The recent decision of the National Council of Educational Research and Training (NCERT) to drop entire chapters from the history textbooks for class 12, as well as from other classes and to delete statements from other textbooks is a matter of deep concern. Using the period of the pandemic-cum-lockdowns to argue that there was a need to lighten the load of the curriculum, the NCERT initiated a contentious process of dropping topics like the history of the Mughal courts, the 2002 communal riots in Gujarat, the Emergency, mention of Dalit writers, the Naxalite movement, and the fight for equality from social science, history, and political science textbooks of classes 6 to 12. The new editions of these NCERT books have simply made the deletions the norm even when we are in a post-pandemic context in which school education has limped back to normalcy and is no longer in the online mode.
In this light, it is deeply troubling that a chapter on the Mughals has been deleted from part-II of the history textbook for class 12, while two chapters on modern Indian history have been removed from part-III of the history textbook. There has been no attempt to consult members of the teams that had prepared the textbooks, which included historians and school teachers, apart from members of the NCERT. The books were developed through a process of consultation and wide-ranging discussions. This was valuable not only in terms of content, but also in terms of pedagogy, which ensured an organic unity and a graded development in understanding from the middle to the senior school. The attempt was also to make the textbooks as inclusive as possible, and to provide a sense of the rich diversity of the human past both within the subcontinent and the wider world. As such, removing chapters / sections of chapters is highly problematic not only in terms of depriving learners of valuable content, but also in terms of the pedagogical values required to equip them to meet present and future challenges. While we understand the need for periodic revisions of school textbooks, this can only be done in sync with the consensus of existing historical scholarship. However, the selective deletion in this round of textbook revision reflects the sway of divisive politics over pedagogic concerns.
According to the Director, NCERT, the deletions are part of the rationalisation of the school textbooks, and have been done in order to reduce the burden on students. As per the NCERT, during the pandemic the students faced loss in learning, and in the post-pandemic period the students have been feeling overburdened with the syllabus. According to the NCERT, since some of the chapters were overlapping across subjects and classes, it was rational to reduce the content for the overburdened students. The NCERT authorities have denied any ulterior political motive behind this move of rationalisation.
However, notwithstanding the NCERT Director’s denial, the selective dropping of NCERT book chapters which do not fit into the larger ideological orientation of the present ruling dispensation exposes the non-academic, partisan agenda of the regime in pushing through amendments to school textbooks. This becomes abundantly clear when one critically analyses the removal of selective themes in the textbooks in the backdrop of the present central government’s larger ideological agenda of misconstruing the history of the people of the Indian subcontinent as a product of a hegemonic singular (Hindu) tradition.
Driven by such an agenda, the chapter titled ‘Kings and Chronicles: The Mughal Courts (c. sixteenth-seventeenth centuries) has been deleted from part-II of the history textbook. This is despite the fact that the Mughals ruled several parts of the subcontinent for a substantial period; making the history of these times an inseparable part of the subcontinent’s history. In medieval times, the Mughal empire and the Vijayanagara empire were two of the most important empires in the Indian subcontinent, both of which were discussed in the previous textbooks. In the revised version, while the chapter on the Mughals has been deleted, the chapter on the Vijayanagara Empire has been retained. The exclusion exposes the wider communal undertones, based on an inaccurate assumption about India’s past — that the religion of the rulers was the dominant religion of the times. This leads to the deeply problematic idea of a ‘Hindu’ era, ‘Muslim’ era, etc. These categories are uncritically imposed on what has historically been a very diverse social fabric.
Moreover, two very important chapters have been deleted from part-III on Modern India, namely, ‘Colonial Cities: Urbanisation, Planning and Architecture’ and ‘Understanding Partition: Politics, Memories, Experiences’. Also significant is the deletion of any mention of the role of Hindu extremists in the killing of Gandhi. For example, in the chapter titled ‘Mahatma Gandhi and the Nationalist Movement’ in part-III of the history textbook the reference to Nathuram Godse being “the editor of an extremist Hindu newspaper” has been expunged.
