Wednesday, August 29, 2018

NBCC and the Ordinary Citizen

Redevelopment  cannot happen without either cutting or transplanting trees... Do we want people to live in slums?

This  quotation heads today's interview  on page 5 of The City Section, of  The Indian Express. with Anoop Kumar  Mittal, Chairperson cum Managing Director   of NBCC.  AK Mittal is currently conducting a tree census in Sarojini Nagar and pitches himself as the head of the National Building Construction Company, with a bleeding heart.

The less than three month old protest by a ragtag group of Delhi residents from all walks of life, protesting against  loss of  forest cover and the rampant  decimation of trees in the name of construction and redevelopment have brought matters to a head.

Ordinary residents of New Delhi, have usually been second class citizens in matters pertaining to allotment and use of public spaces. Year after year and decade after decade, master plans that shuffle just about everything come into place, allowing for an unholy nexus between the state and commercial builders.  A stay on  the cutting of trees  issued, by the Delhi high court,in colonies that were to be redeveloped has provided interim relief, putting the brakes on   NBCC's aggressive rampage and destruction of gorgeous, ancient trees in several colonies. 

 Does AKM's heart really bleed  for slum dwellers? Is he  the friendly face of a welfare state that is building inhabitants beautiful homes?  This is very  far  from the truth. A visit to  East Kidwai Nagar and the soulless construction that  now sits there, pretending to be a planned city  provides a testimonial, countering NBCC lies.

Here is another snap interview, conducted as a result of the dissatisfaction generated by  The Indian express interview. Since those interviewed are licensed to spin tall tales, it becomes necessary to counter this with a fictional interview where the truth can be told.


 Ordinary Citizen:  For whom and what does  your heart bleed AKM Ji?   How can we conceive  of a city without trees?


Anil Kumar Mittal: ..Look at New York, Does it have  any trees?

  OC: Excuse me AKM Ji..Have you not heard of New York's  Central Park?

 AKM: So what? CP has a Central Park too?

 OC: There is a difference in size, tree cover and usage,Nevertheless, you mention East Kidwai Nagar as a planned modern city. There seem to be too many commercial buildings in East Kidwai Nagar. Wasnt it a large housing colony for mid-level  government employees ?

 AKM:  Aap chahtey kya hain? We have built beautiful homes for senior government employees. Unki bhi koi status hoti hai. We want them to live in prime property, in luxurious homes

OC:  How many flats were there in Kidwai Nagar earlier?

AKM: There were over 2444 houses  earlier

 OC: How many flats do we have now where former residents will be relocated.?

AKM: We have given 210 Type II housing units. Very well planned with water harvesting. People can live without trees. They cannot live without cars.  That is why our new colonies will be redeveloped to have parking facilities for 40,000  cars. Yet people are complaining about our having  to cut  16,000 trees.

OC: Are trees not  our living heritage? Should we not aim for sustainable cities?

 AKM: Yes yes. So, we have made  beautiful concrete  trees, which will have no dead leaves and  no plant debris, so  no need to sweep and maintain the  public areas. Plenty of concrete birds and animals., will be placed around these trees.   Living species are pests. Cause too much nuisance.  This is real development, that we plan to sustain for 30 years.

 OC: Did you not say that we need to cut trees and transplant them because we do not want people to live in slums?

AKM: Absolutely.  To prevent slum like environment,  we have  built flats in higher categories.We have had enough of people living in prime  residential colonies, turning them into slums.  We are making beautiful houses  for beautiful people.

OC:  How do you explain the proposed  mall in Sarojini Nagar, or the plans for a WTC in Naroji Nagar? What happened  in these instances  to your plans of housing the city's millions?

AKM: Please don't be misguided. First you want redevelopment. Then you want beautiful homes.  Where is the money going to come for all this? We will build a mall and sell  off units. we will build a WTC and sell off units. Slowly we will collect the money. over a five year period.


OC: This sounds like social engineering. You have uprooted ordinary citizens living and employed in these parts, driven them away and ensured that they will never return. Do you think this is fair?

