Letter by IIT Kanpur Faculty to the President
To
The Honourable Dr. A.P.J Abdul Kalam,
The President of India
Rashtrapati Bhavan
New Delhi,
India–110 011.
26 May 2006
Respected Sir,
As members of the faculty of IIT Kanpur, an institution that is rated among the best technical universities in the country, we are appalled by the proposed policy of caste–based reservation for other backward castes (OBCs) that is being sought to be implemented in this and other IITs. We are committed to nation building and wish to contribute to make India an equitable and just society. However, we believe that such move at the present stage will be very injurious to the IITs. It will have devastating consequences to the culture of excellence cultivated over half–a–century by generations of dedicated and knowledgeable teachers and tens of thousands of brilliant students of all castes, creeds and linguistic and ethnic groups.
The undergraduate students of IIT Kanpur do not usually, or even often, come from wealthy and privileged backgrounds. The vast majority come from the smaller metropolises like Kanpur, Patna and Allahabad, or cities like Bareilly, and the moffasil towns and villages of Uttar Pradesh and Bihar. A typical example is the late Satyendra K Dubey, an IITK alumnus, whose murder in 2003 while working on the National Highway project got national media attention. He came from a small village in Bihar.
Most IIT Kanpur students thus overcome poverty, bad schools, and many adverse circumstances to compete in a gruelling entrance examination for the right to be here. Many of these students also belong to OBCs; how many, we cannot say, because the admission is blind to caste and indeed to every other criterion except ability. Thus the distinguishing mark of IIT students is not wealth, privilege, or birth, but dedication and talent.
Into such an environment the introduction of privileges accruing only to members of particular castes would be a travesty. Further, with no objective criteria yet laid down for defining backwardness, such privileges will seemingly be granted in perpetuity. This would be the very image of the caste discrimination of the past centuries that the policy purports to assuage. Past injustices cannot be redressed by further injustices perpetrated today. Backwardness is not determined by caste alone. It is clear for all to see that other factors like poverty, region and gender have greater adverse impact on the chances of a person becoming an engineer or a doctor. It therefore seems to us that, except in electoral terms, purely caste–based reservations make no rational sense.
However the point we wish to make here is not to argue for one set of criteria for reservations over others. Rather it is to argue that the best institutions in India should be the preserves of excellence, with proven performance as their only selection criterion. Such institutions serve to develop the "seed–corn" of the nation which can then be planted elsewhere to make the whole nation grow in strength and prosperity. Therefore think not of IIT students in terms of their castes, but of them only as India's best hope, as the future leaders of India who have been nurtured in an environment where only excellence matters, not caste, creed or ethnic origin.
This emphasis on merit must not be viewed wrongly as ivory–tower elitism in a country of millions of poor and deprived people. Rather it is a necessary strategy for ensuring that developing India soon catches up with the developed nations of the world, so that, in the long run the IITs are instrumental to raising the standard of life of all Indians, and shine forth as exemplars of development and emancipation in an environment of extreme challenges.
Even if Government insists on affirmative action programs for IITs, we are sure that the IITs can be trusted to evolve and implement such programs by themselves. After all, IIT Kanpur has had an exemplary record of implementing the SC/ST reservation in a supportive and pro–active way that became a model for all IITs. Such an approach to affirmative action will also be in keeping with the autonomous status given us by Parliament. We share the concern of the government for providing the young generation with good education and economic prospects. In fact, many of us, and our students, spend time in school education, health, and rural developmental projects outside our busy schedules. We could participate in major ways in innovative research in education, health, and grassroots work, and thus contribute significantly to affirmative action.
It would be most disastrous to impose a 27.5% quota on the IITs in an ostensibly "fair way" by increasing the number of seats. This would mean rapidly increasing the seats substantially. In recent years we have doubled our intake. So the IITs are already short of faculty, as few applicants meet our exacting standards of academic excellence. If a sudden increase of faculty is imposed on us by a drastic increase of seats, the entire academic standing of the IITs will be compromised, and they will go the way of so many universities before them.
Many institutions in India now have good undergraduate programs, but only very few other than the IITs can train students in the highly specialised engineering and scientific skills required in India if it is to become a developed country. So there has been a concerted effort in the IIT system to shift our focus to post–graduate education and to creating an excellent research environment. This was the direction provided by the IIT review committee and Government over the last decade. To this end we have been working hard to increase postgraduate intake and provide more time to faculty for research. A drastic increase in undergraduate strength will derail this effort indefinitely.
