Friday, August 26, 2016

WHAT AILS JNU?

```````What Ails JNU?


It is JNU at its worst.  When an educational institution starts getting deteriorated in an accelerating way, the end result is the product what is called – Kanhaiya.

Jawaharlal Nehru University started with good intentions to commemorate the memory of our first Prime Minister who valued the higher education and research as the very basis of national foundation for growth and development.  This university was the brain child of Professor Nurul Hasan – a renowned historian, elder statesman and an academician with abiding faith in leftism.  He developed personal proximity to Pandit Nehru and Mrs. Indira Gandhi during heyday of these leaders.  Both the leaders projected democratic values with ideologically inclined left to the centre attitude. They visualised socialist pattern of society with mixed economy and mixed polity as the bases for their future course of action.  These ideologies are now the relics of time and do not work anymore.   

JNU, according to Professor Nurul Hasan, was established only as a research centre of high order, more than what we have, the Institute of Advanced Studies, at Shimla.  So the university was set up particularly to cater higher research in humanities with no provision to have post graduate classes and professional courses to degrade its research standards and programmes.  JNU started with higher aim of research centre in 1969. A few professors were appointed to start with.  But from the very beginning, it could not justify its existence purely as a research body fully occupied with research activities.  Professors at the university demanded opening of PG classes because they feared they could lose their jobs for not being engaged fully in research oriented activities.  This was the first stage of deterioration of JNU.  

When JNU was started it was wrongly supposed that it should harbour communist ideological base since its originator was inclined to leftist ideology.  But this attitude dominated, somehow, in the recruitment of professors unofficially.  At an early stage most of the professors were imported from West Bengal.  Good or bad, the university started getting coloured ideologically, day by day, year after year, so as to develop a centre for communist propaganda.  Although educational institutes should be, in principle, neutral towards politics, but JNU, nonetheless, became a hub of communist’s activities – in theory and practice both.  This was the second stage of deterioration of JNU.

Our national governments at the centre have always been soft on ideological basis as part of democratic freedom.  Mostly it was the Congress government which ruled over sixty years, mildly and softly, and allowed the university to become a political centre and a breeding ground of communists of all variants and varieties. It was nothing wrong till it crossed limits and became a separatist centre for encouraging Kashmiris separatists and terrorists.  Even Vajpayee and Modi governments did not interfere in JNU affairs till February 9, 2016.  For the last two-three decades, JNU activities were getting more and more politicised, actively and passively, through its teachers, students and even vice-chancellors.  It was a wrong practice to put up VCs at JNU with leftist leanings.  This was a hidden practice, but prevailed invariably for the appointments of the top posts. But why did this happen?  Because it was felt that everybody should get his organisational head according to his choice.  Professor Nurul Hasan was made the Governor of West Bengal only because he was supposed to be leftist in ideology and was easily acceptable to the State during that time.  So many VCs were appointed at JNU who had leftist leanings.  This created an accumulated impact of bad governance which ruined the university.  Most of JNU professors who survived this ordeal were supposed to be leftists, actively or passively.

             JNU thus became consciously a cauldron of communism.  There were various variants of communism which flourished on the campus.   The Communist Party of India (CPI) was the most wide spread of all.  It was revolutionary party which cultivated communist aspirations grown on Indian soil.  Another party on campus sowed its seeds a bit differently through its powerful organ i.e. CPM (Marxist).  It developed among students deriving its strength purely on Marxist ideology.   It was ideologically a hard core party which propounded Marxist theory of work and action and derived inspiration from erstwhile Soviet Union.  But the worst of all was the shade of communism which spread its ideology through revolutionary spirit as adopted by Maoists.  It is CPM (ML & Maoist) which supports Naxalism, Red Book, Lal Salaam, the Gun through which the power flows, and suppression of the Nation and Society till the power comes to the hands of the poor.  They work secretively and combine with separatists and terrorists.  The present upheaval at JNU is the result of this group at large.

Here one must relate to the changes brought about in the communist world.  With the fall of Berlin Wall and USSR broken into pieces, the relevance of communism in the present day world is only historical.  It has no place in the globalised economy and democratic free world.  JNU is sitting on the relics of old ideology of communism.

