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Even as he wrote his final words, Rohith Vemula could not avoid mentioning science. He was fighting the battle against institutional discrimination through student politics, but evidently, at the heart of it all was his love for science. But for Vemula, and several others who have similarly perished, it is their passion for science which cost them their lives.
Activists say that across the science departments most professors are from the upper castes, due to which Dalit students face rampant discrimination.
On 24 February 2008, Senthil Kumar, who was pursuing his PhD in Physics at Hyderabad Central University committed suicide in his hostel room. At first, University authorities claimed that he died of a heart attack, but when his post-mortem revealed that he died of poisoning, the issue blew up. There was a political furore, following which a fact finding committee was set up under Professor Vinod Pavarala.
Pavarala’s findings were shocking and showed a thriving culture of caste-discrimination in the School of Science. In Senthil’s batch, four including him were not assigned supervisors. All of them were from reserved categories.
Under pressure to perform and with no guidance, Senthil failed in one of the courses, due to which he stopped receiving his fellowship stipend. Hailing from a poor family of pig-breeders in rural Tamil Nadu, Senthil succumbed to the pressure and killed himself. Two others who were not given supervisors left the program.
Pavarala’s report also stated that,
“it is a fact that most of the students affected by the inconsistencies and ambiguities in procedures were SC/ST students”.
More importantly, it also stated that,
“all the physics students that this committee could meet have reported their sense that the school was acting against the interests of the SC/ST students”.
The discrimination was intentional, students said.
Writing in EPW, the Senthilkumar Solidarity Committee summed up the reasons for his suicide, and one of them was “the exclusivity of pure science”.
Speaking to The Hindu in 2008, Senthil’s friend Thennarusu of HCU also said that the discrimination was “very high” in science branches, and that Dalit students had to bear bias and prejudices. Getting guides was very tough and no one would come forward to accept them as their wards, he had said.
And it is not just Rohith or Senthil, here are stories about Rejani Anand and Ajay Sree Chandra.
After Senthil’s death, university rules were changed to help Dalit students to continue receiving their fellowship stipends even if they have backlogs, but the discrimination still persists.
Thanks to the boom in private education institutions, the supply of seats in engineering colleges was high enough for Dalit students to get admitted. Due to social movements which have enabled the weaker sections to some extent, the number of professors and students in humanities and social science has increased in the past decades. But the gates are shut tight in pure sciences, say academicians.
Here’s a Caravan report about a student suicide in AIIMS.
In 2008, among those who took up Senthil’s cause was the then MLA from Dalit-party VCK of Tamil Nadu, D Ravikumar. It was at his insistence that a committee was formed to look into his death and the discrimination in the department.
The problem is even more difficult to solve in Central Universities since they are controlled by the Union government, thereby reducing immediate accountability, he adds. Further, students from other states do not find support due to parochial divisions.
Parthasarathi Mutthukkaruppan, Assistant Professor at EFLU in Hyderabad, points out that on the other hand, several Dalit students have been able to do well abroad.
What can be the solution to this? “I will not say reservations,” says Ravikumar, “Dalits need a fair reservation in University senates and managements. But more important is awareness about classroom discrimination. Unless we train teachers to be socially sensitive, the situation will persist.”
(Ramanathan S works with The News Minute.)
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