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The world's a stage of contrasts. On one side are people who parade their caste-pride, while on the other are people who do their bit to de-root caste from the minds of the younger generation. Two such teachers in Tamil Nadu are being awarded for their work to create a caste-sensitive classroom in their respective educational institutions.
Ansar Ali, a government school teacher and V Senthamil Selvi, Principal of Raja Serfoji Government College, Thanjavur, have been selected for the ‘Nikari Award 2019’ by Manarkeni Research Journal for promoting equality in the classroom.
For Ansar Ali, a teacher at the Government High School in Udayalur, Thanjavur district, caste is something that needs to be addressed very often and in a casual manner in classrooms.
“I taught history for middle school before I was promoted as a maths teacher for high school classes. So I got a lot more opportunities to talk about caste and social inequality earlier,” he says, adding that his new role as maths teacher has definitely limited his chances of talking about caste. “I still do that in a casual manner,” he points out.
Born and brought up in a village named Avaniyapuram near Kumbakonam in Thanjavur district, Ansar Ali’s father was a school teacher as well and his mother, a home-maker. “I sense that many times some students feel superior to others because of their caste. I keep saying, casually, that all of us are equal so that it becomes ingrained in them from an early age,” he says.
For professor V Senthamil Selvi, the Principal of Raja Serfoji Government College in Thanjavur, looking beyond caste is a part of her regular duty as a teacher.
“I feel like I have been helping out marginalised students since the day I started teaching. I consider it the duty of a teacher to help students from marginalised backgrounds get better opportunities in life,” she explains.
Senthamil Selvi was born in a village near Orathanadu in Thanjavur district and finished her education in government schools and colleges.
“I was just doing what I am supposed to do as a teacher. I haven’t done anything special,” she reiterates.
Speaking to TNM about the award, D Ravikumar, the Editor of Manarkeni Research Journal and the MP from Villupuram constituency, says that the suicide of a Dalit student named Senthil Kumar in Hyderabad Central University in 2008 prompted him to analyse the role of teachers in removing caste-based discrimination among students.
“Every year since 2013, an independent jury peruses the applications and chooses two candidates who fit the criteria – one from a school and one from a college. After the selection, our team also conducts background verifications to confirm their credentials. The only criterion to apply was that the teachers must be non-Dalits. We wanted to recognise teachers from dominant castes who encourage caste equality inside educational institutions,” he says.
The award consists of a memento, a citation and Rs 10,000 cash.
(Published in an arrangement with The News Minute.)
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