Politics
M R Subramani
Jun 20, 2018, 03:29 PM | Updated 03:29 PM IST
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On Monday (18 June) when colleges in Chennai reopened, Tamil Nadu police encountered a different experience. Police got reports that some students of Pachaiyyapa’s College were indulging in unruly scenes at Parry’s Corner, a bustling business district near the Chennai Port. They also received similar reports from a couple of other places in the city. When teams of policemen rushed to control the students, they were in for a shock. While carrying out a search on the students, they found that some of them were carrying sharp weapons like knives with them. Fifteen of those carrying weapons were arrested by the police.
The incidents makes one regret of how some of the renowned colleges like Pachaiyyapa’s or Presidency have virtually turned a den for unruly students. The hallowed portals of Chennai’s Presidency College has produced two Nobel laureates Sir C V Raman and Subrahmanyam Chandrasekhar, first Army Chief of Independent India and scholar-soldier General K M Cariappa, India’s first governor-general after Independence C Rajagopalachari, former Union agriculture minister C Subramaniam, Dewan of Travancore C P Ramaswamy Iyer, former defence minister V K Krishna Menon besides a host of others.
Similarly, Pachaiyappa’s College has its own share of producing great thinkers, statesmen and politicians like mathematician Srinivasa Ramanujan, Tamil theatre’s founding father Pammal Sambandha Mudaliar, Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK) founder and former chief minister of Tamil Nadu C N Annadurai, former Union minister and DMK Ideologue Murasoli Maran and the former Tamil Nadu finance minister late Nedunchezhian.
Regrettably now, the question that is being asked is: Are colleges in Chennai turning a den for rowdies?
The focus on academics has taken a backseat in these institutions with college authorities busy controlling student unrest. It is not uncommon for authorities to periodically request students to surrender knives or cycle chains that they hide in their bags. Besides drinking and gambling, these institutions have become an epicentre of dubious activities.
The following incidents demonstrate this:
A Times of India report quoted Government Railway Police sources as saying that student clashes have shifted to railway stations after the Madras High Court banned the celebration of ‘Bus Day’ by college students. It’s another story that the Bus Day celebrations led to violence, traffic jams, hijacking of buses and harassment of commuters and the High Court was finally forced to intervene. One such celebration saw bloodshed near Nandanam on arterial Anna Salai. Student clashes, the sources said, are frequently taking place in the suburban railway routes at Nemmlicherry, Hindu College and Korukkupet stations.
Here are five reasons why Chennai colleges are turning into a den for rowdies.
One, in some bus routes, there are route leaders or route thala as they are called in Tamil. These guys are leaders in a specified bus route who dare anything and wouldn’t settle for any insult or loss on their side. They assume themselves as the king of the route in which they travel. Often, personal rivalry of these route thalas turn ugly and result in violence. Sometimes, ego clashes also result in violence.
Second, education authorities say that most of these students involved in the incidents are from troubled spots and hail from families that struggle to make both ends meet. Involvement of local politicians is also a reason for these violent incidents as students get paid for indulging in clashes. The cash reward from the politicians emboldens them to turn violent and, in some cases, hooliganism. Some of the students from the colleges have gone to become ardent supporters of a few politicians.
Third, according to a retired government official, the best students join professional courses like engineering, medical and chartered accountancy. Only the weaker ones join these regular day colleges. “Those days, we didn’t have so many professional colleges as now. So, all those who joined these colleges took their studies seriously and worked their way through to make it big in life,” the retired official said. Even in the case of professional colleges, there have been times when violence has cropped up like the one last year at Sathyabhama University after a student committed suicide.
The general view is that the students joining these regular colleges just need a degree to show they have also studied. As a result, they don’t concentrate on studies and indulge in all sorts of undesirable activities.
Four, making collegiate education free has had its side-effects with those not too serious joining these reputed colleges and creating problems.
Five, some experts that Swarajya spoke to pointed out that the near terminal decline of institutions like Presidency and Pachaiyappa’s is a testimony to the pernicious consequences of a social justice movement, which is well past its sell date. For instance, the Pachaiyappa’s College was founded by a group of pious non-Brahmin Hindu elites with a laudable vision to broad-base higher education among all communities.
The students, just out of school, think they have the freedom to do anything after getting admission despite average marks. The result: Most of them end up with huge arrears when they finish the third year and then take a couple of years to graduate. During the college days, these students tend to be irresponsible and get easily influenced by anti-social elements and thus end up being a tool for violent activities.
On the other hand, some students who join these regular colleges on their own will to pursue subjects they love, blame the teaching faculty for the mess. Some teaching staff reportedly come to class, take attendance and then leave without taking any lesson. That leaves many students idling, resulting in all these unsavoury incidents. Parents, too, complain that these students lack proper guidance, resulting in such incidents recurring.
Some colleges like Pachaiyappa’s have appointed counsellors for students to tackle the situation but the success has been limited. At least 100 students are being booked by police for various violent acts annually in the last couple of years.
After the 31 January incident last year turned serious, the higher education department has asked college authorities to engage the students more in campus activities. Sports and recreation are seen as ways to engage them. But the point is Pachaiyappa’s College has one of the best hockey and cricket teams in Chennai. It has good athletes too. It has produced some great cricketers like Robin Singh and Bharath Reddy. The college now plans to provide free breakfast coaching for its students interested in sports and games.
These initiatives may help, but it is important that the unruly elements are tamed at the earliest and no room is given for rowdyism in educational institutions. These colleges should be able to focus more on academics and improve educational standards rather than coordinating with police to ensure law and order!
M.R. Subramani is Executive Editor, Swarajya. He tweets @mrsubramani