writeontop: What Young India does not Want: I am a regular viewer of Just Books that is telecasted on NDTV and it was a pleasant surprise to watch Hon’ble MP from Kendrapada, Od...
Sunday, August 12, 2012
Saturday, August 11, 2012
What Young India does not Want
I am a regular viewer of Just Books that
is telecasted on NDTV and it was a pleasant surprise to watch Hon’ble MP from
Kendrapada, Odisha Mr. Baijayant Panda and Hon’ble MP from Thiruvananthapuram,
Kerala Mr. Sashi Tharoor on the panel to discuss about Chetan Bhagat's new book
"What Young India Wants". This show prompted me to write a blog about
the topics that were being debated in the panel discussion.
I haven't read the book and hence wouldn't
comment on it. While Mr. Bhagat said that young Indians only care about a good
job and their love life which is not entirely wrong; it is just one part of the
whole story. It holds true for those fortunate young Indians who were blessed with
good genes and a good background and had the privilege of access to decent
educational institutions. But as Mr. Tharoor rightly pointed out what about the
millions who are not fortunate enough to go to schools? I am not very
sure about those people and I can only hope these young people who are also a
part of the India growth story don't have a defeatist attitude towards life.
The household help who comes to our house
and that of our neighbours slogs for more than 10 hours a day so that her son
and her daughters can wear decent cloths and she can buy books and notebooks
for them and pay for their private tuition. I am sure many such young people
who pass out of schools and colleges with low grades are unemployable and the
matter of concern is these young people don't have a clue what they want to do
in life and that's where the problem begins. There is nobody who is there to
guide these people and nobody seems to have the time to bother about them.
I have seen and observed many a times that
people like us (me included) think that these people are born poor and would
die as poor and as destitute. We don't even bother to think that they have
their own lives to live, that the waiter who serves us at the restaurant likes
good food as much as we do, that the household help who comes to our house
likes watching movies, that the chauffeur who takes us around aspires that
someday he would also own a bike or a car.
Talking about higher education, Mr. Panda
pointed out that India produces the lowest number of Phd holders in the world.
Most young Indians view higher education as a short cut to a good life and
selection of colleges and Universities is based on campus offers and pay
packages and not on the background of the faculty and the strong research
background the institution holds. It is so because very few parents encourage
their children to get doctorate or post doctorate degrees. They are more
concerned about the company that the sons and daughters of their relatives,
neighbors and colleagues have got into and the high packages that these young
people are drawing. The only thing that a student pursuing higher education is
bothered about during the final years of B.Tech,M.Tech,MBBS or MBA or other
professional or general course , thanks to his
circumstances and pressure from family and peers, is a good job and a good
pay package. How can he/she even think of a Doctorate degree under such circumstances
where he/she has been made to feel that the sole purpose of higher education is
a good job and higher salary that would ultimately lead to higher social status
?
I cannot say much about politics because I
never seen politics from close quarters. But I can say that not every young
Indian despises politics or politicians. But today’s young Indian is getting a
very wrong signal as far as politics and politicians are concerned and this
needs to change. Young Indians residing in villages have seen and observed
that the local politician is the most influential person who can get things
done. Today’s politicians are viewed as someone who has power and financial
backing of influential people in the society and they can get things done for
something in return. This very thought has done more damage to the image of
politicians than any other thing in the past and the present. To me it seems
like offering prasad at the temple and bribing the priest in the form of
dakshina so that the lord may grant all their wishes.
Today’s young Indian has also observed
that getting into politics and fighting elections as an independent candidate
is by no means an easy task and this can be compared to the days of License raj
when businessmen had to fight intense red tapeism to set up
legitimate businesses. They see that only those young people do well in
politics who are members of various regional or national political parties and
who inherit the political legacy of their fathers, uncles and grandfathers.
Dynasty politics is one of the single biggest deterrents and it is one of the
major reason as to why today’s young Indian is distancing himself/herself from
politics and politics is being termed as ‘dirty’. I can cite examples of many
national and regional parties to prove my point. Be it the Congress party at
the Centre; the Samajwadi Party in UP; NCP and Shiv Sena in Maharashtra; DMK in
Tamil Nadu; BJD in Odisha ; the TDP and YSR Congress in Andhra Pradesh ; the
Akali Dal and INLD in Punjab and Haryana respectively – all these parties have
thrived upon and indeed perfected the art of dynasty politics.They have even
created a sort of a successful template for other to emulate.
Young Indians certainly don't want this. I
am not as sure as Mr. Chetan Bhagat as to what young Indians want but I can
only say a few things about what young Indians certainly don’t want. Young
Indians don’t want a society which is divided on the basis of caste, colour and
creed. Young Indians certainly don’t want a society where one’s caste becomes
the basis of selection for a certain job and an institution while merit takes a
back seat. Young Indians certainly don’t want to go to schools and colleges that
are run by the state governments and private institutions which merely make
them literate rather than educating them. Young Indians don’t want to vote for
political parties that merely view them as vote bank and not as the future of
the country. Young Indians don’t want to work for organizations and people who
think that they are doing a big favour by employing these bright young people
and can treat people in any way as it pleases them because they are being paid
to work. Young Indians don’t want to be part of a governance system that
doesn’t hold those people accountable whose primary job is to find ways to
improve the lives of people whom they represent in the Vidhan Sabhas, the Lok
Sabha and the Rajya Sabha.
I think perhaps the best way to sum up my views
is to quote one of my favorite singers of all times – Bono who had said, “This is a time for bold measures.
This is the country, and you are the generation.”
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