CLASS-
VIII OUR PASTS –III
09. CIVILISING THE “NATIVE”, EDUCATING THE NATION
The
British in India wanted not only territorial conquest and control over
revenues. They also felt that they had a cultural mission: they had to
“civilise the natives”, change their customs and values.
HOW
THE BRITISH SAW EDUCATION
Let
us look at what the British thought and did, and how some of the ideas of
education that we now take for granted evolved in the last two hundred years.
In the process of this enquiry we will also see how Indians reacted to British
ideas, and how they developed their own views about how Indians were to be
educated.
The
tradition of Orientalism
· In
1783, William Jones arrived in Calcutta. He had an appointment as a junior
judge at the Supreme Court that the Company had set up. In addition to being an
expert in law, Jones was a linguist.
·
Linguist – Someone
who knows and studies several languages
· He
had studied Greek and Latin at Oxford, knew French and English, had picked up
Arabic from a friend, and had also learnt Persian.
· At
Calcutta, he began spending many hours a day with pandits who taught him the
subtleties of Sanskrit language, grammar and poetry. Soon he was studying
ancient Indian texts on law, philosophy, religion, politics, morality,
arithmetic, medicine and the other sciences.
· Jones
discovered that his interests were shared by many British officials living in
Calcutta at the time. Englishmen like Henry Thomas Colebrooke and Nathaniel
Halhed were also busy discovering the ancient Indian heritage, mastering Indian
languages and translating Sanskrit and Persian works into English.
· Together
with them, Jones set up the Asiatic Society of Bengal, and started a journal
called Asiatick Researches.
· Jones
and Colebrooke came to represent a particular attitude towards India. They
shared a deep respect for ancient cultures, both of India and the West.
· Indian
civilisation, they felt, had attained its glory in the ancient past, but had
subsequently declined. In order to understand India it was necessary to
discover the sacred and legal texts that were produced in the ancient period.
· For
only those texts could reveal the real ideas and laws of the Hindus and
Muslims, and only a new study of these texts could form the basis of future
development in India.
· So
Jones and Colebrooke went about discovering ancient texts, understanding their
meaning, translating them, and making their findings known to others. This
project, they believed, would not only help the British learn from Indian
culture, but it would also help Indians rediscover their own heritage, and
understand the lost glories of their past.
· In
this process the British would become the guardians of Indian culture as well
as its masters.
· Influenced
by such ideas, many Company officials argued that the British ought to promote
Indian rather than Western learning. They felt that institutions should be set
up to encourage the study of ancient Indian texts and teach Sanskrit and
Persian literature and poetry.
· The
officials also thought that Hindus and Muslims ought to be taught what they
were already familiar with, and what they valued and treasured, not subjects
that were alien to them. Only then, they believed, could the British hope to
win a place in the hearts of the “natives”; only then could the alien rulers
expect to be respected by their subjects.
· With
this object in view a madrasa was set up in Calcutta in 1781 to promote the
study of Arabic, Persian and Islamic law; and the Hindu College was established
in Benaras in 1791 to encourage the study of ancient Sanskrit texts that would
be useful for the administration of the country.
·
Madrasa – An Arabic word for a place
of learning; any type of school or college
“Grave
errors of the East”
· From
the early nineteenth century many British officials began to criticise the
Orientalist vision of learning. They said that knowledge of the East was full
of errors and unscientific thought; Eastern literature was non-serious and
light-hearted.
· So
they argued that it was wrong on the part of the British to spend so much
effort in encouraging the study of Arabic and Sanskrit language and literature.
· James
Mill
was one of those who attacked the Orientalists. The British effort, he
declared, should not be to teach what the natives wanted, or what they
respected, in order to please them and “win a place in their heart”.
· The
aim of education ought to be to teach what was useful and practical. So Indians
should be made familiar with the scientific and technical advances that the
West had made, rather than with the poetry and sacred literature of the Orient.
· By
the 1830s the attack on the Orientalists became sharper. One of the most
outspoken and influential of such critics of the time was Thomas Babington
Macaulay. He saw India as an uncivilised country that needed to be civilised.
· No
branch of Eastern knowledge, according to him could be compared to what England
had produced. Who could deny, declared Macaulay, that “a single shelf of a good
European library was worth the whole native literature of India and Arabia”.
· He
urged that the British government in India stop wasting public money in
promoting Oriental learning, for it was of no practical use.
· Orientalists –
Those with a scholarly knowledge of the language and culture of Asia
· Munshi –
A person who can read, write and teach Persian
· Vernacular –
A term generally used to refer to a local language or dialect as distinct from
what is seen as the standard language. In colonial countries like India, the
British used the term to mark the difference between the local languages of
everyday use and English – the language of the imperial masters.
