How
long can one remain a “student”? How good is an institution if a
student cannot pass out of it? And who is qualified to lecture on life
or the country?
I
was curious to know about the student Kanhaiya Kumar. It seems,
according to his Wikipedia page, he finished school in 2002 which should
make him atleast 31 years old today. The Page mentions that thereafter
“he moved to Patna and joined College of Commerce” without mentioning
the year of joining or completion. I came across an article in Telegraph
(February, 19,2016) which mentioned that he was an undergraduate
student at the college between 2003-2007. I will ignore the gap of one
year between finishing school and commencing the undergraduate course
and also its completion taking a year longer but his Wikipedia Page says
“he moved to Delhi and joined JNU” without mentioning the year he so
did but mentions “he became President in 2015”.
It
has been nine years since he finished graduation (which was after a
break of a year and took a year longer than usual) and he is nowhere
near completing his PhD. It was in the eight year of his undertaking the
PhD course – three years more than the maximum it should take to
complete the PhD – that he became the President of the Student Union
perhaps because he found studying pointless by then. The PhD itself,
incidentally, is not Centre for Political Studies (which deals with
subjects of multiculturalism, federalism and social justice) but
“African Studies”! The JNU site of Centre for African Studies says that
it provides funding support to faculty for field visits to Africa and
supports academic activities like research seminars, and publications.
It is not known whether Kanhaiya ever visited Africa or he organised any
seminars on African studies but the Delhi High Court Order releasing
him on interim bail records that he resented cancellation of a program
“Against the judicial killing of Afzal Guru & Maqbool Bhatt’ the
permission for which was applied by Umar Khalid on the proforma (believe
it or not) for ‘Poetry Reading – The Country Without A Post Office.’
In
his speech on release Kanhaiya is reported to have said, “Let me just
say it is not easy to get admission in JNU neither it is easy to silence
those in JNU.” What he omitted to mention was the fact those admitted
do not find it easy to leave the institute much like Kanhaiya who stays
there in his ninth year, remaining a student in his thirty first year
trying to complete a course with which he has shown no affinity (despite
the “difficulty” in getting admission) even four years beyond the
maximum time taken to complete it.
Bravado
in a place of comfort (he chooses not to leave JNU) without proven
accomplishment in the discipline undertaken (he has proven incapacity in
African Studies) and an abject failure to make an honest living (not
every Indian enjoys the luxury of an indefinite education and most need
to settle soon into a livelihood to sustain themselves) shows only an
empty pursuit of ambition and a selfish misuse of position making not
only a mockery of education but entailing in addition the lampooning of
livelihood something which will not behove any responsible individual.
Kanhaiya
is least competent to lecture anyone on life or country. It is not the
best way to live life if one inexplicably remains a “student” till 31.
And such a person definitely does not live like an ordinary honest
Indian (education for whom is an opportunity which is respected) whose
cause he claims to espouse. It is easy to advocate action. It is
deliberation that is difficult. Before lecturing us did he deliberate on
his condition – a thirty one year old student!
And while mentioning the targeting of JNU did he wonder why so
prestigious a university could not make him complete his course in time?
And
then ofcourse the stirring love for country. Azadi “within” the country
is battle cry. Who but Kanhaiya will know about it. It is the freedom
to remain a student for ever, the freedom never to leave the University,
the freedom not to complete courses but spend time making speeches, the
freedom never to work, the freedom to merely speak, the freedom to be a
demagogue or a soap-box orator, the freedom to rouse emotions and stir
hysteria and the freedom to denounce punishments lawfully administered
as “judicial killings” under the guise of “poetry reading”, the freedom
to replace Kanhaiyaism for all other isms!
Kanhaiya
is definitely not the role model for the bearer of national standards
and in fact epitomises the very wrongs in the system which are stymieing
it.

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