AKM: Arrey, what is your problem ? Are you an  urban  naxal?  Are  you threatening the developmental activity of the nation's capital?

No AKM JI. I am literate. I learnt  that a project from Tamil Nadu was  rehashed, cut and pasted and submitted as a proposal for Naroji Nagar, and that it was  hurriedly passed.
 
AKM: Isn't this a wonderful example of Unity in Diversity? The same blood and spirit, the same water and air and trees exist  through the length and breadth  of India That is why when we cut a tree we planted  fifty. Now we will plant five hundred.  JAI Hind.

 OC: When you are smashing and ripping up   the city to build anew  with our money,  should you not discuss  such important matters with us , the people?

AKM: Please stop this right now.  What do you people know about architecture or trees? Thanks to you all Urban Naxals embracing lemon and pomegranate trees I  will  have to measure the circumference of the only two real Indian trees , the  Neem and the Pipal. ? Why do we need any other trees anyway ? We can import  lemons and  all other  fruits we want from Israel. Foodhall is already stocking such good quality fruits. I do all my shopping there. You also do  the same please. Now please don't delay my work any further. It is of National Importance.





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Thursday, June 14, 2018

Now I Know What A Non-Khatai Is !

We were at the end of a long street, waiting to  to touch base with Rajender who was to escort us to the dargah and also take us on a guided tour of Fatehpur Sikri. The charming aspect of roads is that they have crossroads and intersections and we were parked in front of a ramshackle market with odds and ends and hawkers selling fruit and vegetables, small eating joints on either side. There were vendors with the  gazak and chikki and rewadi, winter ware that continues to delight, but the eye was also entranced by what looked like baked rose florets.

 I stepped out of the car and enquired as to what they were, thinking of their resemblance to what we called naun-khatai at New Delhi. The nankhatai is  usually a mix of maida and dalda  that continues to be made in bakeries all over North India. In Chandni Chowk the  dough is  kneaded in a plastic container and set to bake on a hot iron griddle on coals which is covered by a tin plate. The khatai,  warm and fresh from the griddle makes for   delicious morsels that shoppers and shopkeepers snack upon and are available off  cycle thelas that ply in the lanes.







I chose a vanilla flavour made with butter, and eventually  purchased  non-khatais for five rupees per piece. I carried them back to the car and distributed them, at that precise moment on a winter afternoon, when the sun feels a little bleak and the sky begins to  gray in shared anxiety. On contact with the mouth the  khatai  disintegrates into little khatai crumbs  that can be  slowly relished, munched and swallowed to allow ,   a comfortable warmth  to spread through one's being. A  cup of tea would  have  heightened the pleasure, but Rajinder had responded to our phone call and we headed in the direction of the monument.
 On our return  we stopped  on the other side of the road, at a larger stationary outlet and bought boxes of non-khatai to take back home to Delhi. All these years, I had imagined that these delicate biscuits were called nan khatai because they were made of maida in the same way as nans were. Innumerable local bakeries  at  New Delhi  which sell this  delicate biscuit always referred t it as nan -khatai.



 The nickel  finally dropped.  They were  termed non-khatai because no fermenting agent was used to make them, unlike the nan which requires a little bit of   be fermentation   before it can be rolled out and  baked into delicious crisp breads. Non khatai indicates a baked item that needs no fermentation.

 Odd, how language routinely fine tunes and  resets our understanding of both the everyday and the unusual. The non khatais on the road leading to Fatehpur Sikri are the largest  and most aesthetic  khatais I have ever seen.  They are also light, crisp and crumbly and  a great pleasure, both to view and eat. They definitely deserve a GI tag. Take a look and  try them out  if you are in the vicinity!




The GBM and its After-Math?