The IITs preserved their excellence over the decades when university after university fell prey to politics, corruption and inertia. At this moment, when the entire nation is on the verge of take–off to becoming a major economic power, when multinational companies are shifting their research and development centres to India because of the vast technical manpower here, let us not play with these great institutions and cripple them in the hour of their greatest utility.
We request you to reconsider the reservation policy, and do everything you can to preserve the IITs for the future generations of India and, indeed, for the very future of our country. Of all the educational institutions in India, the IITs have remained true to the mission assigned to them by Pandit Nehru. So let them remain free to flourish as the standard bearers of Indian science and technology which was, and should remain, their primary purpose.
Yours very respectfully,
the undersigned faculty of IIT Kanpur
1. Dr. Vinayak Eswaran Professor
Mechanical Engineering
2. Dr. Pankaj Jain Professor
Physics
3. Dr. V. Ravishankar Professor
Physics
4. Dr. Ajai Jain Professor
Computer Sci & Engineering
5. Dr. Bikramjit Basu Assistant Professor
Matrls & Metallurgical Engg
6. Dr. K. Srihari Associate Professor
Chemistry
7. Dr. Vinod Singh Professor
Chemistry
8. Dr. Bharat Lohani Assistant Professor
Civil Engineering
9. Dr. Pravir Dutt Professor
Mathematics
10. Dr. R. Prasad Professor
Physics
11. Dr. Sandeep Verma Associate Professor
Chemistry
12. Dr. Rajat Moona Professor
Computer Sci & Engineering
13. Dr. Jitendra Kumar Professor Material
Science
14. Dr. Govind Sharma Professor Electrical
Engineering
15. Dr. R. K. Ghosh Professor
Computer Sci & Engineering
16. Dr. Aprish Banerjee Assistant Professor
Electrical Engineering
17. Dr. Nitin Kaistha Assistant Professor
Chemical Engineering
18. Dr. A. K. Mallik Professor
Mechanical Engineering
19. Dr. Y. N. Mohapatra Professor
Physics
20. Dr. Peeyush Mehte Assistant Professor Ind. Management
Engg
21. Dr. Raghu N. Sengupta Assistant Professor Ind
Management Engg
22. Dr. Debabrata Goswami Associate Professor Chemistry
23. Dr. Bhaskaran Raman Assistant Professor
Computer Sci & Engineering
24. Dr. K. K. Saxena Professor
Humanities and Social Sci
25. Dr. Kameswari Assistant Professor
Electrical Engineering
26. Dr. Neeraj Misra Professor
Mathematics
27. Dr. Rajdip Bandyopadhyay Assistant Professor Chemical Engineering
28. Dr. Jayant K. Singh Assistant Professor
Chemical Engineering
29. Dr. K. R. Priya Visiting Faculty
Humanities and Social Sci
30. Dr. S. Biswas Professor
Computer Sci & Engineering
31. Dr. B. N. Banerjee Professor
Mechanical Engineering
32. Dr. S. Guha Associate Professor
Civil Engineering
33. Dr. Binayak Rath Professor
Humanities and Social Sci
34. Dr. Manas K. Ghorai Assistant Professor
Chemistry
35. Dr. R. C. Sharma Professor
Matrls & Metallurgical Engg
36. Dr. S. Sivaprakasan Assistant Professor
Physics
36. Dr. Yogesh M. Joshi Assistant Professor
Chemical Engineering
37. Dr. P. Sinha Professor
Biol Sci and Bioengineering
38. Dr. J. Ram Kumar Assistant Professor
Mechanical Engineering
39. Dr. N. N. Kishore Professor
Mechanical Engineering
40. Dr. P. K. Panigrahi Associate Professor Mechanical
Engineering
41. Dr. K. Muralidhar Professor
Mechanical Engineering
42. Dr. R. K. Thareja Professor
Physics
43. Dr. P. S. Ghoshdastidar Professor
Mechanical Engineering
45. Dr. Onkar Dikshit Professor
Civil Engineering
46. Dr. G. Neelkantan Professor
Humanities and Social Sci
47. Dr. A. K. Chaturvedi Professor
Electrical Engineering
48. Dr. B. Deo Professor
Matrls & Metallurgical Engg
49. Dr. D. Kundu Professor
Mathematics
50. Dr. P. Sircar Professor
Electrical Engineering
