User:Akankaria/NCERT textbook controversies

Article body
 Criticism 

According to Audrey Truschke, a historian at Rutgers University, "erasing Mughals from textbooks does not erase them from India’s history". In “Living in Harmony? Casteism, Communalism, and Regionalism in Indian Social Science Textbooks,” Banerjee and Stober further acknowledge Truschke’s point by stating that BJP government's revisions to the NCERT have distorted historical narratives by portraying Mughal emperors as “religious zealots” who persecuted Hindus, while downplaying their contributions to Indian art, architecture, and culture [1]. Similarly, the authors also note that the textbooks have emphasized the importance of Hindu historical figures, such as Raja Raja Chola and Shivaji, while downplaying the contributions of other regional and minority groups. According to Harbans Mukhia, a historian of medieval India, the Modi-led BJP is using a strategy to win the next general elections in 2024 by unifying the Hindu vote by way of attaching the narrative that Hindus are under threat from Muslims.

Such revisions have drastic negative consequences on the prevalence of communal violence in India. According to Yogendra Yadav, a political scientist and social activist, the BJP government’s attempts to impose a pro-Hindu and anti-Muslim narrative in textbooks is part of a larger effort to silence dissent in India [2]. Historian and author, Ira Mukhoty, argues that this move is part of the BJP’s larger agenda to “polarize India along communal lines” [3]. She suggests that by removing the Mughals from history textbooks, the BJP is trying to erase the contributions of India’s Muslim communities to the country’s history and culture, which creates alienation and exclusion of these communities.

'''Around 1800 scientists, educators, science teachers, science popularizers, and citizens from various reputable institutions criticized the removal of Darwin's theory of evolution from NCERT textbooks, saying that the purging of foundational science chapters will seriously handicap students' thought process. They wrote an open letter to the government urging it to continue teaching theory of evolution''' Overall, according to scholars like Christophe Jaffrelot, the manipulation of history is part of the BJP's larger agenda to promote a Hindu nationalist narrative in Indian textbooks [4]. This agenda aims to rewrite history to make it consistent with the BJP's political ideology and vision of India as a Hindu nation, delegitimizing other religious groups for a homogenized version of Indian history.

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