Jawaharlal Nehru University.
To:
The Vice
Chancellor, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi-110067.
Dear Mr.
Vice Chancellor,
I have learnt from friends and witnessed
through public channels with alarm, and now
with increasing disgust how your handling of situations as the administrative
and academic head of Jawaharlal Nehru University has led to its steady
deterioration paving the way to its intellectual disintegration.
I joined the
university as a young professor in 1973; with some years’ gap in between, I
left it in 2001. During my years at JNU, it passed through various phases of
justified or unjustified student unrest; competent or incompetent handling of situations
by the administration; and even temporary shut-down of teaching. What is different now is not only incompetence
of handling of situations by the authorities, but a deliberate attempt to
throttle the free, and lively atmosphere of debate and discussion for which JNU
was known all over the country. This was a matter of pride for its faculty as
well as its students that they were exposed to a whole range of ideas which was
something that did not happen anywhere else in India, even I would say from
experience, in very few academic institutions in the world. It seems to me that
the current attempt by the administration at destroying that atmosphere of freedom
of expression is in line with a larger and more sinister plan of which you as
the head of JNU also appear to be a pivotal part. You seem determined on
imprinting your administration’s narrow minded world view, and shut all other
windows of ideas to the students.
It pains me,
but I feel it would be immoral on my part without registering my protest to
remain a silent observer in this larger, sinister scheme of throttling dissent which
is unfolding now at the University. I am protesting in the only way which I
find is open to me. I am giving up my emeritus professorship at JNU. Along with
some other emeritus professors, I have already been locked out several months
ago from the room allotted to me in JNU (with books and some personal effects
still in it). In practical terms therefore, it means little. And yet, I do hope
that my returning the honour which was bestowed on me by the University sends
you the right message of my deep concern at your leadership of the university
which is leading that premier institution of learning to its systematic disintegration.
For this reason alone, I feel compelled to place this letter also in public
domain.
Amit Bhaduri
Respectand condratulations for your decision. I am also apprehensive that the heads of those in power have enough space to realise the significance of your decision. Will they not be gleeful considering this as their success of further shrinking the of idas and thoughts and a step towards Hindutwa-isation.
ReplyDeleteQuite appropriate. Nevertheless, the Vice Chancellor, an utterly closed mind, will only be happy about it.
ReplyDelete