51. Dr. P. K. Bhattacharya Professor
Chemical Engineering
52. Dr. Goutam Deo Professor
Chemical Engineering
53. Dr. Prem K. Kalra Professor
Electrical Engineering
54. Dr. S. Qureshi Professor
Electrical Engineering
55. Dr. S. K. Choudhury Professor
Mechanical Engineering
56. Dr. S. P. Gupta Professor
Matrls & Metallurgical Engg
57. Dr. S. Sangal Professor
Matrls & Metallurgical Engg
58. Dr. Ashish Garg Assistant Professor
Matrls & Metallurgical Engg
59. Dr. S. C. Koria Professor
Matrls & Metallurgical Engg
60. Dr. K. K. Kar Assistant Professor
Mech Engg & Mat Sci
61. Dr. T. K. Sengupta Professor Aerospace
Engineering
62. Dr. Debopam Das Assistant Professor
Aerospace Engineering
63. Dr. H. Hatwal Professor
Mechanical Engineering
64. Dr. S. Gupta Chief Sci Officer
Adv Cent Mat Sci
65. Dr. Animangsu Ghatak Assistant Professor
Chemical Engineering
66. Dr. Anil Kumar Professor
Chemical Engineering
67. Dr. H. Wanare Assistant Professor
Physics
68. Dr. Anoop Singh Assistant Professor Ind
Management Engg
69. Dr. V. Raghavendra Professor
Mathematics
70. Dr. S. K. Chakrabarti Professor
Civil Engineering
71. Dr. R. Balasubramaniam Professor
Matrls & Metallurgical Engg
72. Dr. Binay K. Pattnaik Professor
Humanities and Social Sci
73. Dr. R. R. K. Sharma Professor
Ind Management Engineering
74. Dr. Amit Mitra Assistant Professor
Mathematics
75. Dr. Sharmishtha Mitra Visiting Faculty Mathematics
76. Dr. K. N. Rai Emeritus Fellow
Material Science Program
77. Dr. Achla M. Raina Professor
Humanities and Social Sci
78. Dr. S. Raychaudhuri Associate Professor
Physics
79. Dr. A. K. Agarwal Assistant Professor
Mechanical Engineering
80. Dr. B. D. Gupta Professor
Chemistry
81. Dr. Mohua Banerjee Assistant Professor
Mathematics
82. Dr. Sanjeev Garg Assistant Professor
Chemistry
83. Dr. Nandini Nilakantan Assistant Professor
Mathematics
84. Dr. Subrata Sarkar Associate Professor
Mechanical Engineering
85. Dr. C. V. R. Murthy Professor
Civil Engineering
86. Dr. R. Shekhar Professor
Matrls & Metallurgical Engg
87. Dr. I. D. Dhariyal Professor
Mathematics
88. Dr. Surajit Sinha Professor
Humanities and Social Sci
89. Dr. M. K. Kadalbajoo Professor
Mathematics
90. Dr. P. K. Mohapatra Assistant Professor Civil
Engineering
91. Dr. Bijoy Bomesh Professor
Humanities and Social Sci
92. Dr. B. Bhattacharya Assistant Professor
Mechanical Engg
93. Dr. U. B. Tiwari Professor
Mathematics
94. Dr. J. N. Moorthy Associate Professor
Chemistry
95. Dr. M. J. Rao Assistant Professor
Chemistry
96. Dr. G. Sengupta Assistant Professor
Physics
97. Dr. Joseph John Professor
Electrical Engineering
98. Dr. Ravindra Arora Professor
Electrical Engineering
99. Dr. V. Shankar Assistant Professor
Chemical Engineering
100. Dr. D. S. Katti Assistant Professor
Biol Sci and Bioengg
101. Dr. P. Venkitnarayanan Assistant Professor
Mechanical Engg
102. Dr. H. C. Verma Professor
Physics
103. Dr. Sanjeev K. Aggarwal Professor
Computer Sci & Engg
104. Dr. Sameer Khandekar Assistant Professor
Mechanical Engg
105. Dr. S. N. Tripathi Visiting Associate Professor
Civil Engineering
106. Dr. Lilavati Krishnan Professor
Humanities & Soc Sci
107. Dr. Kalyanmoy Deb Professor
Mechanical Engg
108. Dr. Arindam Ghosh Professor
Electrical Engineering
109. Dr. Deepak Gupta Research Scientist
Computer Sci & Engg
110. Dr. Ashutosh Sharma Professor
Chemical Engineering
111. Dr. Anjan Ghosh Professor
Electrical Engineering
112. Dr. Sudhir Jain Professor
Civil Engineering
113. Dr. Prabha Sharma Professor
Mathematics
114. Dr. Gautam Biswas Professor
Mechanical Engg
115. Dr. Manindra Agarwal Chair Professor
Computer Sci & Engg
116. Dr. C. Venkatesan Professor
Aeronautical Engg
117. Dr. Sarvesh Chandra Professor
Civil Engineering
