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For most of the 142
million people of this country, the Freedom Movement and Partition
are parts of a dim history, gleaned from the faint memories of relatives
and from school textbooks. Whatever we learn as students is coloured
by someone else's perception and we are never allowed the luxury
of interpreting events ourselves. As Pakistan and India teeter on
the edge of war, it is important to understand the causes of our
enmity.
Krishna Kumar, a professor at Delhi University, has undertaken
a historiographical study of the Freedom Movement. His book, Prejudice
and Pride, compares the ways in which a shared history is presented
in Pakistani and Indian school textbooks. This is the first work
of its kind, and shall hopefully spawn more interest in the subject.
Kumar talks of how a nation's ideology is imparted to its young
through education. Arranging the book topically, he looks at texts
from various state and privately run schools in India and Pakistan
and analyses the manner in which they present what are essentially
the same facts. Kumar begins by talking of the challenges schools
face in teaching history to children that have already been socialised.
He thus also considers Indian and Pakistani societies and their
separate concerns for teaching the young. India claims to be a secular
society and in its texts tends to play down Hindu-Muslim violence
during the Freedom Struggle. Pakistan, with its policy of Islamisation,
shows how the two religious groups have always been in conflict.
Education is seen as a way of imparting a national identity to the
young. Heroes and villains are thus constructed in the narrative
of the past. Gandhi, accorded near-deity status in Indian texts,
is given little importance in Pakistani textbooks. Pakistan's hero,
Jinnah, is similarly given little status in Indian textbooks. Going
through various school textbooks, Kumar shows how both countries
distort, play down or simply ignore certain historical facts in
order to present students with a certain image of the past. Pakistani
texts, for example, speak of the 1857 rebellion as the last concerted
effort by Muslims to regain their position of power in India. Indian
texts speak of it as a revolt by a tired populace against a common
enemy.
Kumar notes how state-run schools present a more doctored version
of history to their students than elite public/private schools.
Children attending elite schools are therefore likely to get a more
balanced view of history than their poorer counterparts. In the
last section of his book, Kumar cites essays written by Pakistani
and Indian school children. Both groups, especially those from elite
schools in their respective countries, believe that war is wasteful
and futile and that India and Pakistan should learn to live peacefully
with each other. The children, not fully indoctrinated in the language
of nationhood, speak freely of war, Kashmir, the Independence struggle,
Partition and cricket. The idea of Pakistan - having a separate
nation for Muslims is debated by children in both countries, and
Indian children unequivocally write of Pakistan with a certain sadness.
In his introduction, Kumar speaks of the "iron curtain"
separating India and Pakistan, a curtain so thick that each side
sees only what it wants of the other. Neither Pakistan nor India
are willing to study and understand each other. When necessary,
opinions rather than information are sought to validate preconceived
ideas of the other. It is strange that countries so hostile know
so little about each other. Kumar ventures that physical proximity
and cultural similarities, as well as a shared history, are the
reason for this indifference. Indians view Pakistan as a former
part of their whole, and as such undeserving of separate study.
It is telling that Indian school history ends with Partition and
Independence in 1947. According to the Indians, Pakistan was wrenched
away from the womb of Mother India. The resentment and hurt is still
fresh in Indian minds, as evinced by school children's essays, included
in Kumar's book.
Prejudice and Pride is a well-written, analytical book. It forces
readers to evaluate their understanding of a common history, and
to see it from the perspective of the other, demonised side. Kumar's
attempt to look at the school histories fairly and without undue
bias is commendable. However, as a product of the Indian system,
he has been raised with certain beliefs and opinions. These manifest
themselves in his style when writing of Pakistani textbooks' shortcomings.
On the whole, however, Kumar has taken a huge step towards understanding
Pakistan and India's differing views. For countries with such a
shared past, it is imperative to make sense of it together. As the
Hutus and Tutsis understood after their genocidal war in Rwanda,
to live together in peace, one must first come to terms with history.
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