CHAPTER FOUR
AT SCHOOL (1)
I was nearing my fifth birthday (January, 1902) when
I was told I would be sent to school. I do not know how
other children have felt in similar circumstances, but I was
delighted. To sec your elder brothers and sisters dress and
go to school day after day and be left behind at home simply
because you are not big enough-not old enough—is a gall-
ing experience. At least, so I had felt, and that is why I was
overjoyed.
It was to be a red-letter day for me. At long last I was
going to join the grown—up respectable folks who did not
stay at home except on holidays. We had to start at about 10
a.m. because the classes commenced exactly at 10 a.m. Two
uncles of about the same age as myself were also to be ad-
mitted along with myself. When we were all ready, we began
to run towards the carriage which was to take us to school.
Just then, as ill-luck would have it, I slipped and fell. I was
hurt and, with a bandage round my head, I was ordered to
bed. The rumbling of the carriage wheels grew fainter in the
distance. The lucky ones had gone, but there I lay with dark-
ness staring me in the face and my fond hopes dashed to the
ground.
Twenty—four hours later I found solace.Ours was
a missionary school1
meant primarily for European and
Anglo—Indian boys and girls with a limited number of
seats (about 15 per cent) for Indians. All our brothers and
sisters had joined this school, and so I did. I do not know
why our parents had selected this school, but I presume it
was because we would master the English language better
and sooner there than elsewhere, and knowledge of English
had a premium in those days. I still remember that when
I went to school I had just learnt the English alphabet and
no more. How I managed to get along without being able
to speak a word of English beats me now. I have not yet
forgotten one of my first attempts at English. VVe had been
given slate pencils and told to sharpen them before trying
to write. Mine was done better than that of my uncle; so I
pointed that out to our teacher by saying, “Ranendra mot2
I shor3
”-- and thought that I had talked in English. Our
teachers were Anglo—Indians (and mostly ladies) with the
exception of the headmaster and headmistress, Mr and Mrs
Young, who had come out from England. Most of our teach-
ers we did not fancy. Some like Mr Young we feared, though
we respected, for he was too liberal with his cane. Some like
Miss Cadogan we tolerated. Others like Miss S. we posi-
tively hated and would cry ‘Hurrah’ if she ever absented
herself. Mrs Young we liked, but Miss Sarah Lawrence who
was our first teacher in the Infant Class we loved. She had
such a sympathetic understanding of the child’s mind that
we were irresistibly drawn towards her. But for her, I doubt
if I would have got on so easily at a time when I was unable
to express my•• self in English.
Though the majority of the teachers and pupils were
Anglo—Indians, the school was based on the English
model and run on English lines, as far as Indian condi-
tions would permit. There were certain things we did learn
there which we would have missed in an Indian school.
There was not that unhealthy emphasis on studies which
obtains in Indian schools. Outside studies, more attention
was given to deportment, neatness, and punctuality than
is done in an Indian school. In the matter of studies, the
students received more individual attention at the hands of
their teachers and the daily work was done more regularly
and systematically than is possible in an Indian school. The
result was that practically no preparation was needed when
an examination had to be faced. Moreover, the standard of
English taught was much higher than that of Indian schools.
But after giving due consideration and credit to all this, I
doubt if I should today advise an Indian boy to go to such a
school. Though there was order and system in the education
that was imparted, the education itself was hardly adapted
to the needs of Indian students. Too much importance was
attached to the teaching of the Bible, and the method of
teaching it was as unscientific as it was uninteresting. We
had to learn our Bible lessons by heart whether we under-
stood anything or not, as if we were so many priests memo-
rizing the sacred texts. It would be no exaggeration for me
to say that though we were taught the Bible day in, day out,
for seven long years, I came to like the Bible for the first
time several years later when I was in College.
There is no doubt that the curriculum was so framed
as to make us as English in our mental make—up as
possible. We learnt much about the geography and history
of Great Britain but proportionally little about lndia—-and
when we had to negotiate Indian names, we did so as if
we were foreigners. We started our Latin declensions—
—‘bonus, bona, bonum’—rather early and did not have to
be bothered about our Sanskrit declensions———‘Gajah,
Gajow, Gajah’—till we had left the P. E. School. When it
came to music, we had to train our ears to ‘Do, Ray, Me.
