Teaching values in a country of gimmicks
On 31 October 2025, which was also rather ironically
the National Unity Day, a Hindi movie titled The Taj Story was
released. Hardcore right-winger Paresh Rawal is the protagonist of the movie
which aims to show that the Taj Mahal was originally a Hindu temple, Tejo
Mahalaya. There is no historical evidence at all for the claim. Even the
Archaeological Survey of India, which has become a handmaiden of the BJP
government in India, has repeatedly rejected the claim that the Taj Mahal was
originally a Shiva temple.
Paresh Rawal is a talented actor of
considerable repute in the Hindi belt of India. He is also a member of the BJP
and was an MP from 2014-2019. A diehard fan of Prime Minister Modi, Rawal once
wanted to use writer Arundhati Roy as a human shield in Kashmir to fight
terrorism there.
Imagine Paresh Rawal taking moral
science classes in a school, like PM Modi teaching values in Mann ki Baat.
Values are not taught, they are
caught. That has become a cliché, I know. That is the truth, however. When
hatred has become the official policy of the government, and top leaders spew
the toxin of sectarian hatred in every which way possible, what values do we
expect our young generation to ‘catch’?
The history textbooks given to our
school students are guilty of many omissions and commissions such as
quasi-truths, omitted truths, and fabricated falsehoods. The media – print,
digital, electronic, social, whatever – have become blatant government agencies.
Absolute lies are passed on as sacred truths by the topmost authorities in the
country.
What values do we expect our young
students to absorb?
The stories a nation tells about
itself shape not only its history but also its morality. All the lies that fly
all over will inevitably seep into the realm of values, attitudes, loyalties,
and moral judgment.
When the state promotes selective or
distorted narratives, it subtly communicates that truth is flexible if power
demands it. As George Orwell wrote in 1984, “Who controls the past
controls the future.” Who distorts the past distorts the future. If young minds
internalise the idea that facts can be rearranged for political convenience,
they may grow up believing that manipulation is normal. And once truth is
negotiable, integrity falters.
When textbooks and other such ‘sacred’
sources erase uncomfortable episodes, demonise minorities, or glorify one
narrative as flawless, students lose exposure to complexity. Instead of
learning critical evaluation, they absorb binaries: Us vs Them, Heroes vs
Villains, Pure vs Corrupt.
Empathy shrinks.
Literature teaches nuance; propaganda
teaches certainty.
Certainties have committed atrocities
in history. Nuances ennoble civilisations.
When questioning official narratives
becomes risky, the classroom becomes memory tests. Over time, this may breed
silent compliance or cynical disengagement or aggressive ideological loyalty. The
number of people choosing suicide in India has been rising in the past few years.
Now one student commits suicide every hour in India.
We are asked to sing Vande Mataram,
all of 3 minutes and 10 seconds. That is the latest remedy prescribed for all
our ills.
Our value system is reduced to that
sort of gimmicks.
Gimmickry is what we now have even in
our courts of justice. What do you expect in schools then?
PS. This is the tenth
post of a series on education.
Previous Post (which
will also give you the links to all others in the series):

Satyameva Jayathe... Into that haven of Truth and Freedom, let my country awake. Pity the generation, which has to drink in untruth, post-truth and alternative construction of facts... Truth is Swayamprakasha. We shall return to Truth.. Through Resistance...
ReplyDeleteHari Om
ReplyDeleteSet by example, is the adage I favour. Oh my, what examples are being set... YAM xx