Haridwar: Vice President M Venkaiah Naidu questioned those who accuse the government of 'saffronising' education even as he called for total rejection of the Macaulay system of education from the country. "What is wrong with saffron?", the Vice President said and advised that Indians must give up their "colonial mindset" and learn to take pride in their Indian identity.
The vice president made the remarks in his address after inaugurating the South Asian Institute of Peace and Reconciliation at the Dev Sanskriti Vishwa Vidyalaya here. Naidu also said the Indianisation of the education system is central to India's new education policy, which puts great emphasis on the promotion of mother tongues. "We are accused of saffronising education, but then what is wrong with saffron," he asked. Calling for rejection of the Macaulay system of education in the 75th year of Independence, Naidu said it imposed a foreign language as the medium of education in the country and confined education to the elite.
"Centuries of colonial rule taught us to look upon ourselves as an inferior race. We were taught to despise our own culture, traditional wisdom. This slowed our growth as a nation. The imposition of a foreign language as our medium of education confined education to a small section of the society, depriving a vast population of the right to education," he said.
Thomas Babington Macaulay was a British historian who played a major role in the introduction of English as the medium of instruction for education in India. "We should feel proud of our heritage, our culture, our forefathers. We must go back to our roots. We must give up our colonial mindset and teach our children to take pride in their Indian identity. We must learn as many Indian languages as possible. We must love our mother tongue. We must learn Sanskrit to know our scriptures, which are a treasure trove of knowledge," the vice president said.