‘Lokmanya’ Tilak is militant for J&K’s
PSC
"Swarajaya
Mera Janam Sidh Adhikar Hai, Main Issay Lekar Rahoonga (Swaraj is my birthright
and I shall have it)", was the popular slogan given by the revered freedom
fighter Lokmanya Bal Gangadhar Tilak, which motivated millions of India to join
the freedom movement. However, for Jammu and Kashmir Public Service Commission
(PSC), Bal Gangadhar Tilak was a militant.
A
question asked in a written examination conducted by the PSC at Jammu and
Srinagar for the posts of Assistant Controller in Legal Metrology Department
read as: ``who among the following didn't represent the militant school of thought''?
The options included RN Bose, Ashwani Kumar Dutt, MN Roy and Bal Gangadhar
Tilak. The right answer could be RN Bose as he was a soft-liner while three
others were hard-liners. However, according to academicians, the question
clearly meant that excepting Bose, three others including Bal Gangadhar Tilak
represented the militant school of thought.
The
examination was conducted on December 9. A large number of students, who
appeared for the examination, were stunned to see the name of Bal Gangadhar Tilak
figuring among those, who represented the militant thought. Such was the
popularity of Tilak among the people of India for his role in the freedom
movement that he had been conferred with honorary title of `Lokmanya', which
literally means that he had been accepted by the people as their leader. However, the leader of millions of Indians,
had been described as militant in the PSC exam, the academicians regretted and
demanded stern action against the PSC and the question paper setter for hurting
sentiments of a large number of people. As per the history, Bal Gangadhar Tilak
was a true nationalist, journalist, teacher, social reformer, lawyer and
independent activist, who was the first popular leader of the Indian
Independence Movement.
Surprisingly,
the PSC's question was also against the Delhi High Court directions.
In a judgment
delivered on January 30, 2008, the then Delhi High Court Judge Justice Tirath
Singh Thakur had directed the NCERT to remove about 75 objectionable passages
from its books including the ones which described freedom fights Bal Gangadhar
Tilak and Lala Lajpat Rai as militants. The High Court had directed the NCERT
to ensure that such errors were not repeated. The NCERT counsel had then told
the court that none of the books being taught in the schools would contain the
objectionable passages
Source:
http://www.dailyexcelsior.com/web1/12dec12/news1.htm#2
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