It is important to stress that the present retrograde step by the NCERT to delete entire chapters and portions of texts from the history textbooks is not based on any academic or pedagogic consideration. Rather, the chapters deleted from the history textbook are precisely those which do not fit into the pseudo-historical schema of the ruling dispensation. Excising any period from the study of the past would make students unable to comprehend the connecting thread of the past with the present times, and would deprive students of an opportunity to connect, compare and contrast the past and the present, and would disrupt the organic inter-connectedness of the subject-matter of the discipline. Furthermore, removing entire periods of history from history textbooks would not only perpetuate misconceptions and misunderstandings, but would serve to further the divisive communal and casteist agenda of the ruling elites. The books and history syllabi designed earlier by the NCERT were meant to provide an understanding of the Indian subcontinent as a great melting pot of different cultures consisting of various groups, ethnicities, etc. The sequence of the chapters was designed to teach students about the craft of history, and to develop critical thinking about the past. The composite heritage of the Indian subcontinent and historical genealogies of the present times were the main focus of the old NCERT syllabus from which chapters have now been strategically excised.
Apart from deletions in the history textbook of class 12, there are several deletions from the history textbook of class 11, which includes very essential themes like the industrial revolution, inter alia. There are also deletions from the textbook for political science, which includes sections on the rise of popular movements, the 2002 Gujarat Riots, and the mention of the report of the National Human Rights Commission. Similarly, the reference to the 2002 Gujarat Riots has been dropped from the Class 11 sociology textbook ‘Understanding Society’.
Guided by a divisive and partisan agenda, the NCERT by selectively deleting several important themes from school textbooks is not only doing great disservice to the composite heritage of the Indian subcontinent, but betraying the aspirations of the Indian masses. The colonial constructions and their contemporaneous reproduction manifest the misconstruing of Indian civilization as a product of a hegemonic singular tradition, such that categories like ‘Hindu society’ are uncritically imposed on what has historically been a very diverse social fabric. Ultimately, all these deletions present the students with a sanitized history of a homogenous ‘Hindu’ society in the Indian subcontinent. History of this variety has a disturbing preoccupation with the narrative surrounding kings and the wars they waged. It reduces state formations, empire-building, and transformations of the medieval period to an unsubstantiated, perennial contest between an allegedly homogenous ‘Hindu’ society and ‘Islamic’ invaders and rulers. It also projects the idea of presumably widespread social harmony in India’s past which conceals the exploitation and oppression of populations under different state formations along the axes of gender, caste, and class etc. It also overlooks regional diversity. By reducing the study of history to such monolithic accounts, the ground is being prepared for pseudo-histories, especially of a communal and casteist variety, to hold sway. In any case, such ‘histories’ are widely circulated today through WhatsApp and other social media applications.
We are appalled by the decision of the NCERT to remove chapters and statements from the history textbooks, and demand that the deletions from the textbooks should be immediately withdrawn. The decision of the NCERT is guided by divisive motives. It is a decision which goes against the constitutional ethos and composite culture of the Indian subcontinent. As such, it must be rescinded at the earliest.
