Why I Was Expelled from Banaras Hindu University


Book Description

The book 'Why I was expelled from Banaras Hindu University in Varanasi, India is about how a parochial government led by Bhartiya Janata Party and its ideological parent Rashtriya Swayamsewak Sangh are bent upon destroying the academic environment of our campuses in an effort to take them over. This has happened campus after campus. Scholars have been made to leave, humiliated, events of organisations believing in ideology different from the Hindtuva ideology of RSS/BJP have been cancelled on campuses at last moment if they were lucky to get initial permission, students have been suspended, unqualified people belonging to RSS have been appointed to top positions, mythology has been paraded as history/science, research is sought to be controlled, etc., since the BJP government came to power in 2014. In 2016, I was expelled from BHU on charges that my teachings were anti-national, I was a Naxalite sympathiser and I had committed cyber crime by sharing the link of BBC documentary 'India's Daughters' which was banned by Government of India. I went to the Allahabad High Court. In spite of getting a wonderful order which upheld my fundamental right to freedom of expression and supported the idea of respect for diversity of thought by quoting none other than the founder of the University, Madan Mohan Malviya, the Vice Chancellor Girish Chandra Tripathi, whose academic credentials to hold this high post were suspect, did not let me return to campus. What is happening to our university campuses is part of larger exercise to communalise the society and polarise the voters. In doing so the fascist tendencies of RSS/BJP are killing all spaces of dissent, so essential for any academic activity. The BHU VC thought that the only reason why students needed a 24 hours internet facility was to be able to watch pornography. The mindset of people in power since 2014 has been anti-intellectual and is causing permanent damage to our academic institutions. The book has been written to share these concerns so that the fight against retrograde forces could be strengthened, not only to save the academic campuses but also the larger society. The liberal values of liberty, equality, justice, fraternity-sorority and the entire Constitution is under threat today. A basic question is confronting Indian society today, whether democracy will survive or not? It is hoped that the book will contribute in some way towards this larger struggle.




Civic Affairs


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Governance of Universities


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Calcutta Review


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Secular Democracy


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Curse of a Broken Soul


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Jyoti was unfortunate daughter of her own grandfather, who dumped her pregnant mother in a prostitution house at Banaras, India. A god man fell in love with her mother and married, adopting Jyoti as his own daughter. He gave good education to Jyoti. Jyoti married Raja, an ambitious business man from Thailand. He started creating big empire in world and kept many keeps abroad. Neglected Jyoti came to know about it. She kept Sohan, a small Jamindar from Banaras, and her hero of university days, as Yoga trainer and seduced him. She planed of creating a big memorial in Bangkok. Sohan started extracting money from Jyoti and created big Jamindari at his village. Rajan died early and Jyoti appointed Sohan as Vice President with aim to marry him. They could not manage business and it collapsed. Sohan deserted her and fled to India. She also came to India to marry Sohan, but he disowned her. The next man came in her life, cheated and made her beggar. She approached Sohan again but his family badly misbehaved with her. She cursed Sohan and family with her broken soul. What happened to Sohan and family after her curse? What happened to her life in India? Was her dream of a memorial got fulfilled? This book takes the readers deep into the lanes of Jyoti's tragic love stories and effect of her "curse" with her broken soul.







Parliamentary Debates


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The Calcutta Review


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