It is strange rather surprising to know how separatist activities flourished on JNU campus and no precautionary step was taken up to curb them by the administration.  It is good to provide freedom of speech and also to allow students to celebrate their cultural programme, but how outsiders with covered faces entered the campus?  In fact, they were well invited persons, not intruders, and known to JNU students community.  Kanhaiya, the VC, Proctorial Board and the Disciplinary Committee of JNU are answerable to the citizen of India as they are paid out of their tax money.  What they were doing when anti-national slogans were raised?  Why the proctorial board or any representative member of the board was not present on the occasion.  It is the duty of proctorial board to keep account of student’s activities on the campus in detail.  JNU administration has miserably failed in performing its duty in this respect.

The other fact which is normally ignored, and often misunderstood, is the role of police on the campus. The police, as legally appointed investigating agency, have every authority to enter the campus if the crime is committed inside the university.  It is a myth that it can’t go inside the campus – a notion that is non-sense.  If the police force does not enter the campus, it is on account of its own good gesture. In some especial case, it can wait till the accused does not surrender.  But normally the police can arrest the person who commits criminal offence inside the campus.  However, the accused has every right to call his/her lawyer to defend the case before the police and the court and seek time for the same before arrest.  In the present case of JNU, the government vis-a-vis the executive council of the university are equally responsible for not taking precautionary measures to stop student’s menace repeatedly occurring on the campus.

JNU students are divided in various groups and factions.  These groups are basically political in nature but they operate as cultural bodies which go at times out of control and create law and order problem.  The role of police becomes imminent here and no permission of the Vice-Chancellor is needed to control such a situation.  No place is out of bounds for the police.  Is there any clause in the statutes of JNU or any other university in India where it is written that the police cannot enter the campus?  When students go on rampage, the police force helps the authorities to bring the situation under control.  The students on the campus act heterogeneously because of their different groups, variants and mind-sets.  The students have their own organisational bodies such as – SFI, AISA, DSU, NUSI, AISF, LPF, DSF, BAPSA, CFI, ABVP etc.  As long as they work separately or work within their own group, no problem arises.  But the moment a large gathering of various groups is held in the name of a common cultural programme, the problem crops up. They do not recognise each other either by face or by name.  And in the event of such slogans as raised by students on campus on 9th February, 2016, a pandemonium was created; a chaos was generated.  It is tragedy to note that the JNU controlling body remained somnolent to the whole affair on the campus.  Of all the variants of student’s bodies at JNU, it is the total sum of ‘Communist Group’ which dominates the campus.  This group is all powerful and remains at variance with the other bodies.  Since this group has all India and even foreign support, the group is powerful monetarily, organisationally and ideologically.

Under the unprecedented situation of chaos and confusion, not only the students, but some teachers remain involved actively or passively.  They support the right of freedom of speech even at the cost of anti-national slogans; they issue press notes in favour of students even when they behave unruly, creating utter confusion and total chaos.  They politicise the issue to gain students favour.  But such activities directly hamper their growth and inversely impact their teaching and research standards. They let loose students do whatever they like except learning, library and class work, tutorials, seminars and regular research papers to be prepared and submitted to the faculty or the guide.  At JNU students get more time for political activities than attending classes and teachers spend more time in supporting political activities than delivering lectures in the class or guiding research work.  Some teachers become so familiar with students that they live at their level and even visit their home town to create regional affiliations.  Caste, creed and sectarianism dominate their relationship and education becomes worst sufferer in this scenario.

It is pertinent here to understand how the red forces fully occupied the campus.  There are different shades of red found at JNU.  It is a war within – between different shades of red.   When the students’ union elections are over, they almost become one.  It is this fact which makes Kanhaiya more convenient to attend the function organised by any other sub-group of which he remains an intrinsic part.  When anti-national slogans were raised at the function, Kanhaiya was very much the part of the gathering, not that he was passively standing, but he was actively involved.  He has not attained sainthood to become passive at a place where he has to show his mettle well.  He was the part of larger connivance being organised on the campus.

The early years of JNU did not witness any political impact.  First two-three years were well engaged in pursuing Ph.D. and M.Phil. courses, guiding students and managing their research projects.  The School of International Studies was established and the first set of students was mostly research oriented.  The general tenor of the school was apolitical.  In case of Russian studies, the students and teachers were pro Soviet Union but there was no politics attached to it.  These were the formative years of JNU when it posed to be a serious centre for learning devoid of any political leanings.  The professors at this centre could in no way be identified as Marxists, communists or socialist.

