More

    Palshikar, Yogendra write to NCERT chief: We’ll sue if you don’t remove our names from textbook | India News


    Suhas Palshikar and Yogendra Yadav, former chief advisors for political science textbooks for classes 9 to 12, have threatened the National Council of Educational Research and Training (NCERT) with legal action if it fails to delete their names from the textbooks, The Indian Express has learnt.

    In a letter addressed to NCERT chief D P Saklani on Monday, Yadav and Palshikar said they were “shocked to discover” that more than a year after they publicly disassociated themselves from the textbooks in their current form and even requested Saklani to remove their names, the Council had yet again reprinted the textbooks with further revisions while still identifying them as chief advisors.

    The letter was written a day after it was reported that the revised version of the class 12 political science textbooks carried a pruned section on the Ayodhya dispute. As first reported by The Indian Express on Sunday, the revised textbook, which hit the market last week, does not mention the Babri Masjid by name, calling it a “three-domed structure”, and has deleted telling details from the earlier version, including the BJP rath yatra from Somnath in Gujarat to Ayodhya; the role of kar sevaks; communal violence in the wake of the demolition of the Babri Masjid on December 6, 1992; President’s rule in BJP-ruled states; and the BJP’s expression of “regret over the happenings at Ayodhya.”

    “Besides the earlier practice of selective deletions, the NCERT has resorted to significant additions and rewriting that are out of sync with the spirit of the original textbooks… The NCERT has no moral or legal right to distort these textbooks without consulting any of us and yet publish these under our names despite our explicit refusal. There can be arguments and debates about someone’s claims to authorship of any given work. But it is bizarre that authors and editors are forced to associate their names with a work they no longer identify as their own,” the letter states.

    “Both of us do not want the NCERT to hide behind our names to pass on to students such textbooks of political science that we find politically biased, academically indefensible and pedagogically dysfunctional… The new editions of these books that have been published with our names should be withdrawn from the market forthwith… If the NCERT fails to take immediate corrective action, we may be forced to take legal recourse,” the letter adds.

    Festive offer

    Last year, when Yadav and Palshikar had first disassociated with the textbook, the NCERT had emphasised its right to make changes based on copyright ownership and stated that the “withdrawal of association by any one member is out of the question”, given that the textbooks are the product of a collective effort.

    © The Indian Express Pvt Ltd

    An award-winning journalist with 17 years of experience, Ritika Chopra is the Chief of the National Bureau (Govt) and National Education Editor with The Indian Express in New Delhi. In her present role, she oversees the newspaper’s coverage of government/policy and education. She also closely tracks the Union Government, focusing on the politically-sensitive Election Commission of India and the Education Ministry. This includes investigative stories, many of which have forced the government to respond.

    Ritika joined The Indian Express newspaper in 2015. Previously, she was part of the political bureau at The Economic Times, India’s largest financial daily. She began her career with the Hindustan Times in Kolkata — her birthplace — in 2006 as an intern, moving to Delhi in 2007. Since then, she has been reporting from the Capital on politics, education, social sectors, and the Election Commission of India. … Read More

    First uploaded on: 17-06-2024 at 18:01 IST





    Source link

    Latest articles

    Related articles

    Discover more from Blog | News | Travel

    Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

    Continue reading