5 Dariya News

Vice President M Hamid Ansari’s interaction with students of Wilson College, Mumbai

5 Dariya News

Mumbai 03-Feb-2015

Vice President Mohammed Hamid Ansari today held an interaction with the students of Wilson College, Mumbai, before departing for Bhuj, as part of his two-state visit. Shri Ansari answered a wide range of questions from the student community covering domestic, national and international affairs. Shri Ansari, who arrived along with the Governor of Maharashtra, Shri C Vidyasagar Rao and Maharashtra Industry Minister Shri Subhash Desai was welcomed by Bishop Prakash Patole and College Principal Dr. A H Sirvaiya. 

On this occasion Vice President also released a set 5 DVDs containing collected works of eminent educationist Scotsman Rev. John Wilson, the founder of the college in the year 1832. Incidentally, Wilson College predates University of Mumbai, to which it is affiliated, by a quarter century. 

Excerpts of Vice President’s interaction : 

On upholding the spirit of the Constitution The vision of the Constitution is laid down in the text of the Constitution and the spirit behind the text. I think the task which each one of us as a citizen has to undertake is to remain true and faithful to the letter and spirit of the Constitution. The spirit of the Constitution is explained in 4 words – justice, equality, fairness, fraternity. In a country that is so vast and so diverse, where 4,600 different communities dwell, challenge of accommodation is an hourly challenge. People who walk on the road should be governed by the rules of the road and not by the height, or caste or colour of their skin. Our constitution was drafted six decades back. When it was written, a great political scientist in Britain Ernest Barker, in his last book of 200 odd pages, put the preamble of our constitution on the front page and said, my book only expands the idea which are mentioned in this one page. 

Unity in diversity – homogeneity is a limiting notion, diversity is a fact of life. I have spoken frequently enough on this subject. Can you find a country which is homogenous. People says China is almost homogeneous. But almost homogenous means 90%, and the remainder 10% is giving them a fair degree of trouble, because they have not developed a framework to accommodate the 10%.Homogeneity is of fictional notion or a limiting notion. Diversity is a fact of life. Accommodation of diversity is the challenge. Indian polity and Indian society has been addressing this issue not for the past 60 years but for centuries. This diversity has been with us since time immemorial. That is the only response that is possible, any other path will only see obstacles. 

On communal polarization and safeguarding secular tradition The point is what do we understand by the word ‘secular’. There are philosophical, theoretical and practical arguments about it. Philosophical argument is rooted in the Western thought. The ground reality is that we have a society in which people of different faith live side by side. The challenge is the need to accommodate. In terms of statecraft, secularism means, state shall not have any religion of it own, and it shall not discriminate on the basis of religion. When it comes to dispensation by the state, the state should judge on objective criteria and not on the basis of religion, caste or creed. 

On dealing with prejudices 

Openness of mind is the best way to deal with prejudices. It is very easy to attempt to define prejudice but very difficult to actually define. Preference is one thing, prejudice is one. Once you have an open mind, a fair mind, a tolerant mind then prejudices tend to recede into the background. Prejudice is part of the make up of a human mind. What we can do, is to try to bring it within reasonable limits and be tolerant to views that are different from ours. 

On women empowerment 

Discrimination on the basis of sex is forbidden by law. But, our society suffers from various ailments and one of them is discrimination against women. The challenge today is social so it has to be addressed socially and not necessarily legally. Laws have been enacted, yet they are not producing desired results because of social resistance. We have to overcome it. Education has made a key difference. Term empowerment of women does not mean empowerment only at work place. It has to be at home too. The issue therefore has to be addressed at the community level and the family level. On work Culture – quest for excellence should be the motto. When it comes to work culture we all cite world like examples like – Japanese work culture, German work culture so on and so forth. But look at our own examples. Be it the Meenakshi temple at Madurai or the Taj Mahal in Agra; do you think those people who built great edifices in India didn’t have the work culture? Simply explained, their work culture was the ‘quest for excellence’.