New Edu
New Edu
New Edu
NEW EDUCATION
Written By
M. K. Gandhi
Edited By
Bharatan Kumarappa
Editor's Note
It is necessary to state at the outset what this book sets out to cover.
The Navjivan Publishing House has already published a book by
Gandhiji on Basic Education. It deals with Gandhiji's writings and
speeches on education primarily from the latter half of 1937 when he
launched his new scheme of education. This new scheme came to be
called Basic Education. It related to education to be given to a child
from his 7th to 14th year. To this was to be added in course of time
Pre-Basic and Post-Basic education relating to education before the 7th
and after the 14th year respectively. The education covering all these
three stages is what is comprised under New Education or Nai Talim.
Gandhiji's ideas in regard to this New Education did not, of course,
suddenly emerge from his brain in 1937, but were the outcome of long
years of sustained thought and experience. The present book relates to
this earlier formative period when he revolted from the prevailing
system of education and sought in various ways to substitute it by
educational practices it by educational practices more in harmony with
his own conception of the function of education. To understand
adequately the Basic Education scheme which he formulated in 1937 it
is essential to go back to this earlier period where we can see it in
origin and growth. The present book may, therefore, be said to be a
necessary companion volume to the one on Basic Education.
The material for this book was collected by Prof. Nirmal Kumar Bose
and Prof. Anath Nath Bose. But for editing and arranging it in its
present from they are not responsible.
An attempt has here been made to arrange the writings in such a way
that the reader may see for himself the evolution of Gandhiji's ideas in
regard to Education. Section I deals with his period of revolt ; Section
II with experimentation, and Section III and the others following with
formulation of principles. It is hardly necessary to say that these
sections are by no means rigid, for even in his period of revolt and
experimentation we find Gandhiji formulating principles. Nevertheless it
is hoped that classifying his writings thus will help to provide a clearer
understanding of the development of his ideas.
For the most part the titles of chapters and of extracts have been
altered to suit the above arrangement.
Bharatan Kumarappa
Bombay
To The Reader
I would like to say to the diligent reader of my writings and to others
who are interested in them that I am not at all concerned with
appearing to be consistent. In my search after Truth I have discarded
many ideas and learnt many new things. Old as I am in age, I have no
feeling that I have ceased to grow inwardly or that my growth will stop
at the dissolution of the flesh. What I am concerned with is my
readiness to obey the call of Truth, my God, from moment to moment,
and, therefore, when anybody finds any inconsistency between any two
writings of mine, if he has still faith in my sanity, he would do well to
choose the later of the two on the same subject.
M. K. GANDHI
Harijan, 29-04-1933, p. 2
The question arises whether this education answers the wants of the
people. As in the rest of India so in Baroda, the population is
predominantly agricultural. Do the children of these farmers become
better farmers ? Do they show moral and material improvement for the
education they have received ? Fifty years is a long enough time for
showing results. I am afraid the answer to the inquiry cannot be
satisfactory. The farmers of Baroda are no happier, no better than their
brethren elsewhere. They are as helpless as any in times of famine. The
sanitation of their villages is as primitive as in the other parts of India.
They do not know even the value of manufacturing their own cloth.
Baroda possesses some of the richest lands in India. It should not have
to export its raw cotton. It can easily become a self-contained State
with a prosperous peasantry. But it is bedecked in foreign clotha
visible sign of their poverty and degradation. Nor are they better off in
the matter of drink. Probably they are worse. Baroda education is as
much tainted with the drink revenue as the British revenue. The
children of the Kaliparaj are ruined by the drink demon in spite of the
education they may receive. The fact is the education in Baroda is an
almost slavish imitation of the British type. Higher education makes us
foreigners in our country and the primary education being practically of
no use in afterlife becomes almost useless. There is neither originality
nor naturalness about it. It need not be at all original if it would only be
aboriginal.
English Education
Reader : Do I then understand that you do not consider English
education necessary for obtaining Home Rule?
Editor (Gandhiji) : My answer is yes and no. To give millions a
knowledge of English is to enslave them. The foundation that Macaulay
laid of education has enslaved us. I do not suggest that he had any
such intention, but that has been the result. Is not a sad commentary
that we should have to speak of Home Rule in a foreign tongue?
And it is worthy of note that the systems which the Europeans have
discarded are the systems in vogue among us. Their learned men
continually make changes. We ignorantly adhere to their cast-off
systems. They are trying each division, to improve its own status.
Wales is a small portion of England. Great efforts are being made to
revive a knowledge of Welsh among Welshmen. The English Chancellor,
Mr Llyod George is taking a leading part in the movement to make
Welsh children speak Welsh. And what is our condition ? We write to
each other in faulty English, and from this even, our M.A.'s are not free
; our best thoughts are expressed in English ; the proceedings of our
Congress are conducted in English ; our best newspapers are printed in
English. If this state of things continues for a long time posterity willit
is my firm opinioncondemn and curse us.
It is worth noting that, by receiving English education, we have
enslaved the nation. Hypocrisy, tyranny, etc., have increased ; Englishknowing Indians have not hesitated to cheat and strike terror into the
people. Now, if we are doing anything for the people at all, we are
paying only a portion of the debt due to them.
It is not a painful thing that, if I want to go to a court of justice, I must
employ the English language as a medium ; that, when I become a
Barrister, I may not speak my mother tongue, and that someone else
should have to translate to me from my own language ? Is not this
English Education
It is my considered opinion that English education in the manner it has
been given emasculated the English-educated Indian, it has put a
severe strain upon the Indian students' nervous energy, and has made
of us imitators. The process of displacing the vernacular has been one
of the saddest chapters in the British connection. Rammohan Rai would
have been a greater reformer, and Lokamanya Tilak would have been a
greater scholar, if they had not to start with the handicap of having to
think in English and transmit their thoughts chiefly in English. Their
effect their own people, marvelous as it was, would have been greater
if they had been brought up under a less unnatural system. No doubt
they both gained from their knowledge of the rich treasures of English
literature. But these should have been accessible to them through their
own vernaculars. No country can become a nation by producing a race
of imitators. Think of what would have happened to the English if they
had not an authorized version of the Bible. I do believe that Chaitanya,
Kabir, Nanak, Guru Govindsing, Shivaji, and Pratap were greater men
than Rammohan Rai and Tilak. I know that comparisons are odious. All
are equally great in their own way. But judged by the results, the effect
of Rammohan and Tilak on the masses is not so permanent or far
reaching as that of the others more fortunately born. Judged by the
obstacles they had to surmount, they were giants, and both would have
been greater in achieving results, if they had been handicapped by the
system under which they received their training. I refuse to believe that
the Raja and the Lokamanya could not have thought the thoughts they
did
without
knowledge
of
the
English
language.
Of
all
the
Reply to Tagore
I do not want my house to be walled in on all sides and my windows to
be stuffed. I want the cultures of all the lands to be blown about my
house as freely as possible. But I refuse to be blown off my feet by any.
I refuse to live in other peoples' houses as an interloper, a beggar or a
slave. I refuse to put the unnecessary strain of learning English upon
my sisters for the sake of false pride or questionable social advantage.
