Is Student Politics In India A Waste Of Time?

There is a view that youngsters in our college campuses are whiling away their time in political activism

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There is a view that youngsters in our college campuses are whiling away their time in political activism

A slogan in the student movement shaking many parts of India today is ‘Don’t be Silent, Don’t be Violent’. This slogan is good politics. Students are learning about good politics (debate, discussion, tolerance and democracy), the politics of neutrality (look the other way) and bad politics (use of force, sycophancy, hatred of others, exclusiveness). They can make a choice.

Student politics had a niche during the Indian independence movement against the British. Institutions like Allahabad University, Aligarh Muslim University, Banaras Hindu University and others became invigorated by the freedom struggle. In 1942, when the Quit India movement was launched, university students, who joined the struggle, were jailed and punished.

This tendency intensified and widened in independent India. A number of political leaders were born based on their experiences in student politics, including jail terms. Clearly, student politics is part of ‘learning democracy’, asking questions to the establishment and speaking truth to power.

The process of politicization of Indian students could not be contained from the 1960s onwards as many universities and colleges began to be radicalized. Many students joined movements across the right, left and centre. Senior leaders tried to get student leaders from the universities into positions in the political landscape.

In the 1960s and ’70s, colleges and universities worldwide widened the horizon of the most acutely aware students and their teachers (for example, the anti-Vietnam War movement). Of course, there were different gradations in different universities, but through the 1980s, the political conversations and contradictions in the universities became more sophisticated and subtle. Discussions ranged from poverty, development to gender and more.

However, some politics became increasingly based on the interests of political parties. For example, Emergency ...

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