But the scenario did not last long. Mr. Prakash  Karat, who had returned from UK and got acquainted with the ideological functioning of the British Marxists, became instrumental in giving a broader structural frame work to the already existing neutral students body at the School of International Studies (SIS) at JNU. Karat got into close contact with CPI (M) leaders who wanted their students’ wing, SFI, opened at JNU as it was believed to be a clean slate for the party for its entry into JNU without much competition or fight with other bodies.  With the initiative of Karat, the SIS students’ association got merged with SFI and a new JNUSU constitution was properly framed to give an institutional structure to the students-union.  This was how ‘the left’ and JNUSU came to be known as one and the same thing, at least, during the initial years of development of union activities at JNU in which Karat played a leading role.  Thus ‘Communism’ and students’ ‘Unionism’ were born at the same time at JNU and CPI (M) had an advantage of being the first organization established on the campus.  In 1971, an independent candidate won Presidentship, but in 1972, SFI candidate captured the seat.  This followed the ‘Communists Activism’ on the campus.

However, the functioning of the new School of Social Sciences changed the character of JNU.  It was CPI which started inroads on the campus.  Thanks to the group of students and teachers led by Professor Moonis Raza and patronised by the stalwarts like professor Nurul Hasan and others for giving clear way to the establishment of the student wing of CPI,  AISF,  on the campus.  CPI had mass base at the All-India level, while CPI (M) was effectively located at provinces, especially West Bengal and Kerala.  The split of the party was not good for the left movement, but the leadership never tried to bring out any reconciliation or compromise for it because of the power they held in their own constituencies and provinces.  In JNU, those responsible for setting up AISF were active party members who belonged to the groups of students and teachers.  However, both the communist parties attempted to bring these two wings of students together to converge and to be called Progressive Democratic Front (PDF).  Initially it worked out as proposed, but could not achieve much success in the long run.  When the School of Social Sciences (SSS) started MA classes, the main research work for which the university was established got pushed to the background and the real decay of JNU started.  PG and under graduate students were least engaged in learning process and they enjoyed spending more time on political discourses and related activities.  Since this time, political activism became a fashion at JNU, and learning, research, class room work, lectures and seminars were reduced to pass-time professions and students and teachers were least bothered about them.  It may be said that with Professor Moonis Raza JNU attained its perfection and with him started its decay.

The radical left wing students were least satisfied with the theoretical as well as the practical aspects of the programmes as spread out by the parties, from time to time, which they felt were less effective.  They wanted sharp, militant activities, more revolutionary and practical for quick change and transformation of the society.  It was at this juncture that students’ wing known as AISA was born of the parental body called the Communist Party of India (Marxist-Leninist) Liberation.  This party believed in the ideology of the revolutionary legacy of Bhagat Singh and Chandrashekhar Azad.  They also got linked with the “AZADI” movement of NE and Kashmir.  There prevailed an utter confusion among leftist and radical revolutionary groups of students on the campus.  Majority of the students were communists belonging to CPI or CPI (M), but they also accepted the ideology of militant groups and adopted their slogans of “AZADI” of all varieties.  They wanted “AZADI” from and within India.    They made a very thin line between these two types of “AZADIS”.  It was only when Kanhaiya stepped out of Tihar Jail that he made it clear what type of Azadi he wanted.  It was an afterthought and he made a U-Turn from what he spoke actually at the gathering on 9th March, 2016 at JNU. 

Kanhaiya suddenly gets a special status in the minds of the people.  He becomes a precious news item to occupy front page, and at times, the prestigious head line of the Dailies.  In TV shows, he often gets prime time.  His rating sours high like a celebrity and his name and the events in which he participates get viral on social media.  He floats his life like available drift wood to be used by anyone who gets it.  He is never stable and clear in his thought process.  He is 30 and still a student; may attain 40, and even then a student! Who knows?  He is pursuing Ph.D. without seriously getting into it.   He wants to be a teacher, but behaves like a politician.  JNU provides him subsidised training of leadership and he has acquired it with distinction.  But his upbringing has not provided him good language, taste and temperament.  His Hindi (the only language which he speaks) is extremely bad and pronunciation is awfully disgusting.  Last year, in June (2015), he misbehaved with a girl student on the campus, but the matter was hushed up with minor punishment (fine), (See TOI March 11, 2016, Page 17, Bengaluru Edition).  He feels that he has the potential of becoming a CM or a PM candidate.  But he has no contents, appeal or force in his speeches which usually turn into farce.  His body language speaks more than what he speaks.  He presents the spectre of a juggler, forcing mob to believe the unbelievable, by playing tricks, producing rustic humour and mannerism.  He bends his spinal cord convexly, bringing his eyes up toward the sky to create fake hypnosis presuming that he has won the world  by his ‘Azadi’ slogans and wishing to get round of  applause from his less awakened peers.