A R Khan | Retired Professor, IGNOU |
Abhijit Roy | Jadhavpur University |
Abigail Mcgowan | Professor of History, University of Vermont |
Adil Jussanwalla | |
Aditi Kanchanbaras | University of Hyderabad |
Aditya Mukherjee | Retd. Professor, Centre for Historical Studies, JNU |
Aisarya Dutt Roy | University of Hyderabad |
Ajeet Kumar | Atma Ram Sanatan Dharma College, DU |
Akanksha Singh | Lady Sriram College, DU |
Akhila Mathew | Azim Premji University |
Alka Saikia | Gargi College, DU |
Amita Paliwal | Jesus & Mary College, DU |
Anamitra Sarkar | St. Paul’s Cathedral Mission College, Kolkata |
Anand Chakrabarti | Former Professor, DU |
Anand K. Sahay | |
Anand Patwardhan | |
Anil Kumar | Motilal Nehru College, University of Delhi |
Anisha Srivastava | Sri Aurobindo College (Eve), University of Delhi |
Anita Rampal | Retd. Professor, Central Institute of Education, DU |
Anwesha Sengupta | Institute of Development Studies, Kolkata |
Aparna Balachandran | Dept of History, DU |
Apoorvanand | Dept. of Hindi, DU |
Archana Ojha | Kamala Nehru College |
Arnav Gogoi | University of Delhi |
Arunangsha Maity | Taki Government College, West Bengal |
Asha Hans Sansristi | |
Ashesh Kumar Dhar | University of Hyderabad |
Ashish Ghosh | Retd. Associate Professor, Dyal Singh College (Evening), University of Delhi |
Ashoke Chatterjee | |
Ashwin Padi | Zakir Husain Delhi College, University of Delhi |
Asshique Ahmad Iqbal | KREA University |
Ataullah | Zakir Husain Delhi College, University of Delhi |
Avijit Singh | Research Scholar, DU |
Avinash Kumar | Centre for Equity Studies |
Barbara D. Metcalf | University of California Davis |
Bharati Jagannathan | Miranda House |
Bhim Tiwari | Research Scholar, DU |
Bhupinder K Chaudhry | Maharaja Agrasen College, DU |
Biswajit | Delhi University |
Biswajit Mohanty | Delhi University |
Biswaroop Chatterjee | Durgapur, West Bengal |
Brij Tankha | Retd. Professor, Department of East Asian Studies, University of Delhi |
C. Saratchand | University of Delhi |
Chairashree Das Gupta | Centre for Law and Governance, JNU |
Chitran D | University of Hyderabad |
Christiane Brosius | Heidelberg Centre for Transcultural Studies |
Christine Marrewa-Karwosi | Columbia University |
D. Manjit | Delhi University |
Dane Kennedy | Professor Emeritus, George Washington University |
David Blamey | London |
David Ludden | Professor of History, New York University |
Debashree Mukherjee | MESAAS, Columbia University |
Debjani Sengupta | IP College, Delhi University |
Denys Leighton | OP Jindal University |
Devaki Khanna | |
Devarpita Manjit | Delhi University |
Dilip Simeon | Writer and former Professor, Ramjas College, DU |
Dilshad Ahmad | Composite school SARVAT |
Dinesh Kumar Singh | Bharati College, Delhi University |
Dipta Bhog | |
Farhat Hasan | Dept. of History, DU |
Feroze Chandra | Retired |
G. Arunima | Professor, JNU |
Geeta Arya | Lakshmibai College, University of Delhi |
Gyan Prakash | Professor, Princeton University |
Harbans Mukhia | Retd. Professor, Centre for Historical Studies, JNU |
Inder Salim | |
Indu Agnihotri | |
Irfan Habib | Historian and Professor Emeritus, AMU |
Ismail Vengasseri | Lady Sriram College, DU |
Jabir P. | Dept. of History, University of Hyderabad |
Jashobanta Pan | Berhampur University |
Jayanti Gupta | Kamala Nehru College |
Jayati Ghosh | University of Massachusetts Amherst |
Justin Mathew | Hansraj College, DU |