· With
great energy and passion, Macaulay emphasised the need to teach the English
language. He felt that knowledge of English would allow Indians to read some of
the finest literature the world had produced; it would make them aware of the
developments in Western science and philosophy.
· Teaching
of English could thus be a way of civilising people, changing their tastes,
values and culture.
· Following
Macaulay’s minute, the English Education Act of 1835 was introduced. The
decision was to make English the medium of instruction for higher education,
and to stop the promotion of Oriental institutions like the Calcutta Madrasa
and Benaras Sanskrit College.
· These
institutions were seen as “temples of darkness that were falling of themselves
into decay”. English textbooks now began to be produced for schools.
Education
for commerce
In
1854, the Court of Directors of the East India Company in London sent an
educational despatch to the Governor-General in India. Issued by Charles Wood,
the President of the Board of Control of the Company, it has come to be known
as Wood’s Despatch.
· Outlining
the educational policy that was to be followed in India, it emphasised once
again the practical benefits of a system of European learning, as opposed to
Oriental knowledge.
· One
of the practical uses the Despatch pointed to was economic. European learning,
it said, would enable Indians to recognise the advantages that flow from the
expansion of trade and commerce, and make them see the importance of developing
the resources of the country.
· Introducing
them to European ways of life, would change their tastes and desires, and
create a demand for British goods, for Indians would begin to appreciate and
buy things that were produced in Europe.
· Wood’s
Despatch also argued that European learning would improve the moral character
of Indians. It would make them truthful and honest, and thus supply the Company
with civil servants who could be trusted and depended upon.
· The
literature of the East was not only full of grave errors, it could also not
instill in people a sense of duty and a commitment to work, nor could it
develop the skills required for administration.
· Following
the 1854 Despatch, several measures were introduced by the British. Education
departments of the government were set up to extend control over all matters
regarding education.
· Steps
were taken to establish a system of university education. In 1857, while the
sepoys rose in revolt in Meerut and Delhi, universities were being established
in Calcutta, Madras and Bombay. Attempts were also made to bring about changes
within the system of school education.
SYSTEM
OF EDUCATION
The
report of William Adam
· In
the 1830s, William Adam, a Scottish missionary, toured the districts of
Bengal and Bihar. He had been asked by the Company to report on the progress of
education in vernacular schools. The report Adam produced is interesting.
· Adam
found that there were over 1 lakh pathshalas in Bengal and Bihar. These were
small institutions with no more than 20 students each. But the total number of
children being taught in these pathshalas was considerable – over 20 lakh.
These institutions were set up by wealthy people, or the local community. At
times they were started by a teacher (guru).
· The
system of education was flexible. Few things that you associate with schools
today were present in the pathshalas at the time.
· There
were no fixed fee, no printed books, no separate school building, no benches or
chairs, no blackboards, no system of separate classes, no roll call registers,
no annual examinations, and no regular time-table.
· In
some places classes were held under a banyan tree, in other places in the
corner of a village shop or temple, or at the guru’s home.
· Fee
depended on the income of parents: the rich had to pay more than the poor.
Teaching was oral, and the guru decided what to teach, in accordance with the
needs of the students.
· Students
were not separated out into different classes: all of them sat together in one
place. The guru interacted separately with groups of children with different
levels of learning.
· Adam
discovered that this flexible system was suited to local needs. For instance,
classes were not held during harvest time when rural children often worked in
the fields.
· The
pathshala started once again when the crops had been cut and stored. This meant
that even children of peasant families could study.
New
routines, new rules
· Up
to the mid-nineteenth century, the Company was concerned primarily with higher
education. So it allowed the local pathshalas to function without much
interference.
· After
1854 the Company decided to improve the system of vernacular education. It felt
that this could be done by introducing order within the system, imposing
routines, establishing rules, ensuring regular inspections.
· How
was this to be done? What measures did the Company undertake? It appointed a
number of government pandits, each in charge of looking after four to five
schools.
· The
task of the pandit was to visit the pathshalas and try and improve the standard
of teaching. Each guru was asked to submit periodic reports and take classes
according to a regular timetable.
· Teaching
was now to be based on textbooks and learning was to be tested through a system
of annual examination.
· Students
were asked to pay a regular fee, attend regular classes, sit on fixed seats,
and obey the new rules of discipline.
· Pathshalas
which accepted the new rules were supported through government grants. Those
who were unwilling to work within the new system received no government
support.
· Over
time gurus who wanted to retain their independence found it difficult to
compete with the government aided and regulated pathshalas.
· The
new rules and routines had another consequence. In the earlier system children
from poor peasant families had been able to go to pathshalas, since the
timetable was flexible.
· The
discipline of the new system demanded regular attendance, even during harvest
time when children of poor families had to work in the fields.
· Inability
to attend school came to be seen as indiscipline, as evidence of the lack of
desire to learn.
