Now the government has made available
all NCERT textbooks online through e-Pathshala portal. The URL is: http://epathshala.nic.in/e-pathshala-4/flipbook/
A simple scan through the 6th
standard NCERT social studies will give the direction & ‘agenda’ of our
educators to educate our future generation. If you happen to be a parent,
please do care to go through this. This will open your eyes. Our educators are
educating your kid to be guilty of India, to be guilty of our civilization, to
be guilty of ancient scriptures & traditions. Subtly they convey that
everything Indian is bad and everything foreign be it Chinese, Christian,
Islam, Judaism is very good. They go the extent of telling that in India women
had no independence & “Women had to follow husbands”!!!
Thankfully history textbooks are made
extremely confusing and boring; so the child forgets what he read & parents
don’t care. But he remembers the essence – That India is just a bland, boring,
unscientific, superstitious country. Because the structure & content conveys
it overall.
Few points I have taken here to put across the
content & its agenda. Comments & analysis is my view to see the
alternative to the points.
Page Ref
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Content as
is
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What’s the ‘Agenda’? Comments &
Analysis
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Page 4 Chapter 1
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The Iranians and the Greeks who came through the northwest about 2500
years ago and were familiar with the Indus, called it the Hindos or the
Indos, and the land to the east of the river was called India. The name Bharata
was
used for a group of people who lived in the northwest, and who are mentioned
in the Rigveda, the earliest composition in Sanskrit (dated to about 3500
years ago). Later it was used for the country
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Agenda:
To educate that India and Bharata were names given by some foreigners. ‘Later
it was used for the country’ means what? The land existed somehow & later
intelligent people came made it a country? Only after British united it
became a country and was christened India & some saffronists called it
Bharata? Why originally only for Northwest region it was called Bharata?
Because to educate that the Deccan was in darkness or nonexistent or
insignificant?
Comment
& Analysis: Why can we not mention Bharata is named after Bharata
Muni or Bharata the King; Why not refer our own sandhyavandana which calls
our land as Bharata Varsha/ Bharata Khanda over many millennium before as per
our oldest Puranas? There are many scientific dating done on our scriptures. Why
not refer Jainism first Thirthankara Rishabha who travelled across Niligiris,
Sahyadri as part of Bharata Varsha? Why not refer Agasthya who traced course
of Kaveri; why not refer Ramayana whose scientific dating is put in the range
of 5000 to 7000BC to set the course of Bharata Varsha?
In
this textbook itself, Chapt 10, page 100 gives a sangam literature poem
describing entire Bharata;
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Page 47
Chapter 5
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Do any of these names sound familiar?
Sometimes, the people who composed the
hymns described themselves as Aryas and called
their opponents Dasas or Dasyus. These
were
people who did not perform sacrifices, and
probably spoke different languages.
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Agenda:
To educate that there were 2 classes of people - nobles and slaves. They were
called Aryans & Dasyas. The names resonate with most Indian languages and
hence precariously put under that title. The 2 sects always fought. Different
languages mentioned to build up thought of different language speaking folks
fought.
Comment
& Analysis: We never hear in any of our Ramayana, Mahabharata,
Puranas any sect called Aryans & Dasas. It is for convenience of earlier
Brits & later leftists to hammer home the theory of Aryan Invasion from
foreign lands and enslaving locals. We hear of Deva – Asura. But both speak
same language. We hear many kingdoms like Kosala, Lanka, Kaikeya, Gandhara,
Anga, Kalinga etc., & names of people according to those kingdoms. But
never a separate sect called Arya. Arya is just a Sanskrit word for a
Gentleman. Dasa is a Sanskrit word for a servant. For example Hanuman is a
great Dasa of Rama. It was by devotion & not by force.
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Page 47
Chapter 5
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Later, the
term dasa (and the feminine dasi) came to mean
slave. Slaves were women and men who were often
captured in war. They were treated as the property
of their owners, who could make them do
whatever work they wanted.
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Agenda:
In Europe & Arabia then later extended to America, Australia the human
slavery, slave trade, treating them less than even animals was the hall mark
of the civilization development in medieval period. So there is an attempt to
draw parallels here and to show India also in that poor light. The textbook
committee cannot fathom Indian civic sense to be far superior to that of
foreign.
Comment
& Analysis: Never in Indian subcontinent Slavery was practiced the
way it was in the west. The defeated king or his kith or kin used to be re-established
& not dethroned. In epic stories of Ramayana/ Mahabharata or during
Buddha’s time or in Pururava in Alexander time or in Mauryan time or in
Gupta, Chalukyan time, or in Vijayanagara time or in Shivaji times we never
see any defeated king, his soldiers & citizens being degraded as slaves. They will
be prisoners until a pact is reached, but never used as permanent slaves. Then
why is there a blatant LIE here? What is their agenda?!!!!
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Page 55
Chapter 6
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Some priests and warriors were rich, as were some farmers and traders.
Others, including many herders, crafts
persons, labourers, fishing folk and hunters and gatherers, were poor
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Agenda:
To educate discrimination existed. Rich & poor divide was based on caste
and jobs!!? Rich were Brahmins & Kshatriyas. Poor are shudras. India is
bad & India was bad?
Comment
& Analysis: It is so silly. Many stories start with a poor Brahmin in
our folklore. Many hunter groups were tribes with their own leader as king.
Krishna was a herder. So what is rich? What do they mean by poor?
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Page 56
Chapter 6
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Often, women were also grouped with the
shudras. Both women and shudras were not allowed to study the Vedas.
The priests also said that these groups were decided on the basis of
birth. For example, if one’s father and mother were brahmins one
would
automatically become a brahmin, and so on.