I would have our young men and young women with literary tastes to
learn as much English and other world languages as they like, and then
expect them to give the benefits of their learning to India and to the
world, like a Bose, a Roy or the Poet himself. But I would not have a
single Indian to forget, neglector be ashamed of his mother tongue, or
to feel that he or she cannot think or express the best thoughts in his
or her own vernacular. Mine is not a religion of the prison-house. It has
room for the least among God's creation. But it is proof against
insolence, pride of race, religion or colour.
Young India, 1-6-1921
effected
later
have
been
due
to
delusion,
miscalled
lesson in liberty and self-respect that I gave them at the cost of the
literary training. And where a choice has to be made between liberty
and learning, who will not say that the former has to be preferred a
thousand times to the latter ?
Autobiography (1926), pp. 245-48
young.
The conception no doubt was not without its flaws. All the young people
had not been with me since their childhood, they had been brought up
in different conditions and environments, and they did not belong to the
same religion. How could I do full justice to the young people, thus
circumstanced, even if I assumed the place of paterfamilias ?
But I had always given the first place to the culture of the heart or the
building of character, and as I felt confident that moral training could
be given to all alike, no matter how different their ages and their
upbringing, I decided to live amongst them all the twenty-four hours of
though it must be said that good air and water and regular hours of
food were not a little responsible for this.
A word about vocational training. It was my intention to teach every
one of the youngsters some useful manual vocation. For this purpose
Mr Kellenbach went to a Trappist monastery and returned having learnt
shoe-making. I learnt it from him and taught the art to such as were
ready to take it up. Mr Kellenbach had some experience of carpentry,
and there was another inmate who knew it ; so we had a small class in
carpentry. Cooking almost all the youngsters knew. All this was new to
them. They had never even dreamt that they would have to learn these
things some day. For generally the only training that Indian children
received in South Africa was in the three Ra's. On Tolstoy Farm we
made it a rule that the youngsters should not be asked to do what the
teachers did not do, and, therefore, when they were asked to do any
work, there was always a teacher co-operating and actually working
with
them. Hence
learnt, they
learnt
cheerfully.
Literary training, however, was a more difficult matter. I had neither
the resources nor the literary equipment necessary; and I had not the
time I would have wished to devote to the subject. The physical work
that I was doing used to leave me thoroughly exhausted at the end of
the day, and I used to have the classes just when I was most in need of
some rest. Instead, therefore, of my being fresh for the class, I could
with the greatest difficulty keep myself awake. The mornings had to be
devoted to work on the Farm and domestic duties, so the school hours
had to be kept after the midday meal. There was no other time suitable
for the school.
We gave three periods at the most to literary training. Hindi, Tamil,
Gujarati and Urdu were all taught, and tuition was given through the
vernaculars of the boys. English was taught as well. It was also
necessary to acquaint the Gujarati Hindu children with a little Sanskrit,
and to teach all the children elementary history, geography and
arithmetic.
I had undertaken to teach Tamil and Urdu. The little Tamil I knew was
acquired during voyages and in jail. I had not got beyond Pope's
excellent Tamil handbook. My knowledge of the Urdu script was all that
I had acquired on a single voyage, and my knowledge of the language
was confined to the familiar Persian and Arabic words that I had learnt
from contact with Mussalman friends. Of Sanskrit I knew no more than
I had learnt at the high school ; even my Gujarati was no better than
that which one acquires at the school. Such was the capital with which I
had to carry on. In poverty of literary equipment my colleagues went
one better than I. But my love for the languages of my country, my
confidence in my capacity as a teacher, as also the ignorance of my
pupils, and more than that, their generosity, stood me in good stead.
The Tamil boys were all born in South Africa, and therefore, knew very
little Tamil, and did not know the script at all. So I had to teach them
the script and the rudiments of grammar. That was easy enough. My
pupils knew that they could any say beat me in Tamil conversation, and
when Tamilians, not knowing English came to see me, they became my
lost their love and respect. It was comparatively easier to teach the
Mussalman boys Urdu. They knew the script. I had simply to stimulate
in them an interest in reading and to improve their handwriting.
These youngsters were for the most part unlettered and unschooled.
But I found in the course of my work that I had very little to teach
them, beyond weaning them from their laziness, and supervising their
studies. As I was content with this, I could pull on with boys of different
ages and learning different subjects in one and the same class room.
Of text-books, about which we hear so much, I never felt the want. I do
not even remember having made much use of the books that were
available. I did not find it at all necessary to load the boys with
quantities of books. I have always felt that the true text-book for the
pupil is his teacher. I remember very little that my teachers taught me
from books, but I have even now a clear recollection of the things they
taught me independently of books. Children take in much more and
with less labour through their ears than through their eyes. I do not
remember having read any book from cover to cover with my boys. But
I gave them, in my own language, all that I had digested from my
reading of various books, and I dare say they are still carrying a
recollection of it in their minds. It was laborious for them to remember
what they learnt from books, but what I imparted to them by word of
mouth they could repeat with the greatest ease. Reading was a task for
them, but listening to me was a pleasure, when I did not bore them by
failure to make my subject interesting. And from the questions that my
talks prompted them to put I had a measure of their power of
understanding. The spiritual training of the boys was a much more
difficult matter than their physical and mental training. I relied little on
religious books for the training of the spirit. Of course I believed that
every student should be acquainted with the elements of his own
religion and have a general knowledge of his own scriptures, and
therefore, I provided for such knowledge as best as I could. But that, to
my mind, was part of the intellectual training. Long before I undertook
the education of the youngsters of the Tolstoy Farm I had realized that
the training of the spirit was a thing by itself. To develop the spirit is to
build character and to enable one to work towards a knowledge of God
and self-realization. And I held that this was as essential part of the
training of the young, and that all training without culture of the spirit
was of no use, and might be even harmful. I am familiar with the
superstition that self-realization is possible only in the fourth stage of
life, i.e. sannyasa (renunciation). But it is a matter of common
knowledge that those who defer preparation for this invaluable
experience until the last stage of life attain not self-realization but old
age amounting to a second and pitiable childhood, living as a burden on
this earth I have a full recollection that I held these views even whilst I
was teaching, i.e. in 1911-12, though I might not then have expressed
in identical language. How then was this spiritual training to be given? i
made the children memorize and recite hymns, and read to them from
books on moral training. But that was far from satisfying me. As I came
into closer contact with them I saw that it was not through books that
one could impart training of the spirit, Just as physical training was to
be imparted
through
intellectual through
intellectual exercise, even so the training of the spirit was possible only
through the exercise of the spirit. And the exercise of the spirit entirely
depended on the life and character of the teacher. The teacher had
always to be mindful of his p's and q's whether he was in the midst of
his boys or not.
It is possible for a teacher situated miles away to affect the spirit of the
pupils by his way of living. It would be idle for me, if I were a liar, to
teach boys to tell the truth. A cowardly teacher would never succeed in
making his boys valiant, and a stranger to self-restraint could never
teach his pupils the value of self-restraint. I saw, therefore, that I must
be an eternal object-lesson to the boys and girls living with me. They
thus became my teachers, and I learnt I must be good and live
straight, if only for their sakes. I may say that the increasing discipline
and restraint I imposed on myself at Tolstoy Farm was mostly due to
those wards of mine. One of them was wild, unruly, given to lying, and
quarrelsome. On one occasion he broke out most violently. I was
exasperated. I never punished my boys, but this time I was very angry.
