A
friend after reading my previous post about the Sonejis, where I had described how
Subhadra and I had, unlike the Sonejis, decided to move to a city to educate
our son Ishaan in a school, commented that this was a very unradical admission
on my part!! This has prompted me to do a detailed post on home schooling and
why we couldn't do it ourselves.
Home
schooling is undoubtedly the best way to educate children to grow up to
challenge the present destructive system. However, it requires a tremendous
commitment and discipline from the parents if this is to be done properly. Either
one or both the parents have to give time to schooling the child. In our case
this was not possible. Primarily because both of us were activists who did not
have any fixed working hours and also frequently went to jail. Once Ishaan was
born Subhadra had to give up on activism for some time to tend to him and I had
to shoulder the responsibilities of our organisation and also earn money.
Moreover, Subhadra who was a high school pass out only decided to use the
opportunity of tending to Ishaan to begin her graduate studies through distance
education which was a huge challenge for her. Just a few months after Ishaan
was born there was a massive crackdown on one of the organisations with which
we were associated which hiked up the legal expenses tremendously necessitating
me to do greater consultancy work to earn money. So unlike the Sonejis who had
stabilised their agricultural lifestyle on their farm and could both give
enough time to teach their children, we were in a very topsy turvy situation
ourselves and so we decided to move to the city and opt for traditional
schooling for Ishaan. Of course this schooling is of a very low standard and
does not impart a very good education. So both of us have given our inputs in
Ishaan's education over and above that he has received in his school but we
could not have done only home schooling.
There
was another aspect that Subhadra pointed out. She said that when it came to
earning money through consultancies I had to fall back on my school and college
education and the brand value of being an IIT graduate. Even the work that we
do is recognised because of the publicity that I have succeeded in giving to it
and this would not have been possible without the skills that I gained through
my formal school and college education. This is an important point because
effective activism cannot be carried out without adequate funds. The Sonejis
were concerned with living off their land at subsistence levels and were not
into activism that requires mass mobilisation, legal action, publicity and the
like. At that point of time we did not have any such agrarian plans and neither did we
envision that our son would take to a rural lifestyle like we had done. Thus,
we shifted to the city and opted for school education for Ishaan, supplemented
by our own inputs.
Our
colleagues in the Khedut Mazdoor Chetna Sangath, Amit Bhatnagar and Jayashree
Bhalerao, decided to start a residential school for Adivasi children in Sakar
village in Barwani district in 1996. They brought up their two children, Revli
and Sarang, along with the Adivasi students of that school which was an
innovative one in many ways. So in a way they were home schooled!! Their school
was only upto class eight. After that the students joined traditional schools
with a few continuing in the Adhaarshila school as teachers while studying for
their secondary and higher secondary level examinations. After class eight both
Revli and Sarang opted to go to traditional schools as they said that they
wanted to see what that education was like. That was the end of their home
schooling.
Our
son Ishaan has seen our work and life at close quarters and he knows that we
are anti-establishment people. On most days the discussions in our home are anti-establishment
with the American neo-imperialists coming in for the severest of critiques
regularly. Yet he has decided to become a computer scientist and one from an
IIT at that. Thus, he now has no time for a broader education and is solely
focused on getting a good rank in the IIT entrance examination one and a half
years hence!! The value that the IITs had had in our time when one got the best
technical education at a dirt cheap price has become considerably eroded because
even better education is available free online while the IIT education has become prohibitively expensive. However, this argument doesn't
seem to hold water with Ishaan and he insists that he doesn't want to follow an
anti-establishment path like we have done. So instead of reading Hemingway and Marx like I did in addition to science and maths when I was in high school, he spends his time solving math, physics and chemistry problems only!! This is what made me comment in the
earlier post that possibly home schooling would have been better for him.
However, Revli and Sarang, despite being home schooled in a bucolic environment
have been influenced by the strong consumerist socio-economic trend of the world in general
to opt for a life in the mainstream so the challenge of preparing our children
for an anti-establishment outlook, given the strong consumerist propaganda that
is being beamed at them is a big one.
The
Amish community in the USA is an agrarian community which has schooling only
upto class eight as it feels that is all that is necessary to lead an
agricultural lifestyle. They have an astonishing retention of 95 per cent and
only a very few opt out of the community to join the mainstream. The Amishes of
course are a religious sect and have a strong belief sytem backed by a self
sufficient economic base. So unless we have a strong belief system and a self
sufficient economic base to back it up it is difficult to retain children in an
anti-establishment mode once they grow up. The Sonejis, have such a system
albeit only for their own household. Whereas, Amit and Jayashree don't have one
as they are dependent on donations and funding and so are we. In my case, I am
even more of an anomaly as I earn most of my money by doing consultancies which
are dubious from the point of view of anti-establishment doctrine!! So it is
not surprising that our children have given short shrift to our
anti-establishment life styles and chosen to pursue careers in the
establishment!!
This brings me to the
content of the education that is being provided in the schools we run for the
Adivasi children. This is mainstream but with a smattering of
anti-establishment critique in it. For instance the children grow their own
vegetables on the farm in the schools as shown below.
The curriculum has a
strong link to the local society and economy. But at the end of the day we have
not been able to produce many anti-establishment proteges from these schools. Primarily
because we have not been able to set up a system that can challenge the
mainstream in all these years of activism. We had started off with such a dream
but it did not materialise because we didn't have the strength to establish an
alternative socio-economic system in the face of the powerful consumerist
capitalist onslaught, which through direct to home television and mobile
content propagation has reached every nook and cranny of this world.
4 comments:
A very candid assessment, Rahul. It also illuminates why it is difficult to maintain an anti-establishment soul while living in the midst of the establishment body. Incidentally, did in two cases the parents moved in one direction and the children currently at least in the opposite because the latter closely witnessed the struggles and difficulties the former faced?
No Sadanand in both the cases it is I feel a result of a realistic assessment by the children that anti-establishment work doesn't pay!! they just want to enjoy the fruits of being part of the looting class!!!
by "...doesn't pay", do you mean fruitless, leading nowhere?
no i mean in the sense that there is no money in it!! my son is particularly sharp and he tells me that i do all kinds of consultancies to earn money and fund my activism with that. it basically reflects the serious crisis of society that people who are anti-establishment face a major livelihood crisis.there is no sustainable economic support system for such people.
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