Fah’ and not to ‘Sah, Ray, Gah, Mah’. The readers contained
stories and anecdotes from English history or fairy tales
which are current in Europe and there was not a word in
them of Indian origin. Needless to add, no Indian language
was taught4
and so we neglected our mother-tongue alto-
gether until we joined an Indian School.
It would be wrong to conclude from the above that we
were not happy at school. On the contrary. During the first
few years we were not conscious at all that the education
imparted was not suited to Indian conditions. We eagerly
learnt whatever came our way and fell completely in line
with the school-system, as the other pupils did. The school
had a reputation for turning out well-behaved boys and
girls, and we tried to live up to it. Our parents, I think, were
on the whole satisfied with our progress. With the school-
authorities our stock was high, because the members of
our family were generally at the top in whichever class they
happened to be.
Sports naturally came in for some amount of atten-
tio11, but not as much as one would expect in a school run
on English lines. That was probably due to the fact that our
headmaster was not much of a sportsman himself. He was a
unique personality in many ways and strong-willed-—and
the stamp of his character was visible everywhere within the
precincts of the school. He was a stern disciplinarian and
a great stickler for good behaviour. In the Progress Report
marks were given not only for the different subjects but also
for (1) Conduct, (2) Deportment, (3) Neatness,
(4) Punctuality. No wonder therefore that the boys
and girls turned out were well-mannered. For misbehaviour
or indiscipline, boys were liable to be flogged5
with a cane.
but only two of the teachers had this authority-—the head-
master and his worthy spouse.
Mr Young had several idiosyncrasies, however, and
many were the jokes we would have at his expense. He had
an elder brother, a bachelor and a missionary with a venera-
ble beard, who was exceedingly fond of children and would
love to play with them. To distinguish our headmaster from
his elder brother, we nicknamed him “Young Young”, the
latter being called “Old Young”. Mr Young Young was very
sensitive to cold and even on a warm day he would shut the
windows lest the draught should come in. He would fre-
quently warn us about the risk of catching cold and getting
cholera therefrom. lf he ever felt out of sorts, he would take
such a stiff dose of quininc as would make him almost deaf.
After he had lived twenty years in the country, he could
speak hardly a word in the local dialect and never eared to
go in for sight-seeing or touring. If the caretaker forgot to
put something on his table, Mr Young would ring for him,
point to the thing wanted, but, unable to scold him in the
local dialect, would content himself with glaring at him and
then muttering, “All this ought to have been done before”. If
a messenger brought in a letter and Mr• Young wanted to
ask him to wait, he would run up to his wife, get the correct
words from her, and go on repeating them till he was able to
come out and throw them at the man.
With all this our headmaster was a man who bore
himself with dignity and poise and commanded our re-
spect, though it was tinged with fear. Our headmistress was
a motherly lady who was universally liked. And I must say
that there was never any attempt to influence unduly our
social and religious ideas. Things went on smoothly for
some years and we seemed to have fitted into our milieu
splendidly, but gradually there appeared a rift within the
lute. Something happened which tended to differentiate us
from our environment. Was it the effect of local causes or
was it the echo of larger socio-political disturbances; that is
a poser I shall not answer for the present.
To some extent this differentiation was inevitable,
but what was not inevitable was the conflict that arose out
of it. We had been living in two distinct worlds and as our
Young was very sensitive to cold and even on a warm day
he would shut the windows lest the draught should come in.
He would frequently warn us about the risk of catching cold
and getting cholera therefrom. lf he ever felt out of sorts, he
would take such a stiff dose of quininc as would make him
almost deaf. After he had lived twenty years in the country,
he could speak hardly a word in the local dialect and never
eared to go in for sight-seeing or touring. If the caretaker
forgot to put something on his table, Mr Young would ring
for him, point to the thing wanted, but, unable to scold him
in the local dialect, would content himself with glaring at
him and then muttering, “All this ought to have been done
before”. If a messenger brought in a letter and Mr• Young
wanted to ask him to wait, he would run up to his wife, get
the correct words from her, and go on repeating them till
he was able to come out and throw them at the man. With
all this our headmaster was a man who bore himself with
dignity and poise and commanded our respect, though
it was tinged with fear. Our headmistress was a motherly
lady who was universally liked. And I must say that there
was never any attempt to influence unduly our social and
religious ideas. Things went on smoothly for some years
and we seemed to have fitted into our milieu splendidly, but
gradually there appeared a rift within the lute. Something
happened which tended to differentiate us from our envi-
ronment. Was it the effect of local causes or was it the echo
of larger socio-political disturbances; that is a poser I shall
not answer for the present.