I tried to reason with him. But he was adamant and even tried to over-
reach me. At last I picked up a ruler lying at hand and delivered a blow
on his arm. I trembled as I struck him. I dare say he noticed it. This
was an entirely novel experience for them all. The boy cried out and
begged to be forgiven. He cried not because the beating was painful to
him; he could, if he had been so minded, have paid me back in the
same coin, being a stoutly built youth of seventeen; but he realized my
pain in being driven to this violent resource. Never again after this
incident did he disobey me. But I still repent that violence. I am afraid I
exhibited before him that day not the spirit, but the brute, in me.
I have always been opposed to corporal punishment. I remember only
one occasion on which I physically punished one of my sons. I have
therefore never until this day been able to decide whether I was right
or wrong in using the ruler. Probably it was improper, for it was
prompted by anger and a desire to punish. Had it been an expression
only of my distress, I should have considered it justified. But the
motive in this case was mixed.
This incident set me thinking and taught me a better method of
correcting students. I do not know whether that method would have
availed on the occasion in question. The youngster soon forgot the
incident, and I do not think he ever showed great improvement. But
the incident made me understand better the duty of a teacher towards
his pupils.
Cases of misconduct on the part of the boys often occurred after this,
but I never resorted to corporal punishment. Thus in my endeavor to
impart spiritual training to the boys and girls under me, I came to
understand better and better the power of the spirit. Day by day it
became increasingly clear to me how very difficult it was to bring up
and educate boys and girls in the right way. If I was to be their real
teacher and guardian, I must touch their hearts, I must share their joys
and sorrows, I must help them to solve the problems that faced them,
and I must take along the right channel the surging aspirations of their
youth.
I hold that some occasions of delinquency on the part of pupils call for
even the drastic remedy of fasting by the teacher. But it presupposes
clearness of vision and spiritual fitness. Where there is no true love
between the teacher and the pupil, where the pupil's delinquency has
not touched the very being of the teacher and where the pupil has no
respect for the teacher, fasting is out of place and may even be
harmful. Though there is thus room for doubting the propriety of fasts
in such cases, there is no question about the teacher's responsibility for
the errors of his pupil.
Autobiography (1926), pp. 407-15, 418 and 419
In National Schools
National Schools
National schools, to be worth the name in terms of Swaraj, for the
attainment of which they were brought into existence, must be
conducted with a view to advancing the national programme in so far
as it was applicable to educational institutions. Thus, for instance,
national schools must be the most potent means of propagating the
message of the charkha, of bringing Hindus, Mussalmans and others
limb knowing that that is the best way of looking after the others. I
would develop in the child his hands, his brain and his soul. The hands
have almost atrophied. The soul has been altogether ignored. I
therefore put in a plea in season and out of season for correcting these
grave defects in our education. Is half an hour's spinning every day by
our children too great a strain upon them ? Will it result in mental
paralysis ?
I value education in the different sciences. Our children cannot have too
much of chemistry and physics. And if these have not been attended to
in the institution in which I am directly supposed to be interested it is
because we have not the professors for the purpose and also because
practical training in these sciences requires very expensive laboratories
for which in the present state of uncertainty and infancy we are not
ready.
Young India, 12-3-''25
Spinning in Schools
If spinning is to be revived as an indispensable industry, it must be
treated seriously and must be taught in a proper and scientific manner
like the other subjects
taught in well-managed schools. The wheels will then be in perfectly
good order and condition, will conform to all the tests laid down in
these columns from time to time, the pupils' work would be regularly
tested from day to day just as all their exercises would be or should be.
Whilst charkha spinning may be taught so as to enable boys and girls, if
they wish, to use the spinning wheel in their own homes, for classspinning the takli is the most economical and the most profitable
instrument.
Young India, 15-10-''25
NEW EDUCATION
descendant. The question then is this: The choice must be clearly and
finally made between national and foreign education, the choice of type
and archetype, of meaning and purpose, of end and means. It has so
far not been made. We are almost certain that the necessity for
choosing is hardly realized. As long as confusion on this matter exists,
'national' education cannot flourish. And that for a simple reason. The
Government is already imparting one type of education in respect of
which it is impossible for any purely non-official body to complete.
Official organization is bigger, it has more money, it has more prizes to
offer. We believe that this root paradox will last as long as there is no
hard and clear thinking about fundamentals. If, as a result of careful
decisions, we promise to the people that the education we offer will be
truly Indian and not a mere inferior prototype of the education offered
in the schools and colleges of Government, people are bound to listen
to us. We believe that the folk who suffer from the effects of the
existing arrangements, who deplore social disruption, who are stricken
by the waste of youth, will be thankful to find an avenue of escape.
Institutions that stand for the inevitable revolution for the restoration of
national and social continuum will have in their hands the secret of the
future.
For that which should be remembered is this. The greatest visible evil
of the present educational method, in itself evidence of deeper defects,
is, that it has broken up the continuity of our existence. All sound
education is meant to fit one generation to take up the burden of the
previous and to keep up the life of the community without breach or
primary
instruction
has
been
sought
to
be
made
compulsory ; but there has never been the remotest perception of the
fact that the whole thing is an evil because it was destroying the very
foundations of all national life and growth. The system must be
scrapped ; enquiry must be made promptly as to what constituted the
elements of education before Indian Universities were constituted,
before Lord Macaulay wrote his fatal minutes. Promptness is essential,
because the race of old teachers is nearly extinct and the secret of their
methods may die with them. The resuscitation of those curricula may
mean the disappearance of political history and geography; but the
prospect does not disturb us in the slightest. We have been trying to
get at the elements of the old curricula at least in one part of the
country and we dare aver in all conscience that they strike us as
infinitely more efficient and satisfactory than the latest thing come out
of Europe. But we confess it is a layman's opinion. That is why we
should like to have the matter investigated by experts. If it is done and
its consequences faced, we are confident that the people of the land
will have reason to be highly thankful.
Young India, 20-3-''24
Almost from the commencement, the text-books (today) deal, not with
things the boys and the girls have always to deal with in their homes,
but things to which they are perfect strangers. It is not through the
text-books that a lad learns what is right and what is wrong in the
home life. He is never taught to have any pride in his surroundings. The
higher he goes, the farther he is removed from his home, so that at the
end of his education he becomes estranged from his surroundings. He
feels no poetry about the home life. The village scenes are all a sealed
book to him. His own civilization is presented to him as imbecile,
barbarous, superstitious and useless for all practical purposes. His
education is calculated to wean him from his traditional culture. And if
the mass of educated youths are not entirely denationalized, it is
No Relation to Environment
Unfortunately the system of education has no connection with our
surroundings which therefore remain practically untouched by the
education received by a microscopic minority of boys and girls of the
nation.
Harijan, 23-5-1936
With the best motives in the world, the English tutors could not wholly
understand the difference between English and Indian requirements.