It was pre-planned to create revolutionary uproar on the campus, with fully charged atmosphere, by celebrating Afzal Guru Day.  Students at the campus along with some JNUSU activists arranged a cultural evening, with belated disapproval by the university, to protest against Afzal Guru’s hanging, calling it as a judicial killing, defying the university authorities and showing contempt for the court.  Students raised slogans against India and showed solidarity with anti-national forces by demeaning the country.  The separatists’ activities on the campus were at the zenith and the celebration was not just an evening event, but a consolidated effort, of months and years of preparations, to bring about such anti-national activities to happen.  Why JNU authorities were not alert to check and control such shameful events organised on the campus?  Such activities happened last year also but no body took any notice of them.  What had happened in JNU on that evening was unfortunate.  The slogans raised were derogatory for the nation, judiciary and the patriotic tenor of the people.  The police arrived on the campus and Kanhaiya Kumar was the first to be arrested.  The police charge sheeted him for sedition case.  A few other names were also surfaced, but Kanhaiya was on top of the list.

JNU authorities blinked the next day.  Till then much damage had been done.  As damage control exercise, they appointed a committee to inquire about the whole incident and take action according to prescribed rules and regulations.  JNU panel indicted nearly 21 students for wilful defiance in holding and joining Afzal Guru meet and at least five of them were recommended for rustication.  It is yet to be seen if it is a paper tiger or really meant for a strict action to be implemented or a way of creating a rift among students by punishing the weak and sparing and protecting the strong. 

Kanhaiya got a name, fame and got a life, love and leadership. He was flying on cloud nine.  He became famous overnight, nationally and internationally.  He found himself as a hot selling material instantly and emerged as a brand name.  Anything ‘Kanhaiya’ is a derivative of leadership, ‘Azadi’, defiance of authority, and a force generating instant revolution – Lal Salam – as he describes it.  Kanhaiya is a brand that enhances TRP for electronic media channels and an item song that is hot for print media to cover columns.  Kaihaiya is a name and a voice of freedom, opposition, solidarity and undaunted heroism.

But this popularity has been brought about for wrong reasons.  Kanhaiya has been charged for sedition by the police and it will take years for him to come out of this ordeal.  JNU is responsible for catapulting him to such heights vis-à-vis bringing him down to earth.  He oscillates between these two extremes.  What is in store for him in future only God knows, but the real culprit is the university which provides a camouflaged cage for innocent students to be trapped and get ruined.  They are not 21, but hundreds of them who receive nothing from JNU – no learning, no education, and no future.

It is for a reference to remember and go through it deep to ponder over the contents of the following passage written by an alumnus of JNU, graduated years before, but still the pinch he feels and perhaps opines for new generation to be alerted from the institute which once was his Alma Mater.  Here is what SHEKAR writes:

“I am a graduate of JNU from the 1980s, and have hated my affiliation with that institution since that time, bitterly regretting a decision not to forego a JNU degree for one from a more prestigious institution where I had the option of studying. This is not a scholastic institution in the classical sense of the term, but a gateway for subsidized entry into politics and the government. Every one of my classmates went into one or the other, the latter by a large margin, with the student union leaders ending up in the former. I learnt very little here and am glad the ideologies never appealed to me. This is one institution that needs to be shut down...we will never see great academic scholarship from here”.


JNU has out lived its utility as an academic institution in the strict sense of the term.
