Jadavpur University: Upholding The Culture Of Resistance And Dissent For Decades

A look at the movements Jadavpur University has spearheaded and taken part in, over the years

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A look at the movements Jadavpur University has spearheaded and taken part in, over the years

Campus protests and violence have resurfaced from time to time at Jadavpur University, ever since the times of the Naxalbari movement of the late 1960s. The most recent instance of this was the protests by some students against the entry of Union Minister Babul Supriyo on 19 September into the campus, leading to unprecedented violence—vehicles and shops were torched, while university property like furniture and windows were destroyed allegedly by rampaging ABVP supporters. But the students of the university, inspired by events and ideologies, have often believed in speaking truth to power. Many former students are very proud of this culture and are heard supporting it vociferously on social media.

An alumnus traces Jadavpur University’s pivotal student movements. 

  • Back in the late 1960s, the Naxalbari movement found sympathizers amongst institutions in Kolkata—Presidency College and Jadavpur University among them. The spirit of the students’ movement in the Paris of 1968 also resonated with the students, and influenced their activism. Things, however, took an ugly, violent turn in the 1970 when the then vice-chancellor (VC) of JU, Gopal Sen, was killed on the day before his retirement near his campus residence, for not giving in to the call of Naxal students to boycott the exams. Even though the Naxal movement lost steam in the next two years, the effect was long-lasting, and the two institutions continued to be spaces of fervent political activities, debates, discussions and dissent. 
  • Jadavpur University continued to see protests through the decades, often organized by student and teacher unions as well. For in...
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