Our climate does not require the buildings which they need. Nor do our
children brought up in predominantly rural environment need the type
of
education
the
English
children
brought
up
in
surroundings
To Develop Character
Education of the Heart
One word only as to the education of the heart. I do not believe that
this can be imparted through books. It can only be done through the
living touch of the teacher. And, who are the teachers in the primary
and even secondary schools ? Are they men and women of faith and
character ? Have they themselves received the training of the heart ?
Are they expected to take care of the permanent element in the boys
and girls placed under their charge ? Is not method of engaging
teachers for lower schools an effective bar against character ? Do the
teachers get even a living wage ? And we know that the teachers of
primary schools are not selected for their patriotism. They only come
who can not find any other employment.
Young India, 1-9-''21
whilst they are pursuing their literary studies, they may not do acts of
service at the sacrifice of their studies, be it ever so small or
temporary. They will lose nothing and gain much if they would suspend
their education, literary or industrial, in order to do relief work, such as
is being done by some of them in Gujarat. The end of all education
should surely be service, and if a student gets an opportunity of
rendering service even whilst he is studying, he should consider it as a
rare opportunity and treat it not really as a suspension of his education
but rather its complement.
Young India, 13-10-''27
To Madame Montessori
Even as you, out of your love for children, are endeavoring to teach
children, through your numerous institution, the best that can be
brought out of them, even so, I hope that it will be possible not only for
the children of the wealthy and the well-to-do, but for the children of
paupers to receive training of this nature. You have very truly remarked
that if we are to reach real peace in this world and if we are to carry on
a real war against war, we shall have to begin with children and if they
will grow up in their natural innocence, we won't have the struggle, we
won't have to pass fruitless idle resolutions, but we shall go from love
to love and peace to peace, until at last all the corners of the world are
covered
with
that
peace
and
love
for
which,
consciously
or
Text-books
For India a multiplicity of text-books means eprivation of the vast
majority of village children of the means of instruction. Text-books,
therefore, in India must mean, principally and for the lower standards,
text-books for teachers, not pupils. Indeed, I am not sure that it is not
better for the children to have much of the preliminary instruction
imparted to them vocally. To impose on children of tender age a
knowledge of the alphabet and the ability to read before they can gain
general knowledge is to deprive them, whilst they are fresh, of the
power of assimilating instruction by word of mouth. Should, for
instance, a lad of seven wait for learning the Ramayan till he can read it
? The results that we arrive at when we think of the few lakhs living in
the cities of India are wholly different from those we obtain, we think,
in terms of the millions of rural India.
Young India, 16-9-1926
The task is difficult enough but not so difficult as one would imagine,
provided the teacher or the manager puts his whole heart into the
work. If he becomes a parent to his pupils, he will instinctively know
what they need and set about giving it to them. If he has it not to give,
he will proceed to qualify himself. And seeing that we have stated with
the idea that the boys and girls have to have instruction in accordance
with their wants, no extraordinary cleverness or possession of external
knowledge is required in a teacher of Harijan and for that matter, any
other children.
And when it is remembered that the primary aim of all education is, or
should be, the moulding of the character of pupils, a teacher who has a
character to keep need not lose heart.
Young India, 1-12-1933
a wall that will not come down through a faulty handling of the
plumber's line. A boy who is thus equipped, will never feel helpless in
battling with the world and never be in want of employment. A
knowledge of the laws of hygiene and sanitation, as well as the art of
rearing children, should also form a necessary part of the Gurukula
lads. The sanitary arrangements at the fair left much to be desired. The
plague of flies told its own tale. These irrepressible sanitary inspectors
incessantly warned us that in point of sanitation all was not well with
us. They plainly suggested that the remains of our food and excreta
need to be properly buried. It seemed to me to be such a pity that a
golden opportunity was being missed of giving to the annual visitors
practical lessons on sanitation. But the work must begin with the boys.
Thus the management would have at the annual gathering three
hundred practical sanitary teachers. Last but not least, let the parents
and the Committee not spoil their lads by making them ape European
dress or modern luxuries These will hinder them in their afterlife and
are antagonistic to brahmacharya. They have enough to fight against in
the evil inclinations common to us all. Let us not make their fight more
difficult by adding to their temptations.
Speeches and Writings of Mahatma Gandhi, pp. 334, 335
Manual Labour
You may ask : 'Why should we use our hands?' and say ' the manual
work has got to be done by those who are illiterate. I can only occupy
myself with reading literature and political essays.' I think we have to
pauperism from this ancient land without reviving and without reviving
home-spinning. I hold the spinning wheel to be as much a necessity in
To be Self-financing
If every school introduced spinning, it would revolutionize our ideas of
financing education. We can work a school for six hours per day and
give free education to the pupils. Supposing a boy works at the wheel
for four hours daily, he will produce every day 10 tolas of yarn and thus
earn for his school one anna per day. Suppose further that he
manufactures very little during the first month, and that the school
works only twenty-six days in the month. A class of thirty boys would
yield, after the first month, an income of Rs. 48-12-0 per month.
I have said nothing about literary training. It can be given during the
two hours out of the six. It is easy to see that every school can be
made self-supporting without much effort and the nation can engage
experienced teachers for its schools.
The chief difficulty in working out the scheme is the spinning wheel. We
require thousand of wheels if the art becomes popular. Fortunately,
every village carpenter can easily construct the machines. It is a
serious mistake to order them from the Ashram or any other place. The
Our education should not be financed out of the excise revenue, neither
out of land revenue. Under Swaraj its main prop should be the spinning
wheel. If the spinning wheel and the loom are introduced in every
school and college, our education would easily pay its way. Today, I
would like our boys to give all their time to spinning. After Swaraj is
attained, at least one hour will have to be given. Swaraj must react in
each and every department of our life. Our schools today are so many
factories to turn out slaves from. Education under Swaraj will aim at
making boys self-supporting from their youth. Any other profession
may be taught them, but spinning will be compulsory. The spinning
wheel ought to be the solace of the miserable. Nothing else has its
virtues, for it alone can supplement agriculture. All cannot be
carpenters, nor smiths, but all must be spinners, and must spin either
for their country or to supplement their own earnings. Because the
need of clothing is universal the spinning wheel must needs be
universal.
Who does not know what questionable things fathers of families in need
of money for their children's education have considered it their duty to
do ? I am convinced that we are in for far worse times, unless we
change the whole system of our education. We have only touched the
fringe of an ocean of children. The vast mass of them remain without
education, not for want of will but of ability and knowledge on the part
the heart, they are simply allowed to run to seed or to grow anyhow in
a wild undisciplined manner. The result is moral and spiritual anarchy.
And it is regarded as something laudable.
As against this, take the case of a child in whom the education of the
heart is attended to from the very beginning. Supposing he is set to
some useful occupation like spinning, carpentry, agriculture etc. for this
education, and in that connection is given a thorough comprehensive
knowledge relating to the theory of the various operations that he is to
perform, and the use and construction of the tools that he would be
wielding. He would not only develop a fine, healthy body but also a
sound, vigorous intellect that is not merely academic but is firmly
rooted in and is tested from day to day by experience. His intellectual
education would include a knowledge of mathematics and the various
sciences that are useful for an intelligent and efficient exercise of his
avocation. If to this is added literature by way of recreation, it would
give him a perfect well-balanced, all-round education in which the
intellect, the body and the spirit have all full play and develop together
into a natural, harmonious whole. Man is neither mere intellect, nor the
gross animal body, nor the heart or soul alone. A proper and
harmonious combination of all the three is required for the making of
the whole man and constitutes the true economics of education.