    



                                                                                    

Sunday, August 21, 2016

THE TROUBLE ON TWITTER

The Trouble on Twitter
Shobha Dey’s concern for Rio medals

R N Misra

Shobha Dey has shown her concern for losing a good number of Rio medals, but we are not returning empty handed even.  Her prophesy has failed to justify what she has tweeted and she has been rebuked, abused, rather made a fool of her own doings, disproportionately.  We should not be so much reactionary against her.  Criticism itself is a game and should be accepted sportingly.  Shobha has a right to say as a citizen and as a woman of sporting attributes, especially when nation’s prestige is involved, and we have been more or less heading to draw a blank.  Thanks to our sports persons, we have at least won a Bronze and Silver at fag end of the Olympics at Rio.  Shobha as a writer has excelled in her field and has acquired recognition vis-à-vis a status.  One can demean her even for this score, it is another matter; it is one’s choice to do so.  There are others who have also felt like her, but they are silent.  They neither tweet nor fill columns.  When Shobha tweets, she really means that something seriously be done for Indian sports to improve the quality, though her language remains sarcastic, impregnable  with insults and degradation. Journalism has spoiled her literary charm and she has been reduced to a columnist of a lower quality ‘Gupshup’.  We win the battles of sports but when it comes to show our might at the war of sports, we are shaken and ultimately lose it.  With a heavy heart, but most relentlessly she tweets:

“Goal of team India at the Olympics: Rio jao, selfies lo.  Khali haat wapas aao.  What a waste of money and opportunity”.

Shobha is a champion of social causes.  She has achieved laurels in the fields she has worked.  She is an excellent woman, a powerful mother, a prolific producer of children and a sporting wife always stands to win, and had there been sex Olympiad organised under the leadership of her mentor, Khushwant Singh, she would have earned Gold much earlier in life than Abhinav Bindra.

Now that the controversy has been raised and most twitterati have expressed their anguish against her – the top most exposition – that equals her sarcasm on twitter has been posted by someone equally gifted and brilliant.  He tweets in anger as a rejoinder to Ms. Shobha:

“Porno books likho.  Twitter par bakwas pelo.  Faltu oxygen ko carbon dioxide me badalo.  What a waste of space and human life”

It is paying in the same coin: in the same diction, style and effect.  Shobha has never been sensitive, sympathetic or emotional to human feelings.  She is double faced woman; keeps something in mind and expresses something else.  She thinks she has won the world by writing fu**ing novels and has become celebrity because she has liberty to write trash in her ‘politically incorrect’ columns through the courtesy of TOI.  She is female edition of her mentor, much debased and degenerated in language, sensitivity and approach.  Has she ever tried to find out causes of failure at Olympics?  Has she ever written in her columns about that sincerely and with honesty?  It is of course a separate topic for debate and discussion.  Why nations fail in general and India in particular in acquiring a reasonable number of medals?  What is that number?  Can Shobha Dey tell about the magic number? She must have contemplated about the same.  Here is what Abhinav Bindra presents his analytics. He sheds light on why India isn't winning medals at Rio Olympics and makes absolute sense.


A fortnight ago the talk in India was about how many medals will the country win at the Rio Olympics. Now, the talk is why has India not been able to earn a single medal even after sending the top 118 athletes in various disciplines.


The answer to this question could lie in this tweet from India's only individual gold medallist at the Olympics - Abhinav Bindra.  He tweets:

“Someone who knows the dynamics of Indian sports and what it means to rise through the ranks, through the hostile bureaucratic walls of the federation.
The cost of one Olympic medal for the UK is 5.5 million Pounds - that is roughly Rs 48 crore per medal. So if India wanted 10 medals at Rio Games, it should ideally have invested at least Rs 480 crore on those medal winners”

The question Bindra indirectly wants us to ask all the authorities who run Olympic sports in India is do they invest that much of money on our athletes for the country to expect these many medals.
Bindra adds:

“Perhaps, India should take the example of Great Britain and learn from them how increased sports budget for Olympics have resulted in more medals.
Since the Beijing Games in 2008, Great Britain increased its funding to Olympic sports by a whopping 16 per cent. As a result, they've risen in the Olympic ranks from 34th spot at the Atlanta Games in 1996 to third spot at London Games in 2012 to already second place in Rio Games.

It was earlier reported that US spends Rs 22 per day per athlete, Jamaica 19 paise per day per athlete and India just 3 paisa per athlete per day.