To some extent this differentiation was inevitable,
but what was not inevitable was the conflict that arose out
of it. We had been living in two distinct worlds and as our
consciousness developed we began to realise slowly that
these two worlds did not always match. There was, on the
one hand, the influence of family and society which was
India. There was, on the other, another world, another
atmosphere, where we spent most of our working days,
which was not England, of course, but a near approach to it.
We were told that, because we were Indians, we could not
sit for scholarship examinations, like Primary School and
Middle School Examinations6
, though in our annual exami-
nations many of us were topping the class. Anglo- Indian
boys could join the Volunteer Corps and shoulder a rifle,
but we could not. Small incidents like these began to open
our eyes to the fact that as Indians we were a class apart,
though we belonged to the same institution. Then there
would be occasional quarrcls between English (or Anglo-
Indian) and Indian boys which would finish up with a box-
ing bout7
, in which sympathies would be mobilized along
racial lines. The son of a very high Indian official who was a
fellowstudent would organise matches between Indians and
Europeans at his place, and those of us who could play well
would join either side. I can also remember that we Indian
boys talking among ourselves would sometimes say that we
were fed up with the Bible and that for nothing in the world
would we ever change our religion. Then there came the
new regulations of the Calcutta University making Bengali a
compulsory sub ject for the Matriculation, Intermediate and
Degree Examinations and introducing other changes in the
Matriculation curriculum. We were soon made to rea lise
that the curriculum of the P. E. School did not suit us and
that, unlike the other boys, we would have to begin anew
the study of Bengali and Sanskrit when we joined an Indian
school in order to prepare for the Matriculation Examina-
tion. Last but not least, there was the influence of my elder
brothers who had already left our school and were prepar-
ing for the Matriculation, Intermediate and Degree Exami-
nations and who spoke to us at home of a different world in
which they moved about.
It would be wrong to infer from the above that I was
in revolt against my school—environment after I had been
there some years. I was there for seven years, from 1902
to 1908, and was to all intents and purposes satisfied with
my surroundings. The disturbing factors referred to above
were passing incidents which did not affect the even tenor
of our life. Only towards the end did I have a vague feeling
unhappiness, of mal Adaptation8
to my environment and a
strong desire to join an Indian school where, so I thought,
I would feel more at home. And strangely enough, when in
January, 1909, I shook hands with our headmaster and said
good—bye to the school, the teachers and the students, I
did so without any regret, without a moment ary pang. At
the time, it was quite impossible for me to understand what
had gone wrong with me. Only from this distance of time
and with the help of an adult mind can I now analyse some
of the factors that had been at work.
So far as studies were concerned my record during
this period was satisfactory, because I was usually at the
top. But as I did badly in sports and did not play any part
in the bouts that took place, and as studies did not have the
importance which they have usually in an Indian school,
I came to cherish a poor opinion of myself9
The feeling of
insignificance——of diffidcnce—- to which I have referred
before, continued to haunt me. Having joined the lowest
standard I had probably got into the habit of looking up to
others and of looking down upon myself.
Considering everything, I should not send an Indian
boy or girl to such a school now. The child will certainly
suffer from a sense of maladaptation and from consequent
unhappiness, especially if he or she is of a sensitive nature. I
should say the same of the practice of sending Indian boys
to public schools in England which prevailed and still pre-
vails10 in certain aristocratic circles in India. For the same
reason, I strongly condemn the move taken by certain In-
dians to start Indian schools run by English teachers on the
lines of English public schools. It is possible that some boys,
for example those who are mentally extrovert, may not suf-
fer from a feeling of maladaptation and may feel quite happy
in such an environment. But introvert children are bound to
suffer, and in that event the reaction against the system and
all that it stands for is bound to be hostile. Apart from this
psychological consideration, a system of education which
ignores Indian conditions, Indian requirements, and Indian
history and sociology is too unscientific to commend itself
to any rational support. The proper psychological approach
for a cultural rapprochement between the East and the West
is not to force ‘English’ education on Indian boys when they
are young, but to bring them into close personal contact
with the West when they are developed, so that they can
judge for themselves what is good and what is bad in the
East and in the West.
No comments:
Post a Comment