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Agenda:
Women discrimination was rampant all across India. Shudras were cursed by
birth. All women are grouped with shudras??!! What crap? India is bad, India
was bad!!?
Comment
& Analysis: Discrimination, untouchability existed and it even exists
now. Our society always fought against it and is fighting against it. Upper
caste people only from Buddha to Shankara to Basavanna to Gandhiji to
Pejavara Shree fought and fighting to reform the society. Society degrades and
reforms continuously in India. It is not rigid. It is fluid. We should
educate our kids about India’s greatness more. This is absolutely lacking in
entire textbook framework.
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Page 72
Chapter 7
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The system of ashramas
Around the time when Jainism and Buddhism were becoming
popular,
brahmins developed the system of ashramas.
Here, the word ashrama does not mean a place
where people live and
meditate.
It is used instead for a stage of life.
Four ashramas were recognised: brahmacharya,
grihastha,
vanaprastha and samnyasa.
Generally, women were not allowed to study the Vedas, and
they had to follow the ashramas chosen by their husbands.
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Agenda:
Hindu is a religion. All is not well in it. So when new religions challenged
it like Buddhism & Jainism, it came up with Chatur Ashrama? Till
then that concept was not there?
Women
had to follow their husbands!!! Look, they were/are so backward!!! What
according to the textbook committee is right? When husband chooses
Vanaprastha/ Samnyasa wife should go elsewhere to quench sexual & other material
desires?
Comment
& Analysis: Firstly Hinduism is not a religion guided by a rigid
guide book & a prophet. Even Buddha is considered as Vishnu avathara and
Rishabha the first Jain thirthankara is considered Vishnu avathara. They can
teach children that Bharatha follows Sanatana dharma which is all
encompassing philosophies to flourish in an open & debatable manner.
Vanaprastha
& all other ashramas find mention in Mahabharata which predates Buddha
& Jains. Because the earliest Buddhist texts and Jain texts refer to both
Rama & Krishna. So it is wrong to say the Chatur Ashrama in
Hinduism came about in response to rise of neo religions.
Then
why so many lies in our text books? What’s the agenda?
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Page 95
Chapter 9
Page 118
Chapter 11
Page 119
Chapter 11
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A few rules picked from Arthashastra of Chanakya
depicting strict rules on erring women
A story snippet from Abhijnana Shakuntala of Kalidasa
showing policemen harassing fishermen
Chinese piligrim Fa Xian mentioning untouchability
Banabhatta’s story snippet on King’s convoy leaving a
dusty trail.
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Agenda:
There are some snippets from various ancient texts picked up to show ancient
India/ Hinduism in all bad light only. Out of a dozen direct quotes only
3, one from Meghadoota & 2 from Sangam literature indicate some goodness
also persisted in India.
Comment
& Analysis: Chinese visitors studied in our universities for decades.
Took 100s of our books to china. Translated them throughout their lives. All committee
found in that was some mention of untouchability?
Kalidasa,
Banabhatta are known for writing great poetry, slimily, language, grace,
beauty, imagination, drama, emotions, raja neeti, loka neeti etc.,. All that committee
could quote is some dusty trail in villages & some lowly conversation?
Why
are we bent on denigrating ourselves? Why can we not boldly glorify the
merits of Arthashastra, Aryabhateeyam, Kavya, Kadambari etc.,? Why our kids
have to feel guilty of our ancient India and its rich literature?
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Page 73
Chapter 7
Page 109
Chapter 10
Page 120 Chapter 11
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A good verse from Zend Avesta of Zoroastrians
Jesus also taught people to treat others with love and trust others, just
as they themselves wanted
to be treated
An exemplary good verse from Bible given;
Like Christianity, Islam was a religion that
laid stress on the equality and unity of all before Allah, the one
supreme god.
An exemplary good verse from Quran given
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Agenda:
All that is foreign is great! Look at those words – equality, unity, love,
trust. These are only found in the lexicons of Bible, Zend Avesta, Quran. Not
in Vedas, Ramayana, Arthashastra, Kalidasa Kavya etc.,
Comment
& Analysis: Good words from good books all over the world are
welcome. But why not good words from our own scriptures. For example, in this
textbook ‘Vedas’ are mentioned in about 11 places. Not a single verse is
given. Why?
Lets
look at some common verses that kids of this age come across from Vedas:
“Sathyameva
Jayate” – Found on our national emblem; In our currency
“Sathyam
vada; Dharmam chara” – Most popular simple statement
“Maa
gruDhah kasya swidDhanam ” – Don’t be greedy on others wealth
“Loka
samastha sukhinobhavanthu; Om Shantihi, Shantihi, Shantihi” – Shanthi manthra
recited generally at the end of a meeting; Similarly Bhojana Manthra, Vidhyashala
manthra like ‘thamasoma jyothirgamaya’ etc.,
If
in the textbook we put up these simple statements, verses, it resonates well
with kid’s day to day life also and feels great to belong to a great country
and civilization. What part of these veda manthras are non-secular?
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Unless you care for your kids and their education, India as
a nation, you pass to your next generation will continue your own slave &
guilty mentality. At least, when the textbook committee makes some minor tweaks
here and there to improve, please stop screaming – saffronization!!. Lets take
some saffron it is good for the heart.
I glanced through a 6th standard textbook for
ICSE called Transitions from Madhubun publications. It is written very well;
presented well. Although it still portrays, Aryan invasion theory & other
date discrepancies, it is much clear & easy to read and understand. It
gives a decent sense of belonging to a great nation called India.
Karnataka state department textbook covering the Vedic
period also is not good, but it is not as denigrating as NCERT texts.
I’ll reserve another blog to cover 7, 8, 9, 10 standard
history books which cover 8th Century CE onwards till Independence.
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