Naysayers will argue that it isn't fair to compare India with Britain's prowess as a sporting nation but what is evident is that if you have a target of medals to win at the Olympics, and can earmark a budget to achieve to that, it can work. It did so for Team Great Britain, it can for India too, provided the federations work towards that goal in sync with the athletes”.

It should be enough for Shobha Dey to realise under what difficult situation do our sports persons struggle to fight for medals and would bring back on track her sense of judgement regarding our participants in Olympics.


Most of India is composed of poor population.  Those who are rich make sports their hobby, if at all they desire, otherwise they do not enter this arena.  So sports, games and other such physical competitions are left to middle and upper middle classes to opt and excel at these activities.  By nature and circumstances, the middle class finds solace in pursuing career first which provides them earning their daily bread.  This is also the case for upper middle class who prefers education to carve out their career.  When there is choice between education and sports, they choose education which shapes their future life.  It is an individual choice - logical and pressing – and they do not opt for sports.  Needless to say that Tendulkar pursued formal education only up to VIII standard.  Many celebrities of tinsel town – Bollywood – formally remain less educated but carve out their career in dance, drama, music and acting or advertising.  So the sport is the most risky business to pursue.  And those who really make a point to become a wrestler, weight lifter, and shooter or opt for any other game of Olympic order do only on their own risk and on their personal worth. 

It is here that the society, the nation or the people at large or their institutions need to  help, encourage, organise and take care of sports persons.  Abhinav Bindra’s gold was an exception.  He or his father spent a lot of personal money on that sport and it was his constant endeavour to pursue to win.  Society or nation did little for Abhinav’s gold.  He kept the zeal and participated in other Olympics but failed.  Why? Because he pursued the life of sports all alone and nation came as a name attached to him.

The other important fact is that we belong to tropics and tropical zones are not very conducive for excellence in sports at the world level.  Our society owes a lot to young performers, sports persons and those who participate in Olympics, undergoing odds and unfavourable conditions at home. Abhinav Bindra is our pride.  But there are hundreds of future Bindras waiting for our waiving hands for encouragement and support.  Let the government and the institutions meant for promoting social and national causes come forward and help our sports persons.  Let a proper infrastructure be set up so that they may get constant support.  If a person tops the district or state level, his life should be made financially secured.  His only aim should be to achieve laurels at higher or highest level.  If a Member of Parliament or state legislature can get pension for life at the age below thirty, why not a sports person should be allowed that facility at the age of 25 or above.

One must also consider that our low performance is linked with geographical and genetic factors – both interdependent – affecting the level of achievement.  India belongs to tropical zone, almost living within tropics, experiencing unfavourable sports-climate along with the vagaries of nature – air, water and Sun.  It reduces our stamina, strength and resilience to undergo the hardships of sports activities and prove our power to achieve higher ranks at the world events or Olympics.  Still we manage to earn some credits, points, ranks or medals but not much to be proud of.  We lose several medals by a fraction of second on technical grounds of timing and counts.  We do not apply and practice the accuracy of nano seconds in our regular sessions at home due to lack of efficient tools and equipment. To understand the point of habitat and genetic factors, one must go through the latest tally of medals (as on 14-8-2016) won by the participants belonging to different geographical zones.

At Rio Olympics as on 14th August:  US: 60, China: 41, GB: 30, Germany:16, Japan:24, Russia:23, Australia:22, Itally:18, S. Korea:13, Hungry:11, Canada;11.  But none of them belongs to the Tropics

Now come to Tropical zone, the medals earned are not more than four/five by individual country.  They are:  Thailand: 4, Ethiopia: 3, Jamica:2, Singapore: 1, Indonesia: 2. Kenya: 2, Malysia:1, Philipines:1, UAE:1

What do the above comparative figures signify?  At any rate, given the present circumstances, we should only expect between 5 to 10 at best, and 1 to 2 or none at worst. And best may happen when we change our arena of sports by creating new settlements in some temperate climatic areas carved within India in middle or high Himalayas or places like Bangalore, Mysore or better hilly tracks of Nilgiris as during Raj the British army had their different commands’ head offices stationed at better places.  And this is not enough.  India must also develop human genetic engineering to produce sports persons.  This is quixotic idea, but has to be accepted in the broader sense of the term if we really want to excel in this field.  India has the best of human stock, only we have to manage it and penetrate scientifically, overcoming social, economic and political constraints.  We can raise an army of athletes if we so desire.  We must organise summer camps of sports and games in Europe or any other temperate zone for the benefit of our sports persons under the guidance of foreign coaches to learn the best of expertise, tactics and technicalities of the games and utilise the winter season for practice at home.  If we start a type of sports revolution in the country and tell the participants that money will not be a constraint in pursuing their mission, we shall in all earnestness achieve our goal. 