I attended the DUTA GBM yesterday because  well over a month had elapsed  since we received the  evaluation boycott call from the DUTA executive.  Serious evaluation requires us to examine  a  limited number of answer sheets over a reasonable period of time, and since I for example,  can  optimally  examine around  seventeen honours answer scripts in a day,  I was anxious to participate in a discussion which could review the evaluation blockade. Of course, if we are going to do eleventh hour evaluations, maybe we could formulate a"everyone will pass formula" or a "everyone gets  distinction methodology." Perhaps we could even take an aggregate of the previous two years and give our third year students  permanent provisional certificates, because I don't see how we will be able  to do justice to the evaluation process at this rate.

What is disturbing is that the moment this is voiced as work-related anxiety, one immediately becomes a fake warrior of  a particular political group. This was the response conveyed on my College Whatsapp group with accusations that  teachers who had participated in the evaluation boycott were being thrown to the wolves. This is astounding, because if we must  use such bizarre metaphors, students waiting to receive their  results are the people we are  actually throwing  under the bus. ( The fact of the matter is, wolves are really pretty noble creatures, so please let us stop  crying wolf ) 


I also don't think that because some farmers have trashed their crop and a few milkmen have emptied milk cans  on the streets, it becomes necessary for us to jettison our students. Yes, we mentor students and help them grow, but I don't think students should be equated with perishable goods. Also, I don't see how damaging student interest,  and saying that  harming only one batch  in the hope of  salvaging the futures of  generations of students becomes an  acceptable procedure. "The end justifies the means," is a terrible example to fall back on, especially when vulnerable, young people are involved.

The system of examinations we have in place is extremely problematic. So also is the system of evaluation and if recent results are anything to go by, we are now on par with CBSE , since  a combination of  the semester evaluation  and internal assessment  systems has succeeded in churning out  batches of outstanding students.

This aspect of our evaluation process, which has been reduced to a mockery, needs to be seriously examined. All of us are unhappy with the semester system, but as an academic body we have been unable to bring back the Annual Mode and put in checks and measures to make internal assessment a gold standard. To our chagrin, Himachal University, the newspapers tell us, has reverted to conducting its examinations in the  Annual Mode. Delhi University, meanwhile continues to shuffle its feet over very clumsily aligned and envisioned  syllabi, and  teaches and evaluates in Semester Mode. None of this is being discussed on platforms that matter.  

Yesterday's GBM was an eyeopener. After a few long drawn out speeches, one member proposed an out of turn closure motion. The President of the DUTA, for reasons best known to him (perhaps it was the excruciating hot weather) put it to mock-vote. This was followed  by considerable mayhem. Many teachers, who did not have any political affiliations never got a chance to speak. The closure motion became real and  absolutely no discussion  was allowed.

I was told by many people that the executive had decided the boycott  and not consulted the staff Associations. The executive had again voted and won 11:8 on the question of continuing the boycott.  When I asked about letters from over 25 Staff Associations  suggesting that the boycott be withdrawn, this was dismissed as not relevant, because had those members been really serious, they would have turned up for the GBM!

So I  understood a  few things from yesterday's GBM which i would like to place  on record: 
Certain procedures are irreversible, for a trade union movement to be successful. 

 I. If the DUTA executive takes a decision, then the decision must never be reviewed. ( trade unions follow the logic that  battles must be fought unto death)

II.  If the executive takes a decision on behalf of Staff Associations and does not consult them in the first place, then the Executive can never  ever  go back to the Staff Associations and ask for a resolution. Clause (1) comes into play.

 III . Students and must be  viewed as collateral damage.(as in the context of war, refer clause I) 

IV. Factoring in adequate time to carry out the evaluation process or drawing attention to it 
 is not a logical thought process. It is evidence of taking the high moral ground and reprehensible  because whenever there is a war zero-time comes into play. In such situations  trade unionists must not behave like educators because to do so is tantamount to  betrayal.( to the situation of war)

V. In a GBM, taking a stand as a teacher is both counterproductive and irrelevant. We must always take a position  that echoes the wishes of  one  political party that we  must compulsorily espouse. Although those who vociferously supported the  the four year program, now support  the evaluation boycott, they've probably got it  right this time.

