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Nestled amidst lush greenery, an illustrious centre of learning, the Visva Bharati University finds itself mired in controversy. It has been alleged that the university is breaking away from a 66-year-old tradition and handing out degree certificates without a convocation.
Founded by Rabindranath Tagore, Visva Bharati University was once the pride of the nation. Set in the sylvan splendour of Santiniketan in Birbhum district of West Bengal, it is approximately 160 kms north of Kolkata. This central-government-funded university’s alumni list includes luminaries like Satyajit Ray, Amartya Sen, Indira Gandhi and Gayatri Devi.
The university was given national importance by Mahatma Gandhi. In 1951 it was decided that the Viswa-Bharati Act be discussed in Parliament and that the prime minister would be the Chancellor of the University.
Has Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s inability to allocate time for Visva Bharati prompted this departure from tradition?
Acting Vice Chancellor Swapan Kumar Datta says:
A delay in receiving the graduation or post-graduation certificate can affect a student's education or job prospects.
For the last four years Visva Bharati has not been able to hold a convocation and as a result 15,000 students are yet to receive their certificates.
Could the Prime Minister not have nominated an eminent person to be present at the convocation like former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh had once done?
Once the Centre realised the Prime Minister’s busy schedule would not permit a visit to Visva-Bharati, the ministry of human resource development suggested that students should get their degrees within six months of having passed their examinations, with or without the convocation.
Viswa-Bharati decided to go ahead and begin the distribution process. Students who had an urgent request, were granted certificates within 24 hours.
It must be pointed out that like the Pondicherry University, Manipal University and Tezpur University, Visva-Bharati too continues to have an ‘Acting’ Vice-Chancellor though he assumed office in February 2016.
Some academicians believe that this too affects the morale of an institution and at times there are doubts about the authority of a person occupying the chair despite his capabilities.
With a student strength of 11, 000, Visva-Bharati needs the Centre's support to modernise its museum and its academic facilities in order to attract eminent faculty from India and abroad.
As a resident of Santiniketan says:
Visva-Bharati, Tagore's name for his university meant the communion of the world with India.
Sadly, today it is a shadow of the glorious dream its founder had once envisaged.
(The writer is a Kolkata-based senior journalist.)
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