<http://thedeathofmeritinindia.wordpress.com/>

   Echoes of stillborn histories
May 1, 2011
  by thedeathofmerit

What can we learn from this
documentary<http://thedeathofmeritinindia.wordpress.com/2011/04/24/%E2%80%98the-death-of-merit%E2%80%99-a-documentary/>
’The
Death of Merit’?

Bal Mukund Bharti was determined to become a doctor. And his teachers were
also very determined: ‘you’ll never pass MBBS’, they told him.

Bal Mukund didn’t give up, nor did his family. Father, mother, married
sister, uncle, aunt– they were all determined to support him in his ardent
journey, which was steadily converted into an uphill struggle by
AIIMS<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/All_India_Institute_of_Medical_Sciences>,
to become a doctor. They scraped, pooled together whatever meagre resources
they could to send him to AIIMS.

Uncle says they invested everything they earned in his education. Sister who
made only 2,500 rupees a month helped whenever father, who worked in a job
which sometimes made him wait 3 long months for wages, couldn’t. It wasn’t a
small dream; if realized, it could have become a source of hope and pride
for many more people outside the immediate family.

As Bal Mukund’s proud father says, ‘he was the first one from our community
to become a doctor in fifty years!’. Bal Mukund’s intelligence and superior
scholastic record instilled that kind of confidence in the family, stoked
such high hopes.

Imagine: the first doctor from a community in fifty years, or in two
millennia, possibly. Also imagine Rakesh Sharma or Kalpana Chawla, people of
the ‘wrong’ race, being told by the Russians or the Americans: ‘you’ll never
go into space’.

But 
AIIMS<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/All_India_Institute_of_Medical_Sciences>was
determined it would see Bal Mukund only as a ‘harijan’, as a person
from
the ‘wrong’ caste. Imagine history being snuffed out in the womb. That
shouldn’t be very difficult to imagine if you step two years back into
history and think of Senthil Kumar of the University of Hyderabad.

In the voices of Bal Mukund’s family, you hear echoes of all those stillborn
voices and histories that didn’t find any listeners outside the families
they left behind. Like Bal Mukund, Senthil was also a pioneer: first person
from his family and his Panniandi community, traditionally associated with
pig-rearing, to have registered for a Ph.D.

Like Bal Mukund, Shyam Kumar <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shyam_Kumar> of
Sarojini Institute of Engineering and Technology, Vijayawada, also came from
a poor family. His parents, farm workers, couldn’t afford his ‘clothes,
books and bus passes’ as the news reports say, even after he got a
scholarship. Like Bal Mukund, Jaspreet of Government Medical College and
Hospital, Chandigarh, was also hounded by those who were supposed to guide
him. The echoes never stop.

Bal Mukund didn’t give up, even when, as his father remembers him lamenting
more than once:  ’professor log humein *like* nahin karte’. Five professors,
the family says. Five, not one lone casteist. But Bal Mukund didn’t give up.

Bal Mukund wasn’t a stranger to discrimination and hatred. He came from a
village and a region where in workplaces and teashops, as his folks remind
us in the video, a Dalit is always offered tea in disposable plastic cups
while others drink from glass tumblers. The kind of place where a Dalit, in
the wrong village, could not expect anyone to offer him a glass of water
even if he’s dying of thirst.

Bal Mukund had probably not grown inured to prejudice and its various
abusive forms, but he couldn’t give up. He had this spark in him that
couldn’t be smothered. It took him to a Navodaya school first and then
earned him a ‘certificate of merit from the President himself!’

The family still clings to that moment. But Bal Mukund didn’t stop there. In
the year he had appeared for the
AIIMS<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/All_India_Institute_of_Medical_Sciences>admission
test, he had also taken three other entrance exams. And he had
excelled in all four! ‘CPMT, IIT, AIIMS..’, his sister recalls all the
challenges he had overcome.

Even now, his zest for learning, in the form of books packed in all nooks
and shelves, further dwarfs his small home. He had started making
preparations to take on the IAS a few weeks before he died. Bal Mukund
couldn’t give up.

Does Bal Mukund seem like someone who couldn’t take ‘academic pressure’?

Some people might say, other kids too die in these elite institutions. Does
that make any unnatural death
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unnatural_Death>there acceptable? Do
these institutions need periodic ritual bloodletting to
prove themselves meritorious in the public eye? Such irrational thinking
seems to dominate the attitude of the administrative leadership manning
these ‘scientific’ institutions, which seem incapable of serious
introspection.

The simple, only relevant question they need to ask in this context is: why
should there be any unnatural deaths, harassment of students in an
educational institution? Eight students committed suicide in IIT-Kanpur in
the last four years, three of them
Dalits<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dalit>(going by information
available until now). 3 of 8– wouldn’t you call that
disproportionate, considering that figure is 3 or 4 times what it should be?