Not that we have done nothing in this area; we have excelled in Hockey.  It is an open air game suiting our climatic conditions, land and temperament.  We have earned laurels and produced the wizard of hockey – Dhyanchand and other dominating players to keep us at the top.  But see what has happened now?  The present hockey is altogether a different game.  It is actually no hockey at all.  Who had suggested the International hockey authorities to change the grounds by covering them with plastic grass?  Certainly we did not. We were best on old natural turf.  Why it was done so?  The change has been done to defeat Asian hockey.

The other point is that country’s population has nothing to do with the ratio of sports persons.  We should not project such relationship.  What is important is the way we organise them for sports.  We lack genuine sports culture and it has to be developed.  We do not have proper set up at grassroots level.  A cluster of villages or Taluka should have a sports-complex.  At District level there should be multiple of such complexes – each specialising in different sports discipline. This infrastructure will become heavier at higher or State level.  Sports and games should be organised under proper guidance and volunteers should be recruited for the purpose.  Schools up to 10+2 level must have instructors – both male and female.

Money is important or may be directly proportionate to medals, but without proper management, framework and structure, it may not bring fruitful results.  Statistics provided relating to this may vary and can prove anything, but our analytics may fail in the long run.  Out  of the money spent on sports, only 10 to 20 percent reaches the genuine person, the rest is spent on organisational set up lavishly.  So a watch dog superstructure should also be there to look after the sports affairs.  Reports have been received regarding the shabby treatment given to our sports persons on the one hand, and luxurious living and spending on the organizers or higher ups on the other.  Not naming anybody, it is evident that our top administration has failed at Rio Olympics to project a clean and honest image of a real promoter, helper and saviour of sports and games in India.   



The Olympics are not the true test of equals.  They try to bring an approximate equality, but it can never be done so.  This fact of matter must be understood and remembered by those who clamour for gold.  It requires equality in economy, geographical conditions and genetics which are not easily possible to be achieved.  The real philosophy of Olympics lies in participation, in global celebration of sports and game.  It is a friendly event of get together of sports persons who rejoice in participation – medals do come with their perseverance, total devotion and dashing quality to win just as bye-products.  But medal or raging war for it is not the soul of Olympics.  It is in this sense that Shobha Dey should judge our athletes. 

Now here is a final word for Didi.  Her twitter remarks have stirred up a real hornet’s nest and she has to bear the consequences.  What you share inside your sitting room with friends should not appear on twitter in a casual manner.  But Didi has done this mistake.   Still, nothing has gone wrong.  Shobha is a great lady and should apologize for her remarks.  She will become even greater.  She wields a good pen and can well subside the controversy through the power and charm of her language, style and beauty.  The athletes are the part of our extended family i.e. India and shobha will not lose opportunity to win their hearts.

Pen is always mightier than the barrels of bones.          
     



                    

Wednesday, August 10, 2016

SHOBHA DEY"S CONCERN FOR RIO MEDALS

Shobha Dey’s Concern for Rio Medals


Shobha Dey has shown her genuine concern for losing Rio Medals (2016).  One should not be reactionary while tweeting against her.  Criticism itself is a game and should be taken sportingly.  Shobha has a right to say like a sport woman who has excelled in her field of writing and has acquired a high status.  Others too have felt like her, but remained mum on losing Rio Medals.  When she tweets, she really means that something serious should be done for Indian sports.  We win battles of sports, but when it comes to the war of sports, we are shaken and ultimately lose it.

Shobha is a great champion for social causes and she is herself an Olympian in her own way.  She has achieved laurels in the fields which she touched.  She is an excellent woman, a powerful mother, a prolific producer of children and a sporting wife always stands to win and had there been a sex Olympiad organised under the leadership of her mentor Khushwant Singh, she would have earned gold much earlier in life than Abhinav Bindra.  


R N Misra