THE
AGENDA FOR A NATIONAL EDUCATION
British
officials were not the only people thinking about education in India. From the
early nineteenth century many thinkers from different parts of India began to
talk of the need for a wider spread of education.
Impressed
with the developments in Europe, some Indians felt that Western education would
help modernise India. They urged the British to open more schools, colleges and
universities, and spend more money on education.
REACTION
AGAINST WESTERN EDUCATION
By
Mahatma Gandhi - “English education has enslaved us”
· Mahatma
Gandhi argued that colonial education created a sense of inferiority in the
minds of Indians. It made them see Western civilisation as superior, and
destroyed the pride they had in their own culture.
· There
was poison in this education, said Mahatma Gandhi, it was sinful, it enslaved
Indians, it cast an evil spell on them.
· Charmed
by the West, appreciating everything that came from the West, Indians educated
in these institutions began admiring British rule.
· Mahatma
Gandhi wanted an education that could help Indians recover their sense of
dignity and self-respect.
· During
the national movement he urged students to leave educational institutions
in order to show to the British that
Indians were no longer willing to be enslaved.
· Mahatma
Gandhi strongly felt that Indian languages ought to be the medium of teaching.
· Education
in English crippled Indians, distanced them from their own social surroundings,
and made them “strangers in their own lands”.
· Speaking
a foreign tongue, despising local culture, the English educated did not know
how to relate to the masses.
· Western
education, Mahatma Gandhi said, focused on reading and writing rather than oral
knowledge; it valued textbooks rather than lived experience and practical
knowledge.
· He
argued that education ought to develop a person’s mind and soul. Literacy – or
simply learning to read and write – by itself did not count as education.
People had to work with their hands, learn a craft, and know how different things
operated. This would develop their mind and their capacity to understand.
By
Rabindranath Tagore- “abode of peace”
· Santiniketan
was established by Rabindranath Tagore in 1901.
· As
a child, Tagore hated going to school. He found it suffocating and oppressive. The
school appeared like a prison, for he could never do what he felt like doing.
So while other children listened to the teacher, Tagore’s mind would wander
away.
· The
experience of his schooldays in Calcutta shaped Tagore’s ideas of education. On
growing up, he wanted to set up a school where the child was happy, where she
could be free and creative, where she was able to explore her own thoughts and
desires.
· Tagore
felt that childhood ought to be a time of self-learning, outside the rigid and
restricting discipline of the schooling system set up by the British.
· Teachers
had to be imaginative, understand the child, and help the child develop her
curiosity.
· According
to Tagore, the existing schools killed the natural desire of the child to be
creative, her sense of wonder.
· Tagore
was of the view that creative learning could be encouraged only within a
natural environment. So he chose to set up his school 100 kilometres away from
Calcutta, in a rural setting. He saw it as an abode of peace (santiniketan),
where living in harmony with nature, children could cultivate their natural
creativity.
· In
many senses Tagore and Mahatma Gandhi thought about education in similar ways.
There were, however, differences too. Gandhiji was highly critical of Western
civilisation and its worship of machines and technology.
· Tagore
wanted to combine elements of modern Western civilisation with what he saw as
the best within Indian tradition. He emphasised the need to teach science and
technology at Santiniketan, along with art, music and dance.
o
Many individuals and thinkers were thus
thinking about the way a national educational system could be fashioned. Some
wanted changes within the system set up by the British, and felt that the
system could be extended so as to include wider sections of people.
o
Others urged that alternative systems be
created so that people were educated into a culture that was truly national.
Who was to define what was truly national? The debate about what this “national
education” ought to be continued till after independence.
ELSEWHERE
Education
as a civilising mission
· Until
the introduction of the Education Act in 1870, there was no widespread
education for the population as a whole for most of the nineteenth century.
· Child
labour being widely prevalent, poor children could not be sent to school for
their earning was critical for the survival of the family.
· The
number of schools was also limited to those run by the Church or set up by
wealthy individuals. It was only after the coming into force of the Education
Act that schools were opened by the government and compulsory schooling was
introduced.
· One
of the most important educational thinkers of the period was Thomas Arnold, who
became the headmaster of the private school Rugby. Favouring a secondary school
curriculum which had a detailed study of the Greek and Roman classics, written
2,000 years earlier, he said: It has always seemed to me one of the great
advantages of the course of study generally pursued in our English schools that
it draws our minds so continually to dwell upon the past.
· Every
day we are engaged in studying the languages, the history, and the thoughts of
men who lived nearly or more than two thousand years ago… Arnold felt that a
study of the classics disciplined the mind.
· In
fact, most educators of the time believed that such a discipline was necessary
because young people were naturally savage and needed to be controlled.
· To
become civilised adults, they needed to understand society’s notions of right
and wrong, proper and improper behaviour.
· Education,
especially one which disciplined their minds, was meant to guide them on this
path.
……. the end……
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