VI. Speakers must hurl accusations and invective  at others. Without this modus operandi,  obfuscation  will not occur and the issue at hand cannot  be deflected.

 VII If there are other suggestions, like going back to evaluating scripts , and gheraoing the Vice Chancellor,  and garnering public opinion  at the ground level, these do not merit a discussion.

I hesitate to storm into the Exam Centre and begin the evaluation process, although I do sympathize with colleagues who are possibly doing so. It would be in the academic nterests of  the the DU  2018 Calendar, if the DUTA leadership would resolve this  post-haste instead of continuing the stale-mate.














Monday, June 11, 2018

Not to evaluate at all was never part of the boycott program

I am writing today to thank the decision making body of the DUTA for the brief respite granted to college teachers when they successfully implemented the examination boycott. For those, who are not in the know, Delhi University officially bowdlerized the examination system six years ago, when the semester system was brought in for all streams, compelling students to take examinations once in six months. Prior to this we had an annual examination mode, with year round assessment being tabulated through internal assessment, where students were evaluated on the basis of tutorials.

This was not exactly a fool proof system and internal assessment remained a flawed method as it also incorporated marks for attendance, the marking system was never standardized across colleges, and marks were invariably subject to multiple-level moderations. The internal assessment system was never reviewed or fixed for obvious glitches. Instead, it was quickly incorporated into the semester examinations as well. Evaluation work for teachers has doubled, as now they are required to evaluate answer scripts two times a year. Of course it is possible to argue that teachers are paid twelve months of the year, so they should have no problems about evaluating scripts twice a year. Our institutions are now allowed  to  function with little concern for the human condition.

The semester system has ensured that teaching cannot be done in the most productive months of November and December at New Delhi since colleges shut down teaching and move into preparatory leave mode in early November. Evaluating assignments and presentations and feeding in all this data along with student attendance is the mind numbing activity that occupies teachers at this juncture, which is followed up by evaluating a large number of examination scripts. The same process is then repeated in the even semester and in the grueling heat of May when hapless students finish with their papers, teachers are supposed to be a part of   the centralized evaluation of answer scripts.( the fact that extremely hot weather is the least productive for carrying out any kind of activity, is now documented by scientific studies) Science notwithstanding, when does a university teacher find a little space for recharging?

 The answer perhaps is that they don't need to recuperate but should soldier on in the interests of nation-building. Foe me, DUTA's call to boycott evaluation of answer scripts provided a restful interlude, in which one could take a well-deserved break from the relentless drudgery after class-room teaching that the university currently demands.

 As a union of teachers, we have been fighting battles in which our rights as teachers have been repeatedly truncated, by those in charge of previous university administrations. Pental pushed in the semester system by disregarding the considered opinion against it voiced by a majority of colleges affiliated to Delhi University and phasing it out over two years. When Dinesh Singh took office, he pulled off a mathematical coup by turning our decision making bodies such as the Academic Council and the Executive Council into a game of numbers. For the first time in the history of the university, numerical strength began to matter far more than ideas and 24 DUTA teacher representatives were viewed as miniscule, a numerical quantity to be easily quelled.

 Worse, we now battle a behemoth, much larger than all of us, that we can neither see nor address.So let us not delude ourselves into believing that we still possess the strength and power that characterized the DUTA in an earlier period or that conditions at the ground level are the same The University continues to be eroded of all value and stature and as teachers we have to protest, although the modes of struggle seem neither viable nor visible. Perhaps we need to remember that under these awful circumstances, DUTA movements  cannot operate as part of a grand plan.

 So let us participate in the struggles that can be undertaken and not begrudge them the odd photo-op in the June heat. Let us instead attend the GBM and chalk out further strategy. In any case, none of us had targeted for a zero year at Delhi University.  As teachers we are required to  factor in the lives of students who are graduating and those who are moving in and around. We would have eventually returned to the onerous task of correcting examination scripts. It is true that we don't have too much on our plate, but the coming of the monsoons raise hopes of better weather conditions to work in.