K N Sunandan | Ajim Premji University |
K. Satchidanandan | Professor |
K.I. Tuteja | |
Kanhad Sinha | The Sanskrit College and University, Kolkata |
Karuna Dietrich Wielenga | Azim Premji University |
Kavita Singh | Retd. Professor, School of Arts and Aesthetics, JNU |
Kavita Srivastava | PUCL |
Keya Dasgupta | Retired faculty, CSSSC, Kolkata |
Krishnakumar M.V. | Newman College, Thodupuzha, Kerala |
Kumkum Roy | Centre for Historical Studies, JNU |
Lakshmi Subramaniam | Visiting Professor of History, BITS Pilani, Goa |
Latika Gupta | University of Delhi |
Levin N R | Bharati College, Delhi University |
Lianboi Vaiphei | Indraprastha College for Women, University if Delhi |
Lianboi Vaiphei | Indraprastha College for Women, University if Delhi |
M H Ilias | Mahatma Gandhi University, Kottayam |
M V Shobhana Warrier | Kamala Nehru College, DU |
Madhuri Chatterjee | |
Madhuri Sharma | Bharati College, Delhi University |
Madhuri Sharma | Bharati College, Delhi University |
Malavika Kasturi | Dept. of History, University of Toronto |
Manu V. Devadevan | IIT-Mandi |
Martin Sökefeld | Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich, Germany |
Maya John | Jesus and Mary College, DU |
Maya Krishna Rao | Theatre artist |
Md. Hamid Husain | Zakir Husain Delhi College, University of Delhi |
Meena Bhargava | Retd. Associate Professor, Indraprastha College for Women, DU |
Meena Megha Malhotra | History for Peace – The Seagull Foundations for the Arts |
Mohd. Bilal | Research Scholar, DU |
Monmayee Basu | Hansraj College, DU |
Moushami Bhowmik | |
Mridula Mukherjee | Retd. Professor, Centre for Historical Studies, JNU |
Mukul Kesavan | Retd. Professor, Jamia Millia Islamia |
Mukul Mangalik | Retd. Professor, Ramjas College, DU |
Naina Dayal | St. Stephen’s College, DU |
Nandita Narain | Delhi University |
Nasir Tyabji | Jamia Millia Islamia |
Nayana Dasgupta | Lady Sriram College, DU |
Neeru Ailwadi | Delhi College for Arts and Commerce, DU |
Nishtha Srivastava | Shivaji College, University of Delhi |
Nitoo Das | IPCW, DU |
P.K. Basant | Jamia Millia Islamia |
Pankaj Jha | Lady Sriram College, DU |
Partho Datta | School of Arts and Aesthetics, JNU |
Parvin Sinclair | Retd. Professor, IGNOU |
Pia Malik | Research Scholar, Delhi University |
Poonam Kanwal | Janaki Devi Memorial College, DU |
Prabhu Prasad Mohapatra | Department of History, University of Delhi |
Pradip Datta | Retd. Professor, JNU |
Pragiti Mohapatra | Indraprastha College for Women, University if Delhi |
Pranab Kanti Basu | Retired Professor, Visva-Bharati |
Pratyay Nath | Ashoka University |
Preeti Chauhan | Lakshmibai College, University of Delhi |
Prem Kumar | Delhi University |
Promukh Bhattacharya | Durgapur, West Bengal |
Puneet Yadav | Kirori Mal College, University of Delhi |
Purwa Bharadwaj | Delhi |
Rachna Singh | Hindu College, DU |
Radhika Chadha | Miranda House, DU |
Rajesh Kumar | Motilal Nehru Evening College, DU |
Rajinder Arora | |
Rajni Arora | |
Rajshree Chandra | DU |
Rakesh Kumar | Ram Lal Anand College, Du |
Ram Murti Sharma | CIE |
Ramesh Dixit | |
Ranbir Chakravarti | Retd. Professor, Centre of Historical Studies, JNU |
Ranjan Anand | Zakir Husain College (Evening), University of Delhi |
Ranjan Ghosh | |
Rashmi Pant | Delhi University (retired) |
Ratan Lal | Hindu College, DU |
Ravi Ahuja | Centre for Modern Indian Studies of Georg-August-University Göttingen |
Renu Bala | D U |
Renuka Devsare | Goethe Institit, Delhi |
