Students should be
free to inquire and explore
College
authorities trying to impose their ideas on students, wanting them to conform
to codes of dress, food, interactions with other students and the outside
world, are not part of some far away dystopian universe as one might imagine.
This exists
even in a major metropolis like Mumbai, as incidents in the past – however
sporadic -- tell us. What is surprising – and troubling – is that not only such
diktats for students should continue to be issued, but also the kinds of
institutions that get affected.
More than
100 students of Grant Medical College (GMC), I understand from newspaper
reports, are up in arms against the authorities of their institution, alleging
‘moral policing’ and a curbing of their rights.
Going by
these reports (also published in this newspaper on Thursday) my sympathies are
completely with the students. It appears they are being bullied on pretexts
that are not only silly but, more damagingly, also regressive.
In a letter
addressed to the Directorate of Medical Education (DMER), the students claim
that on the instructions of the dean of Grant Medical College, male and female
students who live in the campus hostel are disallowed from talking to each
other after a certain hour.
Female
students have also alleged in the letter that the warden of their hostel has
put up a protocol on how they should dress. It hardly needs super intelligence
to deduce that the objection is to clothes perceived as indecent by the warden.
How
ridiculous are these restrictions? Remember, we are talking here about students
who are studying medicine and not in kindergarten.
Barring
exceptions, each one of them will be 18+ years of age. They don’t need spurious
handholding.
Yes, even on
reaching adulthood, by law there are certainly some restrictions: for instance
one can consume alcohol only after 25, men can’t marry before 21 (18 for
women).
But a host
of other things are permitted, among these buying property, starting a
business, and most importantly in the current situation, exercising franchise.
If students
can be trusted with all of these, especially the last mentioned, why not how
they deal with those of the opposite sex or what clothes to wear?
As an aside,
it makes sense for medical students to be ‘socialised’ for them to be better
doctors later than if they were cloistered in their thinking.
Medical
practice entails dealing with all kinds of people, unconcerned with gender. How
does one examine patients, do tests, deal with colleagues and support staff if
there are going to be mental blocks created in the formative stages?
But let’s
face it, the issue here is not so much about those studying medicine in GMC or
even male students as other such incidents that have cropped up in the past
reveal.
This is
primarily directed at female students: whom they should speak to and when, what
kind of clothes they should wear, etc. Essentially, it is a throwback to a patriarchy
that is aimed at controlling women, how they think and behave.
I am a
little cautious in being blindly critical about ‘moral policing’ per se. There
can be aspects to this that can be beneficial. For instance, any campaign
against trafficking in drugs, women and children is highly laudable.
But the kind
of policing that leads to, say, khap panchayat diktats against women, or mob
lynching of innocents is reprehensible. This is not based on any morals, rather
on a heinous show of power based on a medieval mindset.
Where higher
education is concerned, the desirable environment to be created is one that
facilitates intellectual and emotional growth, by inquiry and exploration: to
achieve the level of expertise being pursued and further.
This
necessarily entails a high degree of freedom for students. Not just of
qualifying for subjects of choice, but also to build up a personality that goes
beyond formal education.
Any
constraint in this limits the growth of the individual. The caveat to having
such freedom is that criminal acts and unreasonable disruption of the imparting
of education/knowledge is unacceptable.
Both these
objectives are not inimical to each other. If there are misunderstandings or
misapprehensions, these can be easily resolved with mutual respect between
students and authority.
Hopefully, the dean of Grant Medical College, director of
Directorate of Medical Education and protesting students will find a meeting
ground and resolve the current matter amicably at the soonest.
Source | Hindustan Times | 5th
April 2019
Regards
Mr. Pralhad Jadhav
Research
Scholar (IGNOU)
Senior
Manager @ Knowledge Repository
Khaitan
& Co
Mobile @
9665911593
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