This Article is From Nov 20, 2019

Students Protest As BHU Firm On Muslim Professor For Sanskrit

For 12 days, a group of 30-odd students of Sanskrit literature have been sitting outside the office of BHU Vice-Chancellor Rakesh Bhatnagar, demanding that Professor Khan's appointment be cancelled and a fresh recruitment be made.

Firoze Khan was appointed as an assistant professor of Sanskrit at BHU.

Highlights

  • Students are protesting against a Muslim Sanskrit professor's appointment
  • Students are reciting hymns, carrying out yagnas outside the VC's office
  • The professor hasn't been seen at the university since his appointment
Varanasi:

A student-enforced lockout at the "Sahitya" or the literature wing of the Sanskrit Vidya Dharm Vijnan, a unit of the prestigious Banaras Hindu University has been continuing for nearly two weeks, with the controversy over the appointment of Firoze Khan as an assistant professor refusing to die down.

For 12 days, a group of 30-odd students of Sanskrit literature have been sitting outside the office of BHU Vice-Chancellor Rakesh Bhatnagar, demanding that Professor Khan's appointment be cancelled and a fresh recruitment be made.

Outside his office, students have been reciting hymns and even carried out a yagna, saying they would not budge till their demands are met.

"I think the media is distorting it. We are not fighting against someone from any particular religion but we are aghast that things are not happening according to tradition," said Krishan Kumar, one of the protesters.

Emphasising that they are against the professor's appoint to this particular unit of the university, he said, "This is not a normal department. It is the Sanskrit-Vidya-Dharma-Vijnan-Sankaya, where we are taught about our culture and not just the language"

"If he has to teach, let him go to the department of Sanskrit and teach. We cannot allow it here," he added.

The BHU website says the Sanskrit-Vidya-Dharma-Vijnan-Sankaya was established in 1918 by BHU founder Pandit Madan Mohan Malviya to "preserve and promote the studies of ancient Indian shastras, Sanskrit language and literature".

The university also has a separate department of Sanskrit that functions under the faculty of arts.

The university administration has rallied behind Professor Khan, saying he is the most suitable candidate for the job and that all procedures were followed during the appointment.
"The students say this is not as per the culture of the SVDV, but the university acts according to the constitution and the acts of the university," said O P Rai , the Chief Proctor of BHU.  

"Our selection committee has acted according to this. If the students have an issue, we will take cognizance but the students feel what they think is correct. I think the university works according to its rules and we will work according to them," he added.

A professor at the university has now claimed that the faculty at the university wing is involved in instigating the protests and has questioned why classes are not being restarted. "A majority of the (protesting) students are associated with ABVP, Hindu Mahasabha and Hindu Vahini. I believe that faculty members have a role because as per the updates, girl students at the hostel was asked by professors to sit there (at the protest)," Professor MP Ahirwar told NDTV.

The university has issued statements twice in the last week, saying it is "committed to achieving the objectives of the BHU in providing equal educational and teaching opportunities to everyone irrespective of religion".

Professor Khan hasn't been seen at the university since his appointment, multiple calls and messages to his mobile number went unanswered.

Professor Khan is originally from Rajasthan. His father also studied Sanskrit and sings bhajans at a temple near his locality, according to a report in the Times of India.

The report also says Prof Khan studied Sanskrit at the Rajkiya Sanskrit Vidyalaya in Bagru, Rajasthan, and then got higher educational degrees in the language from a deemed university in Rajasthan.

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