Gujarat riots and Babri demolition needn’t be taught to school students : NCERT

In the NCERT’s 12th Class Political Science book, Babri is mentioned as a ‘Three-domed structure’

New Delhi – The National Council of Educational Research and Training (NCERT) has introduced several significant changes in the 12th Class Political Science textbook. The most notable change is the removal of the term ‘Babri Masjid’, which has now been referred to as a ‘three-domed structure’ in the new Edition. Additionally, the Chapter on Ayodhya has been reduced from four pages to two. The curriculum focuses more on Supreme Court judgments. Speaking about the removal of references to the Babri demolition and Godhra riots from the book, NCERT Director Dinesh Prasad Saklani said, “If students want to read about violence and riots, there is material available elsewhere. We have to not only reduce repetition but also look at what is relevant today”. Talking to India Today TV, Mr Saklani said that it was not an attempt to saffronise the books.

He asked, “Do we want to teach students to become aggressive and create discord in the society ? Do students need to be taught about riots ? They can find out about it when they grow up; why teach them from a textbook ? When the 1984 anti-Sikh riots curriculum was removed from the textbooks there was no such outcry”.

“The hue and cry about the changes is irrelevant. If the Supreme Court has ruled on this, why should it not be part of the curriculum ? What’s the problem with it ? If something is out of date, it should be replaced. Children should know the facts; that is why we teach history, not to prepare the battlefield”, he added.

Changes made in the book

The previous description of the Babri Masjid as a 16th century mosque built by Mir Baqi is now described as a three-domed structure which was erected and built on the site of Shriram’s birthplace in 1528, with Hindu Deities’ paintings and statues inside and outside this wall.

The previous textbook detailed the 1986 Faizabad (now Ayodhya) District Court’s decision to open the mosque for worship, leading to communal tensions and riots. It also gave information about communal violence, the Rath Yatra, the fall of Babri in 1992 and the violence that broke out in January 1993.

These references have been omitted in the new book, which now summarises these events, mentioning the opening of the three-domed structure and the subsequent legal and communal conflicts. The Ayodhya dispute is mentioned in one passage. In 1986 Faizabad District Court ordered to open the doors of the three-domed roof. So people got a chance to pray there. This three-domed structure is believed to have been built at the birthplace of Shriram. The foundation stone of the Shriram Temple was laid; but its further construction was prohibited. The Hindu community was worried about this, while the Muslim community was demanding control over the building. The case went to Court after tensions between the two communities grew over land rights. After the collapse of the concerned construction in 1992, many critics interpreted it as a blow to the principles of Indian Democracy’ – this is mentioned in the textbook.

The Supreme Court’s aspect included : The new Edition includes the Supreme Court’s 2019 ruling that the disputed land belongs to the Temple. The old book also contained news clippings published on 7th December 1992. The headlines of the news were – The ‘Fall of Babri Masjid’, ‘Dismissal of Kalyan Government by the Centre’ and a clipping dated 13th December 1992, in which BJP leader Atal Bihari Vajpayee said that BJP miscalculated in Ayodhya’, has been omitted from the new book.