NCERT panel's advice on replacing 'India' with 'Bharat' wrong: Shivakumar
NT Correspondent
Bengaluru: Karnataka Deputy Chief Minister D K Shivakumar on Wednesday termed as "wrong" the recommendation of an NCERT-constituted panel recommending replacing "India" with "Bharat" in the school textbooks, and alleged an NDA hand was behind the move.
A high-level committee for social sciences, constituted by the National Council of Educational Research and Training (NCERT) to revise the school curriculum, has recommended that "India" should be replaced with "Bharat" in the school textbooks for all classes.
According to committee chairperson C I Isaac, the panel has suggested replacing the name "India" with "Bharat" in the textbooks, introducing "classical history", instead of "ancient history", in the curriculum and including the Indian Knowledge System (IKS) in the syllabus for all subjects.
Reacting sharply to it, Shivakumar wondered why there is the Reserve Bank of India, Indian Administrative Services and Indian Foreign Services, hinting that the word "Bharat" was not used.
"Why the Republic of India is written on Indian passport," he asked.
"I think something wrong has happened to this government. I don't know why they are confusing the young minds of Indians," the Karnataka state Congress president said.
"Who is saying that we are not Bharatiyas, but we are proud Indians. I think whatever stand they have taken is anti-people, antiIndia and anti-Bharat," Shivakumar said.
He alleged that the NDA government forced the NCERT to take the "decision", adding, the move was "completely wrong."
"You can't change the history of India. Though you try to change Congress' history, you can't do it,'' he added.