2009th BLOG POST
13th
Book of 2022
I
don’t generally read books which are written on very heavy topics or are too
historical or contains stuff that might make more than 50% of the book not
comprehendible to me. Hence, I never pick up such pieces in either of the
genres- fiction or non-fiction. Luckily, there are few topics which are of such
character that you wish to know about them – either because of curiosity or to
understand what exactly happened which made it so famous or relevant. One such
topic for me has been about JNU – the college, what happens in its premise and
what is the reason that makes the environment there so political and leftist
rather than academic. I had no idea about the institution until 2016 until we
know how a boy named Kanhaiya Kumar launched an agitation which became the
talking point country wide; well, in international media too. I just completed
reading the book named “JNU: Nationalism and India's Uncivil War” written by
one of the oldest and prominent professors from the same university, Makarand
R. Paranjape.
I
am ashamed of myself that I didn’t hear his name or got to know about his
stance against the Leftist crowd and particularly, Kanhaiya Kumar. It is only
through this book that I went online and checked a lot of content which involved
the author. This 270-odd pages book published by Rupa Publication is a
combination of two aspects – Paranjape's memoir as an insider and personal
journey at JNU and his stance and opinion on the activities that takes place in
the JNU premises which gives it enough negative limelight. The book starts from
his own journey – how he joined JNU and what made him leave IIT and move to
this place which is always full of controversies and is completely different
from what IIT offers. Then, author takes the story forward and explains how he
got involved in the JNU row.
There
is an extensive chapter where author shares a lot of open letters and how he
responded to them vs how his responses were accepted. It is fun and exploratory
to understand the viewpoints and opinions of both the sides – left and right
and try gauging ourselves which side we want to stand with. It makes you
question a lot of things – if favouring state and system completely is good or
going extremely against them and bringing things on standstill a right choice.
Author tries to give us a deep account of how typical JNU crowd thinks, what
they need, what they do to get what they need and what is their agenda behind
this. Everything that author mentions are highly debatable and controversial.
You will definitely find complete support to this piece of work or a complete
disregard- there's not going to be a normal reaction though author keeps
insisting that he falls somewhere in between the left and right wing of our
nation.
In
a chapter, author gives a nice brief of the lives of Tagore and Gandhi – as
their professional work and personal opinions at times stood completely with
nation or it questioned the moral of the state. I really enjoyed reading this
as I never knew much about Tagore’s various aspects of work and his opinions
about our country. Few things really opened my eyes towards the history of our
nation and how we have always been handling the extreme opinions and standing
tough with all these voices roaring around us. Author speaks of how JNU has
also produced great alumni's like Nirmala Sitharaman, S. Jaishankar, Abhijit
Banerjee etc. and raises an expectation as well as question if JNU will produce
such likeminded productive and nation-builders in the future considering its
current opinionated and politically-influenced crowd.
Author
doesn’t shy away from narrating how JNU students run away from studies and want
to protest on meagre issues even when it is something like rise in fees by some
hundred-odd rupees or mandatory 75% attendance rule etc. He tells how students
want the institution to be closed or lecture not happening for more than half
of the year hence they find some issue to revolt against and ensure the whole
attention is towards the same than studies. Lastly, author discusses how JNU
can be further saved from such toxic and extremist culture and what needs to be
done to make it an institute that can bring change and reform to our country in
a positive manner and gets mention for great things happening than the reasons
why it is currently mentioned regularly. Author’s hope and genuine care towards
the institution is evident in every sentence that he’s written. The research
work and documentation of all the JNU events since 2016 displays the hard work
author has put to give this book a proper shape.
Overall, if you have always questioned about JNU, leftists, anti-nationals, tukde-tukde gang and what the whole 2016 azadi slogans were all about, you should definitely pick this book up which has an equally sensational cover page. For a beginner, the language is tough as there are instances where you’ll have to refer to dictionary 7 times in just one sentence. Haha! So, pick it only if you have been reading journalism content since a long time and have good vocabulary prowess. I loved deep-diving into this complicated and controversial subject through Makarand Paranjape’s lenses. I give this book 4.5 stars out of 5. I have learnt a lot about the other side which I was looking forward to know since long.
Thanks!
WRITING BUDDHA
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