Feudalism’s Aversion to Education
By S. Arif Hussaini
Voices have been raised mainly by the traditional groups of Pakistani politicians
against the recently announced requirement that a person aspiring for a seat
in the federal or in a provincial parliament will have to be at least a university
graduate to qualify as a candidate. Although the new condition is generally
acknowledged as having been laid down not for any ulterior motive of the incumbent
rulers but merely to ensure minimum caliber of public representatives, its vehement
opposition particularly by the landed aristocracy, underlines the continuing
bane of politics being dominated in the country by feudal lords.
Feudalism and education are anathema, indeed, to each other. One derogates
the other. Different feudal dynasties control half a dozen political parties,
including the two main formations - the Muslim League (N) and the PPP. Ironically
enough, the so-called People’s Party is headed by a prominent aristocrat/landlord,
Benazir. She talks all the time about elections but has opted to be the chairperson
for life of her own party!! That is in keeping with the feudal spirit.
The end of the British rule in South Asia also marked the beginning of the
end of feudalism - the British system of indirect control - in all countries
of the region with the glaring exception of Pakistan. Education has perhaps
been the biggest casualty of this act of omission. The exigencies of the early
years of the new state, allowed the establishment to put on hold land reforms.
The feudal elite, with the connivance of civil and military bureaucracies, managed
to establish their hold on the country’s politics and for decades to come.
The rapacious rural aristocracy became the biggest force for the maintenance
of the status quo in politics and policy making. No wonder the first general
elections could not be held before 1970 - 23 years after the creation of Pakistan.
The feudal lords of West Pakistan, masquerading as socialists under Bhutto’s
People’s Party, refused to hand over power to a commoner from the Eastern
wing despite the fact that the latter had won an overwhelming majority in the
parliament. Bhutto was their leader then and his daughter, Benazir, heads the
coterie now. Nawabzada Nasrullah Khan, a blue-blooded landlord, is holding the
fort for her as she is unwilling to return to her country to face the corruption
charges against her in courts of law.
During the entire history of the country, education has remained sadly neglected.
Educational reforms, whenever carried out, like those of President Ayub or of
Prime Minister Z.A. Bhutto, touched the issues only superficially without developing
a questioning mind among the youth of the country to challenge the feudal domination.
The result of such a criminal neglect of the educational sector is that today
nearly a third of 5-9 year olds are out of school and literacy rate is 38 per
cent only. Allocations for education have lingered for years around 2.3 per
cent of GNP per annum as against a minimum of 4 per cent recommended by the
UN. Here in the US, highest priority is given to education.
Readers of this column would recall that the single most significant factor
in their ability to reach this country, has been their education back home.
Reverting to the situation in Pakistan, one finds that now the students who
opt for science subjects fail to apply a scientific approach to their subject,
as the educational system stifles their imagination, creativity and curiosity.
It is the spirit of inquiry which makes a nation, and its absence mars it and
relegates it to the dustbin of history. Pakistan is producing now only 40 Ph.Ds.
annually as against 5,000 by India! Education is not, lamentably, considered
crucial, the very life-blood for the society’s survival and progress.
The generation which came to Pakistan from India carrying with them a high value
for education has gradually faded out and their children too have absorbed the
feudalistic spirit of getting something for nothing. Or, they have managed to
leave the country for foreign lands where they could labor and live well, unhindered
and unsuppressed by the ruling elite. The unskilled, semi-skilled workers too
managed during 1975-90 to reach the Middle East to earn respectable wages. Their
remittances enabled their families to send their children to schools. But, the
rapacious politicians and their corrupt bureaucratic minions had, meanwhile,
set up a system of ghost schools to misappropriate government funds. Ten per
cent of some 42,000 schools in Sindh, for instance, had become schools on paper
only. The percentage in Punjab was no better. The children of the workers in
the Middle East, particularly those hailing from remote villages, had acquired
the means to go to schools but there were no schools within easy reach. So they
went to the religious schools attached to local mosques where they could hardly
get the education that would enable them to eke out a living. The supremacy
of the landlord remained undisturbed. The opportunity went to waste. In this
depressing scenario, the projects launched by the present government hold out
a ray of hope of change in the obnoxious system. Expansion of educational facilities
from elementary school to post-graduate levels, registration of religious schools,
introducing secular subjects in their syllabi and enabling them financially
to hire teachers for the new subjects, expansion of higher level education in
science and technology in concert with other Muslim countries, are some of the
salient feature. But, the most important factor is the change in the value system
and the mind-set concerning education. The negative and hypocritical approach
of the landed aristocracy will have to yield place to genuine appreciation and
effort to spread education in the country. That can come only when the elected
representatives are themselves educated. Some Pakistani newspapers have published
lists of prominent landlords who are non-graduates. Some have not even crossed
high school level. Being thus sidelined would hopefully awaken them to the reality
that the days of inheriting power and pelf by birth have come to an end. If
they do not see the writing on the wall, the wind of change will sweep them
down into dust.
Date/Time Last Modified: 3/29/2003 9:29:13 AM
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