Harijan, 8-5-1937
To be Craft-Centered
As to the necessity and value of regarding the teaching of village
handicrafts as the pivot and centre of education I have no manner of
Religious Education
The question of religious education is very difficult, Yet we cannot do
without it. India will never be godless. Rank atheism cannot flourish in
this land. The task is indeed difficult. My head begins to turn as I think
of religious education. Our religious teachers are hypocritical and
selfish; they will have to be approached. The Mullas, the Dasturs and
the Brahmins hold the key in their hands, but if they will not have the
good sense, the energy that we have derived from English education
will have to be devoted to religious education. This is not very difficult.
Only the fringe of the ocean has been polluted, and it is those who are
within the fringe who alone need cleansing. We who come under this
category can even cleanse ourselves, because my remarks do not apply
to the millions. In order to restore India to its pristine condition, we
have to return to it.
Hind Swaraj (1908), p. 107
the boys, whether on the playground or in the class room, will then
give the pupils a fine training in these fundamental virtues.
So much for instruction in the universal essentials of religion. A
curriculum of religious instruction should include a study of the tenets
of faiths other than one's own. For this purpose the students should be
trained to cultivate the habit of understanding and appreciating the
doctrines of various great religions of the world in a spirit of reverence
and broad-minded tolerance. This if properly done would help to give
them a spiritual assurance and a better appreciation of their own
religion. There is one rule, however, which should always be kept in
mind while studying all great religions, and that is that one should
study them only through the writings of known votaries of the
respective religions. For instance, if one wants to study the Bhagavata
one should do so not through a translation of it made by a hostile critic
but one prepared by a lover of the Bhagavata. Similarly to study the
Bible one should study it through the commentaries of devoted
Christians. This study of other religions besides one's own will give one
a grasp of the rock-bottom unity of all religions and afford a glimpse
also of that universal and absolute truth which lies beyond the 'dust of
creeds and faiths'.
Let no one even for a moment entertain the fear that a reverent study
of other religions is likely to weaken or shake one's faith in one's own.
The Hindu system of philosophy regards all religions as containing the
elements of truth in them and enjoins an attitude of respect and
reverence towards them all. This of course pre-supposes regards for
one's own religion. Study and appreciation of other religions need not
cause a weakening of that regard ; it should mean extension of that
regard to other religions.
In this respect religion stands on the same footing as culture. Just as
preservation of one's own culture does not mean contempt for that of
others, but requires assimilation of the best that there may be in all the
other cultures, even so should be the case with religion.
Young India, 6-12-'28
Medium of Instruction
The Mother Tongue
I am hoping that this University* will see to it that the youths who
come to it will receive their instruction through the medium of their
vernaculars. Our language is the reflection of ourselves, and if you tell
me that our languages are too poor to express the best thought, then I
say that the sooner we are wiped out of existence the better for us. Is
there a man who dreams that English can ever become the national
language of India ? (Cries of ''Never''.) Why this handicap on the nation
? Just consider for one moment what an unequal race our lads have to
run with every English lad. I had the privilege of a close conversation
with some Poona professors. They assured me that every Indian youth,
because he reached his knowledge through the English language, lost
at least six precious years of life. Multiply that by the number of
students turned out by our schools and colleges and find out for
yourselves how many thousand years have been lost to the nation. The
charge against us is, that we have no initiative. How can we have any if
we are to devote the precious years of our life to the mastery of a
foreign tongue ? We fail in this attempt also. . . . I have heard it said
that after all it is English-educated India which is leading and which is
doing everything for the nation.
But for the fact that the only higher education, the only education
worth the name has been received by us through the English medium,
there would be no need to prove such a self-evident proposition that
the youth of a nation to remain a nation must receive all instruction
including the highest in its own vernacular or vernaculars. Surely, it is a
self-demonstrated proposition that the youth of a nation cannot keep or
establish a living contact with the masses unless their knowledge is
received and assimilated through a medium understood by the people.
Who can calculate the immeasurable loss sustained by the nation owing
to thousands of its young men having been obliged to waste years in
mastering a foreign language and its idiom of which in their daily life
they have the least use and in learning which they had to neglect their
own mother tongue and their own literature? There never was a greater
superstition than that a particular language can be incapable of
expansion or expressing abstruse or scientific ideas. A language is an
exact reflection of the character and growth of its speakers.
Among the many evils of foreign rule this blighting imposition of a
foreign medium upon the youth of the country will be counted by
history as one of the greatest. It has sapped the energy of the nation, it
has shortened the lives of the pupils, it has estranged them from the
masses, it has made education unnecessarily expensive. If this process
is still persisted in, it bids fair to rob the nation of its soul. The sooner
therefore educated India shakes itself free from the hypnotic spell of
the foreign medium, the better it would be for them and the people.
Young India , 5-7-'' 28
My Own Experience
Let me give a chapter from my own experience. Up to the age of 12 all
the knowledge I gained was through Gujarati, my mother tongue. I
knew then something of Arithmetic, History and Geography. Then I
entered a High School. For the first three years the mother tongue was
still the medium. But the schoolmaster's business was to drive English
into the pupil's head. Therefore more than half of our time was given to
learning English and mastering its arbitrary spelling and pronunciation.
It was a painful discovery to have to learn a language that was not
pronounced as it was written. It was a strange experience to learn the
spelling by heart. But that is by the way, and irrelevant to my
argument. However, for the first three years, it was comparatively plain
sailing.
The pillory began with the fourth year. Everything had to be learnt
through EnglishGeometry, Algebra, Chemistry, Astronomy, History,
Geography. The tyranny of English was so great that even Sanskrit or
Persian had to be learnt through English, not through the mother
tongue. It any boy spoke in the class in Gujarati which he understood,
he was punished. It did not matter to the teacher if a boy spoke bad
English which he could neither pronounce correctly nor understand
fully. Why should the teacher worry? His own English was by no means
without blemish. It could not be otherwise. English was as much a
foreign language to him as to his pupils. The result was chaos. We the
boys had to learn many things by heart, though we could not
understand them fully and often not at all. My head used to reel as the
teacher was struggling to make his exposition on Geometry understood
by us. I could make neither head nor tail of Geometry till we reached
the 13th theorem of the first book of Euclid. And let me confess to the
reader that in spite of all my love for the mother tongue, I do not to
this day know the Gujarati equivalents of the technical terms of
Geometry, Algebra and the like. I know now that what I took four years
to learn of Arithmetic, Geometry, Algebra, Chemistry and Astronomy, I
should have learnt easily in one year, if I had not to learn them through
English but Gujarati. My grasp of the subjects would have been easier
and clearer. My Gujarati vocabulary would have been richer. I would
have made use of such knowledge in my own home. This English
medium created an impassable barrier between me and the members
of my family, who had not gone through English schools. My father
knew nothing of what I was doing. I could not, even if I had wished it,
interest my father in what I was learning. For though he had ample
intelligence, he knew not a word of English. I was fast becoming a
stranger in my own home. I certainly became a superior person. Even
my dress began to undergo imperceptible changes. What happened to
me was not an uncommon experience. It was common to the majority.