118. Dr. Nishith Verma Associate Professor
Chemical Engineering
119. Dr. Aupam Saxena Assistant Professor
Mechanical Engg
120. Dr. S. Anantha Ramakrishna Assistant Professor
Physics
121. Dr. Mahendra Verma Associate Professor
Physics
122. Dr. C. S. Upadhyay Associate Professor
Aerospace Engg
123. Dr. Aparna Dar Assistant Professor
Mathematics
124. Dr. Rama Rawat Assistant Professor
Mathematics
125. Dr. N. Satyamurthy Professor
Chemistry
Ashutosh Trivedi

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Meena Om
THE MESSAGE OF PRANAM
TO ALL PATRIOTIC CITIZENS AND THE YOUTH OF INDIA
Awake! Arise!
The moment for transformation is hovering over our heads.
Today, only that movement will become a medium for transformation, which is based on truth, love and karm (right conduct at right time).
Nothing is going to be accomplished by following the shoddy dilapidated ways (lockouts, strikes, processions, sloganeering and shutting shops) shown by the so-called leaders. These cause chaos in everyday life disorienting the life of the common man, achieving little else.
In Kaliyug, the fight is between truth and falsehood. It is to be accomplished by being truthful. It is a war of the brain to be won by brainpower alone. This is the basis of the faith of the Pranam Movement. No revolution can bring about change until it is lead by someone who is truthful, who has done adequate sadhana for truth and has soul power. Insignificant opportunistic leaders can accomplish nothing. In India there is no dearth of truthful ‘penanceful’ human beings but they have to join hands for the benefit of the nation by surrendering their egos selflessly.
This may be a long drawn battle but it will be a decisive one because hypocrisy has seeped into the very bloodline of our politicians. Whoever manages to get a seat once thinks it to be reserved for his arrogant offspring. But now everyone’s truth is apparent, so without any delay we need to get organized. We have to show no-tolerance, non-cooperation with every falsehood.
The greatest power in a democracy is that of the vote. The correct use of this is to make deserving candidates victorious without the use of money and force. This is a Mahayagya in which everyone needs to participate according to his or her individual capacity. The warriors of the supreme weapon of Maa Saraswati – the pen, will have to leave all greed and selfishness to encourage true deserving individuals. The entire public and all intellectually capable citizens will have to side with truth fearlessly and without duality. There is a need to attack falsehood through words of wisdom and all other media such as TV, radio etc. We will not be party to or let others be party to a corrupt system. The war for change will have to be won with wisdom and hard work. This is the need of the hour and this is the truth.
This is Pranam Movement’s Mana Marg i.e. a path that cannot be denied.
Pranam is that source of power, directed by soul (pran) power, which is there to destroy imperfection and falsehood and ignite the dawn of a new awakening. Pranam is determined and all geared up to make India param bhumi – the greatest land and Jagat guru – the leader of the world.
Awaken! Victory will be ours by the blessings of all truthful evolved souls. Only True dharm, manav dharm and evolved beings will now come into the forefront. This is the message of time and the call of time. If you listen and are ready to work towards this you will be blessed. But if you do not listen, then you shall proceed towards untimely destruction because now the TIME WHEEL has turned towards the age of truth- Satyug.
Truth shall prevail.
Satyam ev Jayate.
Pranam
Meena Om.
02 Aug 2006, 08:17
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