Reyaz Ahmad | |
Ritu Menon | Delhi |
Romila Thapar | Historian and Professor Emerita, JNU |
Rudrashish Chakraborty | Kirori Mal College, University of Delhi |
Ruplekha Khullar | |
S.K. Ehteshan Uddin Ahmad | Dept. of Law, AMU |
S.Krishnaswamy | Retired Senior Professor Ex Madurai Kamaraj University |
Sabina Kazmi | Delhi University |
Sagnik Saha | Doctoral Scholar, University of Hyderabad |
Sandhya Sharma | Vivekanand College, Du |
Sangeeta Luthra Sharma | St. Stephen’s College, DU |
Sanghamitra Rai Verman | Jesus & Mary College, DU |
Sanjeeb Mukherjee | formerly with University of Calcutta |
Sanjukta Naskar | |
Santanu Sengupta | Polba Mahavidyalaya, University of Burdwan |
Santosh George | |
Santoshi Kumari | Delhi University |
Sarika Sunder | Dept. of History, University of Vermont |
Saumya Gupta | Janaki Devi Memorial College, DU |
Sayandeb Chowdhury | School of Letters, Ambedkar University Delhi |
Shabnam Hashmi | Anhad |
Shadab Banu | Women’s College, AMU |
Shahana Bhattacharya | Kirori Mal College, University of Delhi |
Shailja Menon | Ambedkar University, Delhi |
Shantha Sinha | |
Shatarupa Bhattacharya | Lady Sriram College, DU |
Sheodutt | University of Delhi |
Shikha Jhingan | Associate Professor, JNU |
Shilpi Rajpal | University of Copenhagen |
Shivaji K. Panikkar | Delhi/Vadodara |
Shobhana M V Warrier | Kamala Nehru College, DU |
Shobna Nijhawan | York University, Toronto |
Shreekala MV | JNU |
Shubhra Sinha | Kamala Nehru college |
Shubhra Sinha | Kamala Nehru College, DU |
Simmi Mehta | Mata Sundri College for Women, DU |
Smita Sahgal | Lady Sriram College, DU |
Sneha Ganguly | Jesus and Mary College |
Snigdha Singh | Miranda House, DU |
Sonu Vincent | Jesus and Mary college |
Souraj Bhan Bhardwaj | |
Srabani Chakraborty | Centre for Historical Studies, JNU |
Sreekala M V | Jawaharlal Nehru University |
Srimanjiri | Miranda House, DU |
Subhendu Dasgupta | Retired faculty, Calcutta University |
Subir Rana | Research Scholar, JNU |
Suchandra Ghosh | School of Social Sciences, University of Hyderabad |
Sucheta Mahajan | Professor, Centre for Historical Studies, JNU |
Suchetna Chattopadhyay | Dept of History, Jadavpur University |
Sufiyan Abdul Sathar | Calicut |
Sujata Patel | Retd. Professor, University of Hyderabad |
Sujato Bhadra | |
Sujeet Kumar | Delhi College for Arts and Commerce, DU |
Suparna Puri | |
Surajit Sarkar | Delhi |
Surbhi Vatsa | Miranda House |
Syed Ali Nadeem Rezavi | Professor, Dept. of History, AMU & Secretary, Indian History Congress |
Tanu Parashar | Jesus and Mary College, DU |
Tasneem Suhrawardy | St. Stephen’s College, DU |
Tilottama Mukharjee | Jadhavpur University |
Uma Chakrabarti | Historian, DU |
Upinder Singh | Ashoka University |
Urmimala Sarkar Munsi | JNU |
Vaibhav Ramani | Ashoka University |
Vandana | Kirori Mal College, University of Delhi |
Vani Subramanian | Delhi |
Victoria Potshangbam | Kamala Nehru College |
Vijaya Venkataraman | University of Delhi |
Vijaya Venkataraman | University of Delhi |
Vijjika Pandey Singh | ARSD college |
Vinita Malik | Kamala Nehru College, DU |
Virender Singh | Research Scholar, Panjab University |
Yasser Arafat | Dept of History, DU |
Yousuf Saeed | Jamia Millia Islamia |
Dinesh Varshney | Motilal Nehru College (Evening |
Jaya S. Tyagi | Dept. of History, DU |
Bob van der Linden | University of Amsterdam |
Yael Rice | Amherst College |
Mekhola Gomes | Amherst College |