The first three years in the High School made little addition to my stock
of general knowledge. They were a preparation for fitting the boys for
teaching them everything through English. High Schools were schools
for cultural conquest by the English. The knowledge gained by the three
hundred boys of my High School became a circumscribed possession. It
was not for transmission to the masses.
A word about literature. We had to learn several books of English prose
and English poetry. No doubt all this was nice. But that knowledge has
been of no use to me in serving or bringing me in touch with the
masses. I am unable to say that if I had not learnt what I did of English
prose and poetry, I should have missed a rare treasure. If I had,
instead, passed those precious seven years in mastering Gujarati and
had learnt Mathematics, Sciences, and Sanskrit and other subjects
through Gujarati, I could easily have shared the knowledge so gained
with my neighbours. I would have enriched Gujarati, and who can say
that I would not have, with my habit of application and my inordinate
love for the country and the mother tongue, made a richer and greater
contribution to the service of the masses?
I must not be understood to decry English or its noble literature. The
columns of the Harijan are sufficient evidence of my love of English. But
the nobility of its literature cannot avail the Indian nation any more
than the temperate climate or the scenery of English can avail her.
India has to flourish in her own climate and scenery and her own
literature, even though all the three may be inferior to the English
climate, scenery and literature. We and our children must build on our
companions to show how deep the evil has gone. For we have made a
conscious effort to mend ourselves.
It has been argued that the wastage that occurs in our colleges need
not worry us if, out of the collegians, one Jagadish Bose can be
produced by them. I should freely subscribe to the argument, if the
wastage was unavoidable. I hope I have shown that it was and is even
now avoidable. Moreover the creation of a Bose does not help the
argument. For Bose was not a product of the present education. He
rose in spite of the terrible handicaps under which he had to labour.
And his knowledge became almost intransmissible to the masses. We
seem to have come to think that no one can hope to be like a Bose
unless he knows English. I cannot conceive a grosser superstition than
this. No Japanese feels so helpless as we seem to do.
The medium of instruction should be altered at once and at any cost,
the provincial languages being given their rightful place. I would prefer
temporary chaos in higher education to the criminal waste that is daily
accumulating. In order to enhance the status and the market-value of
the provincial languages, I would have the language of the law courts
to be the language of the province where the court is situated. The
proceedings of the provincial legislatures must be in the language, or
even the languages of the province where a province has more than
one language within its borders. I suggest to the legislators that they
could, by enough application, inside of a month understand the
languages of their provinces. There is nothing to prevent a Tamilian
from easily learning the simple grammar and a few hundred words of
Harijan, 25-8-46
have never found any difficulty in holding communion with them. Call
the language of the North what you will, Urdu or Hindi, it is the same. If
you write it in the Urdu character you may know it as Urdu. Write the
same thing in the Nagari character and it is Hindi.
There, therefore, remains a difference about the script. For the time
being Mohammedan children will certainly write in the Urdu character,
and Hindus will mostly write in the Devanagari. I say mostly, because
thousands of Hindus use the Urdu character, and some do not even
know the Nagari character. But when Hindus and Mohammedans come
to regard one another without suspicion, when the causes begetting
suspicion are removed, that script which has greater vitality will be
more universally used, and therefore, become the national script.
Meanwhile those Hindus and Mohammedans who desire to write their
petitions in the Urdu character, should be free to do so and should have
the right of having them accepted at the seat of the National
Government.
There is not another language capable of competing with Hindi in
satisfying the five conditions. Bengali comes next to Hindi. But the
Bengalis themselves make use of Hindi outside Bengal. No one wonders
to see a Hindi-speaking man making use of Hindi, no matter where he
goes. Hindu preachers and Mohammedan Moulvis deliver their religious
discourses throughout India in Hindi and Urdu and even the illiterate
masses follow them. Even the unlettered Gujarati going to the North,
attempts to use a few Hindi words whereas a gate-keeper from the
North declines to speak in Gujarati even to his employer, who has on
Hindi. For in future when Hindi has received State recognition, it will be
introduced as a compulsory language in Madras as in other Provinces,
and intercourse between Madras and them will then increase. English
has not permeated the Dravidian masses. Hindi, however, will take no
time.
Speeches and Writings of Mahatma Gandhi, pp.395-99; 20-10-17
A Common Script
If we are to make good our claim as one nation, we must have several
things in common. We have a common culture running through a
variety of creeds and sub-creeds. We have common disabilities. I am
endeavouring to show that a common material for our dress is not only
desirable but necessary. We need also a common language not in
suppression of the vernaculars, but in addition to them. It is generally
agreed that that medium should be Hindustania resultant of Hindi and
Urdu, neither highly Sanskritized, nor highly Persianized or Arabianized.
The greatest obstacle in the way are the numerous scripts we have for
the vernaculars. If it is possible to adopt a common script, we should
remove a great hindrance in the way of realizing the dream, which at
present it is, of having a common language.
A variety of scripts is an obstacle in more ways than one. It constitutes
an effectual barrier against the acquisition of knowledge. The Aryan
passed through a school, therefore knows both the Gujarati and the
Devanagari
scripts. If
the
committee
had
decided
upon
purely
absorbing them in Bihar, and if the elders of the tribe were consulted,
they would most probably and naturally say that their dialect was just
as good as the Uriya or the Bihari, and that it should be reduced to
writing. And for them it would be a toss whether the script to be
adopted should be Devanagari or Uriya, if not even a newly invented
script, as has happened in modern times in at least two instances I
know. Endeavouring to think in terms of all-India I suggested to my
friends that, whilst it was proper for them to strengthen the Uriya
language among the Uriya-speaking people, the children of this tribe
should be taught Hindi and naturally the script should be Devanagari. A
spirit that is so exclusive and narrow as to want every form of speech
to be perpetuated and developed, is anti-national and anti-universal. All
undeveloped and unwritten dialects should, in my humble opinion, be
sacrificed and merged in the great Hindustani stream. It would be a
sacrifice only to be nobler, not a suicide. If we are to have a common
language for cultured India, we must arrest the growth of any process
of disintegration or multiplication of languages and scripts. We must
promote a common language. The beginning must naturally be made
with the script, and until the Hindu-Muslim question is solved, confined
perhaps to Hindu India. If I could have my way, I would make the
learning of Devanagari script and Urdu script, in addition to the
established provincial script, compulsory in all the provinces and I
would print in Devanagari chief books in the different vernaculars with
a literal translation in Hindustani.
Young India, 27-8-1925
Roman Script
Regarding the replacing of the Urdu and Nagari scripts by the Roman
script, however attractive the proposition may appear to be, in my
opinion, the replacing would be a fatal blunder and we would find
ourselves in the fire out of the frying pan.
