Wasting away of ‘The Beautiful
Tree’
Vanam Jwala Narasimha Rao
Millennium Post, New Delhi (31-05-2020)
(A reflection of the indigenous Indian education
system before the unfortunate Macaulisation-root and stem-of the traditional
Indian education philosophy-Editor)
A WhatsApp message from my 74-year-old
relative-friend, and a brilliant non-practicing attorney, TVS Rao, quoting ‘Glorious
India’, revealed interesting and astonishing facts about India in the field of
education. This triggered interest in me to further probe about the genesis of
those harsh realities and connected facts. The result is knowing about the book
‘Beautiful tree’ written by Dharampal.
The
WhatsApp message among other things mentioned that, the then Governor of Madras
Presidency, Thomas Munro, in March 1826 submitted a report to the British
Government in India about the existence of one primary school for every thousand
population in India. The report also mentioned that, only 24% of students in
these schools comprised of Brahmins, Kshatriyas and Vaishyas whereas the so-called
Shudras constituted a Lion’s share of 65%! That shattered the general
impression widespread then, that the Brahmins dominated the education field.
Later
the Britishers conducted a nationwide survey to confirm the report. They wondered
to find that traditionally every village temple was sponsoring a school,
Gurukul or Mutt. On an average 35% of the revenue free land in a village
belonged to the temple. The temple rituals, festivals, fee for the teachers
were paid out of this income from the land. Apart from this, the village
temples served as nuclei of important social, economic, artistic and
intellectual functions. They were the library for not only Scriptures, Vedas
and Upanishads but also local literature inscribed on palm leaves.
Britishers found that sending a child on the ‘fifth day of the
fifth month of fifth year’ was widely believed to be an auspicious day in those
days. Some temples even provided ‘Anna Prasad’ to the students. Every family
used to send a boy for at least three years till he learnt to read, write and
do basic calculation. Subsequently he would learn the trade of his family
tradition. Girls were normally taught at homes.
Then came Thomas Macaulay who completely destroyed
the age-old Indian Education System. Britishers introduced English education
system in high schools. The fee was high and only few well to do families could
afford it. The literacy rate of India dropped beyond expectations.
‘Beautiful Tree’ was a book written by Dharampal on this subject.
Volume 3 in the book contains a chapter on indigenous education in the
eighteenth century in India. He took up
a job in British Library just to unearth the survey report or Britishers. When
he finally found the hidden report, he wrote the book. Essentially, Britishers
found the education system of India to be a ‘Beautiful Tree’. So, they found
out the roots of this tree and uprooted it!
Dharampal who lived between 1922 and 2006 was a
great Gandhian thinker, historian and political philosopher from India. His
pioneering historical research, conducted intensively over a decade, led to the
publication of works that have since become classics in the field of Indian
studies. His major work entitled ‘The Beautiful Tree’, the Indigenous Indian Education in the Eighteenth Century
published in 1983, provides evidence from extensive
early British administrators’ reports of the widespread prevalence of
educational institutions in many parts of India like the Bengal and Madras
Presidencies as well as in the Punjab.
The Beautiful Tree completely demolished the myth
that the Brahmins kept all the education for their own caste, and that Shudras
were kept in darkness and illiteracy. Yet, the myth is still repeated. It is
not enough to unearth the truth, it also has to be broadcast, and nobody should
get away with pretending it isn't there.
In the introduction to the book it was mentioned
that: the situation in India in 1800
is certainly not inferior to what obtained in England then; and in many
respects Indian schooling seems to have been much more extensive (and, it
should be remembered, that it is a greatly damaged and disorganised India that
one is referring to). The content of studies was better than what was then
studied in England. The duration of study was more prolonged. The method of
school teaching was superior and it is this very method which is said to have
greatly helped the introduction of popular education in England but which had
prevailed in India for centuries.
School attendance, especially in the districts of
the Madras Presidency, even in the decayed state of the period 1822-25, was
proportionately far higher than the numbers in all variety of schools in
England in 1800. The conditions under which teaching took place in the Indian
schools were less dingy and more natural. The teachers in the Indian schools
were generally more dedicated and sober than in the English versions.
The only aspect, and certainly a very important one,
where Indian institutional education seems to have lagged behind was with
regard to the education of girls. Accounts of education in India do often state
that the absence of girls in schools was explained, however, by the fact that
most of their education took place in the home.
Some decades after Dharampal’s work was published,
James Tooley a British educationist was given a copy of “The Beautiful
Tree” by an old book vendor in the old city of Hyderabad. While researching private schools in India for
the World Bank, and worried he was doing little to help the poor, Tooley
wandered into the slums of Hyderabad's Old City.
Shocked to find it overflowing with
tiny, parent funded schools filled with energized students, he set out to
discover if schools like these could help achieve universal education. That opened up new doors for Tooley who was already working on
cost-effective quality education with specific focus on the developing
countries. The result was his book titled “The beautiful tree: a personal
journey into how the world’s poorest people are educating themselves” published
in 2009. Tooley started working on how the old educational system in India was
financed. He also worked simultaneously on how educational system evolved in
Great Britain.
In his preface to the book, Dharampal mentioned that
a major part of the documents reproduced in the book pertain to the Madras
Presidency Indigenous Education Survey. The Beautiful Tree is not being
presented with a view to decry British rule. Rather, it is the continuation of
an effort to comprehend, to the extent it is possible for this author, through
material of this kind relating to the late eighteenth and early nineteenth
centuries, the reality of the India of this period: its society, its infra-structure,
its manners and institutions, their strengths and weaknesses.
An attempt has been made in the preface to situate
the information on the indigenous Indian education of the period in its
temporal context and, with that in view, brief mention is made of the state of
education in England until the beginning of the nineteenth century.
According to the author Dharampal, the title of this
book has been taken from the speech which Mahatma Gandhi had made at Chatham
House, London, on 20 October, 1931. He had said: “the British administrators,
when they came to India, instead of taking hold of things as they were, began
to root them out. They scratched the soil and began to look at the root, and
left the root like that, and the, ‘beautiful tree’ perished.
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