Bal Mukund wouldn’t give up, bowing down to academic pressure. He liked
challenges, his whole career was marked by a continuous series of triumphs
over them. It was AIIMS which did not like challenges like Bal Mukund
Bharti.

They ‘tortured’ him, his family repeatedly says. They targeted him during
practical exams. They’d fail him repeatedly in one exam– a paper he had
never figured as challenging. They told him he’d never pass MBBS.

It seems like all of
AIIMS<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/All_India_Institute_of_Medical_Sciences>had
geared itself up for the challenge called Bal Mukund Bharti.

The amazing clarity of the family in understanding the causes behind Bal
Mukund’s death: has it ever been spotted in the reams and reams of research
on caste and Dalitness produced by India’s many ‘meritorious’ universities?

When Bal Mukund’s father says, ‘hum sab harijanon ko ek union banana
chahiye’, wasn’t he making it plain that this is a problem that a lone Dalit
can’t face single-handed? That what a harassed Dalit or Adivasi faces in
those institutions of higher education is not one or a few individual
tormentors but the institutions themselves, as persecutors? One needs unions
to stand up against institutions and structural adversaries.

Bal Mukund’s sister reveals how acutely aware the family was of the fact
that it was an institutionalised adversary they were up against. Every time
her brother told them about the harassment in his college, they’d console
him by saying: ‘you’ve only 4 more years..3 more years or just six more
months for this to end’. As if he was serving a term in prison.

But Bal Mukund didn’t give up, even when he was driven to, probably, more
stark isolation than he ever was in his village. Why would he talk of
changing his caste, like it could be surgically excised from his body,
otherwise?

His caste started haunting him from the very beginning of his term in
AIIMS<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/All_India_Institute_of_Medical_Sciences>,
when the teachers started probing his caste-lessness. He wanted to change
his caste, his father says. Because it was the only complaint AIIMS had
against him? But what you see in the news reports is that Bal Mukund
suffered from ‘depression’, not caste-lessness.

If depression was the sole cause of his death, then suicide should claim the
lives of at least a tenth of all humanity, because ‘depression’ is as common
an ailment.

You hear the echoes again. Ajay Sree Chandra, Ph.D scholar of I.I.Sc was
also accused of suffering from depression. So was G.Suman of IIT-Kanpur, who
was also ‘depressed’ because he didn’t get a job. Like Bal Mukund, both had
excellent scholastic records. Bahujan students who probed into Ajay’s death
claim he was ‘terrorised’ by someone in his lab.

Ankita Veghda of a nursing college in Ahmedabad was also ‘stressed’, so she
fell off the terrace of her hostel. But her parents point fingers at
incessant ragging by seniors and an unsympathetic warden.

None of them gave up. It’s time the institutions they so trusted, so
struggled to join, gave up their excuses.

Bal Mukund didn’t give up, but his family had to give up some of its dreams
after he passed away. An insecure father, who calls Bal Mukund’s younger
brother, at a college away from home, twice every day (in the morning and
evening), says they’re content with only ‘chhoti vidya aur chhoti naukri’
now.

What more evidence do you require to understand how caste reduces people,
emaciates them?

When the Indian students were attacked in Australia, who were the first to
jump to the conclusion that it was ‘race’ which fueled the random violence,
even before any substantive investigation had happened? Too many deaths have
happened here, too much evidence has been ignored, too many excuses, in the
name of causes, have been bandied around. No more, please.

Dr.Bal Mukund Bharti didn’t give up. He staged one last protest.

We salute you, Dr.Bharti.

http://thedeathofmeritinindia.wordpress.com/2011/05/01/echoes-of-stillborn-histories/

-- 
Adv Kamayani Bali Mahabal
+919820749204
skype-lawyercumactivist
*
*
*The UID project i**s going to do almost exactly the same thing which the
predecessors of Hitler did, else how is it that Germany always had the lists
of Jewish names even prior to the arrival of the Nazis? The Nazis got these
lists with the help of IBM which was in the 'census' business that included
racial census that entailed not only count the Jews but also identifying
them. At the United States Holocaust Museum in Washington, DC, there is an
exhibit of an IBM Hollerith D-11 card sorting machine that was responsible
for organising the census of 1933 that first identified the Jews.*
*
*
*http://saynotoaadhaar.blogspot.com/*
*http://aadhararticles.blogspot.com/*
*http://www.facebook.com/home.php?sk=group_162987527061902&ap=1*<http://www.facebook.com/home.php?sk=group_162987527061902&ap=1>

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"humanrights movement" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected].
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/humanrights-movement?hl=en.

Reply via email to