Harijan, 23-3-1947
Other Languages
Every cultured Indian should know in addition to his own provincial
language, if a Hindu, Sanskrit; if a Mohammedan, Arabic; if a Parsee,
Persian; and all, Hindi. Some Hindus should know Arabic and Persian;
some Mohammedans and Parsees, Sanskrit. Several Northerners and
Westerners should learn Tamil. A universal language for India should be
Hindi, with the option of writing it in Persian or Nagari characters. In
order that the Hindus and Mohammedans may have closer relations, it
is necessary to know both the characters.
Hind Swaraj (1908), p. 107
If I had not acquired the little Sanskrit that I learnt then, I should have
found it difficult to take any interest in our scared books. In fact I
deeply regret that I was not able to acquire a more thorough
knowledge of the language, because I have since realized that every
Hindu boy and girl should possess sound Sanskrit learning.
It is now my opinion that in all Indian curricula of higher education
there should be a place for Hindi, Sanskrit, Persian, Arabic and English,
besides of course the vernacular. This big list need not frighten anyone.
If our education were more systemic, and the boys free from the
burden of having to learn their subjects through a foreign medium, I
am sure learning all these languages would not be an irksome task, but
a perfect pleasure. A scientific knowledge of one language makes a
knowledge of other languages comparatively easy.
Autobiography (1926), p. 30
The Place of English
English is a language of international commerce, it is the language of
diplomacy, and it contains many a rich literary treasure, it gives us an
introduction to Western thought and culture. For a few of us, therefore,
a
knowledge
of
English
is
necessary.
They
can
carry
on
the
I love the English tongue in its own place, but I am its inveterate
opponent, if it usurps a place which does not belong to it. English is
today admittedly the world language. I would therefore accord it a
place as a second, optional language, not in the school but in the
university course. That can only be for the select fewnot for the
millions. Today when we have not the means to introduce even free
compulsory primary education, how can we make provision for teaching
English ? Russia has achieved all her scientific progress without English.
It is our mental slavery that makes us feel that we cannot do without
English. I can never subscribe to that defeatist creed.
Harijan, 25-8-''46
COMPULSORY EDUCATION
Compulsory Education
I am not quite sure that I would not oppose compulsory education at all
times. All compulsion is hateful to me. I would no more have the nation
become educated by compulsion than I would have it become sober by
such questionable means. But just as I would discourage drink by
refusing to open drink shops and closing existing ones, so would I
discourage illiteracy by removing obstacles in the path and opening free
schools and making them responsive to the people's needs. But at the
present moment we have not even tried on any large scale the
experiment of free education. We have offered the parents no
inducements. We have not even sufficiently or at all advertised the
value of literacy. We have not the proper school-masters for the
training. In my opinion therefore it is altogether too early to think of
compulsion. I am not even sure that the experiment in compulsory
education has been uniformly successful wherever it has been tried. If
the majority wants education, compulsion is wholly unnecessary. If it
does not, compulsion would be most harmful. Only a despotic
Government passes laws in the teeth of the opposition of a majority.
Has the Government afforded full facilities for education to the children
of the majority ? We have been compulsion-ridden for the past hundred
years or more. The State rules our life in its manifold details without
our pervious sanction. It is time to use the nation to voluntary methods
even though for the time being there may be no response to prayers,
petitions and advice addressed to the nation. It has had little response
to its prayers. Nothing is more detrimental to the true growth of society
than for it to be habituated to the belief that no reform can be achieved
by voluntary effort. A people so trained become wholly unfit for Swaraj.
It follows from what I have said above that if we get Swaraj today I
should resist compulsory education at least till every effort at voluntary
primary education has been honestly made and failed. Let the reader
not forget that there is more illiteracy in India today than there was
fifty years ago, not because the parents are less willing but because the
facilities they had before have disappeared under a system so foreign
and unnatural for the country.
It is not reasonable to assume that the majority of parents are so
foolish or heartless as to neglect the education of their children even
when it is brought to their doors free of charge.
Young India, 14-8-1924
and
Q. In our schemes for adult education should the aim be to promote the
spread of literacy or to impart 'useful knowledge'?
A. The primary need of those who are come of age and are following an
avocation, is to know how to read and write. Mass illiteracy is India's
sin and shame and must be liquidated. Of course, the literacy campaign
must not begin and end with a knowledge of the alphabet.
It must go hand in hand with the spread of useful knowledge. But
Municipal bodies should beware of trying to ride two horses at a time,
or else they are sure to come a cropper.
Harijan, 18-2-1939
Women's Education
Women's Education
Man and woman are of equal rank but they are not identical. They are a
peerless pair being supplementary to one another; each helps the
other, so that without the one the existence of the other cannot be
conceived, and therefore it follows as a necessary corollary from these
facts that anything that will impair the status of either of them will
involve the equal ruin of them both. In framing any scheme of women's
education this cardinal truth must be constantly kept in mind. Man is
supreme in the outward activities of a married pair and therefore it is in
the fitness of things that he should have a greater knowledge thereof.
On the other hand, home life is entirely the sphere of woman and
therefore in domestic affairs, in the upbringing and education of
children, women ought to have more knowledge. Not that knowledge
should be divided into watertight compartments, or that some branches
of knowledge should be closed to any one; but unless courses of
instruction are based on a discriminating appreciation of these basic
principles, the fullest life of man and woman cannot be developed.
Speeches and Writings of Mahatma Gandhi, pp. 425, 426 ; 20-2-1918
Harijan Education
Harijan education is the most difficult of all. Be it in the crudest manner
possible, a non-Harijan child receives some home culture. A Harijan
child, being shunned by society, has none. Even when, therefore, all
primary schools are open to Harijan children, as they must be sooner or
later and in my opinion sooner rather than later, preliminary schools
will be needed for Harijan children if they are not to labour under a
perpetual handicap. This preliminary training can be discovered and
tried in all the numerous Harijan schools conducted under the aegis of
Harijan Sevak Sanghas scattered throughout India. That preliminary
training should consist in teaching Harijan children manners, good
speech and good conduct. A Harijan child sits anyhow ; dresses
anyhow; his eyes, ears, teeth, hair, nails, nose are often full of dirt;
many never know what is to have a wash. I remember what I did when
in 1915 I picked up a Harijan boy at Tranquebar (in Tamilnad) and took
him with me to Kochrab where the Ashram was then situated. I had
him shaved. He was then thoroughly washed and given a simple dhoti,
vest and a cap. In a few minutes in appearance he became
indistinguishable from any child from a cultured home. His head, eyes,
ears, nose were thoroughly cleaned. His feet which were laden with
dust were rubbed and cleaned out. Such a process has to be gone
through every day, if need be, with Harijan children attending schools.
Their lesson should begin for the first three months with teaching them
cleanliness. They should be taught also how to eat properly, though as
I write this sentence I recall what I had seen during the walking
pilgrimage in Orissa. Harijan boys and grown-ups, who were fed at
some of the stages, ate with much better cleanness than the others
who soiled their fingers, scattered about the leavings and left their
places in a messy condition. Harijans had no leavings, and their dishes
were left thoroughly clean. Their fingers, whilst they were eating, were
after every morsel taken licked clean. I know that all Harijan children
do not eat so cleanly as the particular ones I have described.
If this preliminary training is to be given in all Harijan schools,
pamphlets giving detailed instructions for teachers in their languages
should be prepared and distributed, and inspectors of schools be
required during their inspection to examine teachers and pupils on this
head and to send full reports of the progress made in this direction.
This programme involves care in the selection of teachers and the
training of the present staff. But all this is well worth the attention, if
the Sangh is to discharge its trust by the thousands of Harijan children
that are brought under its care.
Harijan, 18-5-35
HIGHER EDUCATION
National Education
The national University* stands today as a protest against British
injustice, and as a vindication of national honour. But it has come to
stay. It draws its inspiration from the national ideals of a united India.
It stands for a religion which is the Dharma of the Hindus and Islam of
Mohammedans. It wants to rescue the Indian vernaculars from
unmerited
oblivion
and
make
them
the
fountains
of
national
opportunity of studying the Koran and the Muslims of knowing what the
Hindu Shastras contain. If the University has excluded anything, it is
the spirit of exclusion that regards any section of humanity as
permanently untouchable. The study of Hindustani, which is a national
blend of Sanskrit, Hindi and Persianized Urdu, has been made
compulsory. The spirit of independence will be fostered not only
through Religion, Politics and History but through vocational training
also, which alone can give the youths of the country economic
independence and a backbone that comes out of a sense of selfrespect. The University hopes to organize higher schools throughout the
mofussil towns, so that education may be spread broadcast and filtered
down to the masses as early as possible. The use of Gujarati as the
medium of education will facilitate this process and, ere long, the
suicidal cleavage between the educated and the non-educated will be
bridged. And as an effect of industrial education to the genteel folks,
and literary education for the industrial classes, the unequal distribution
of wealth and the consequent social discontent will be considerably
checked. The greatest defect of the Government Universities has been
their alien control and the false values they have created as regards
'careers'.
The
Gujarat
University
by
non-co-operating
with
the
Government has automatically eradicated both these evils from its own
system. If the founders and promoters stick to this resolve till the
Government becomes nationalized, it will help them to cultivate a clear
perception of national ideals and national needs.
Tagore, pp. 445-57; 17-11-1920
There
would
be
degrees
for
mechanical
and
other
Higher Education
Higher education should be left to private enterprise and for meeting
national requirements whether in the various industries, technical arts,
belles-letters or fine arts.
The State Universities should be purely examining bodies, selfsupporting through the fees charged for examinations.
Universities will look after the whole of the field of education and will
prepare and approve courses of studies in the various departments of
education. No private school should be run without the previous
sanction of the respective Universities. University charters should be
given liberally to any body of persons of proved worth and integrity, it
being always understood that the Universities will not cost the State
anything except that it will bear the cost of running a Central Education
Department.
The foregoing scheme does not absolve the State from running such
seminaries as may be required for supplying State needs.
Harijan, 2-10-1937
of
the
nation,
and
answer
the
varied
and
growing
of
knowledgenot
merely
chemistry,
medicine
and
overhaul and scrap that system and remodel it on new lines consonant
with the national requirement.
Today the youth educated in our universities either ran after the
Government jobs or fell into devious ways and sought outlet for their
frustration by fomenting unrest. They were not even ashamed to beg or
sponge upon others. Such was their sad plight. The aim of University
education should be to turn out true servants of the people, who would
live and die for the country's freedom. He was therefore of opinion that
University education should be co-ordinated and brought into line with
Basic Education, by taking in teachers from the Talimi Sangh.
Harijan, 25-8-1946
On New Universities
There seems to be a mania for establishing new universities in the
provinces. Gujarat wants one for Gujarati, Maharashtra for Marathi,
Karnatic for Kannad, Orissa for Uriya, Assam for Assami and what not. I
do believe that there should be such universities if these rich provincial
languages and the people who speak them are to attain their full
height.
At the same time I fear that we betray ourselves into undue haste in
accomplishing the object. The first step should be linguistic political
redistribution of provinces. Their separate administration will naturally
lead to the establishment of universities where there are none.
not
occupy
the
place
it
would,
if
Andhra
was
separate
through
the
medium
of
their
respective
provincial
dominion with perfect safety and honour, then in the nature of things
our education will take a shape altogether pleasing. Either people of
different faiths having lived together in friendship have produced a
beautiful blend of cultures, which we shall strive to perpetuate and
increasingly strengthen and shape, or we shall cast about for the day
when there was only one religion represented in Hindustan and retrace
our steps to that exclusive culture. It is just possible that we might not
be able to find any such historical date and if we do and we retrace our
steps, we shall throw our culture back to that ugly period and
deservedly earn the execration of the universe. By way of example, if
we make the vain attempt to obliterate the Muslim period, we shall
have to forget that there was a mighty Juma Masjid in Delhi second to
none in the world, or that there was a Muslim University in Aligarh, or
that there was the Taj in Agra, one of the seven wonders of the world,
or that there were the great forts of Delhi and Agra built during the
Moghul period. We shall then have to rewrite our history with that end
in view. Surely, today we have not the atmosphere which will enable us
to come to a right conclusion about the conflicting choices. Our two
months' old freedom is struggling to get itself shaped. We do not know
what shape it will ultimately take. Until we know this definitely, it
should be enough if we make such charges as are possible in the
existing universities and breathe in our existing educational institutions
the quickening spirit of freedom. The experience we will thus gain will
be helpful when the time is ripe for founding new universities.
Harijan, 2-11-1947
Students
Students May Forgo Higher Education
When it is difficult for millions even to make the two ends meet, when
millions are dying of starvation, it is monstrous to think of giving our
relatives a costly education. Expansion of the mind will come from hard
experience, not necessarily in the college or the school-room. When
some of us deny ourselves and ours the so-called Higher Education, we
shall find the true means of giving and receiving a really Higher
Education. Is there not, may there not be, a way of each boy paying for
his own education ? There may be no such a way. Whether there is or
there is not such a way is irrelevant. But there is no doubt that when
we deny ourselves the way of expensive education, seeing that
aspiration after Higher Education is a laudable end, we shall find out a
way of fulfilling it more in accord with our surroundings. The golden
rule to apply in all such cases is resolutely to refuse to have what
millions cannot. This ability to refuse will not descend upon us all of a
sudden. The first thing is to cultivate the mental attitude that will not
have possessions or facilities denied to millions, and the next
immediate thing is to re-arrange our lives as fast as possible in
accordance with that mentality.
Young India, 24-6-1926
Self-study
It is a gross superstition to suppose that knowledge can be obtained
only by going to schools and colleges. The world produced brilliant
students before schools and colleges came into being. There is nothing
so ennobling or lasting as self-study. Schools and colleges make most
of us mere receptacles for holding the superfluities of knowledge.
Wheat is left out and mere husk is taken in. I do not wish to decry
schools and colleges as such. They have their use. But we are making
altogether too much of them. They are but one of the many means of
gaining knowledge.
Young India, 25-5-''31
A Student's Difficulty
A
student asks :
Foreign Studies
I have never been an advocate of our students going abroad. My
experience tells me that such, on return, find themselves to be square
not
Congress
students.
Gandhiji
said
that
while
he
Harijan, 18-1-1948