….retrieval
When we look back at the turn of the 20th century,
we are flooded with a general feeling that the old
times were good. The people were good, and its
reason too was obvious, they were God-fearing,
believed in goodness, visited holy places,
undertook pilgrimages, and, it was joint family
system, which was helpful in nurturing fellow
feeling, empathy and compassion.
As the time passed, modernism took over, which
meant the fall of the agrarian life, and the onset of
the mechanical age. The peace of the village life
was lost to the lure of the market town. As the
times moved forward, the village was discarded
and the people started migrating to the city.
Villages were left barren and this process has kept
pace even today. Migration from the villages to the
cities is still going on unchecked.
What I am going to focus here is how the quality
of man has dwindled over time, as machination
has increased. Prosperity appears to have grown
but along with it, men who enjoy thousands of
amenities, have lost something very precious. I can
draw a line too, with which many perceptive
readers may not be in agreement. There was a
generation which started working during the
seventies. Before them, there was a generation of
great scholars who inhabited the universities. The
2 nd generation starts with seventies, in which the
young men who joined services, were still touched
with some sort of idealism. Actually, sixties and
seventies were the times when in our country the
socialist movement was in full swing, and reading
Russian literature was in vogue. These young men
found idealism injected into their blood and their
thought too.
The generation which took to work in eighties too
was touched by that idealism. They had a feeling
of being true to their profession. These were the
times when people felt that copying was a moral
aberration. Teachers still believed in teaching the
students most of the times without getting any
remuneration. Morality was still a subject of
debate in Colleges and Universities.
However, nineties saw an abrupt change in the
sensibility of the people, and it transformed the
sensibility of the time as well. This was the
moment when ultra-modern times had set in.
Desktop had given way to the laptop, mobiles to
smart phone. These were the times when people
realized there was a city called Kota in Rajasthan.
Now, the race was between money and success.
The more the money, the greater the success. The
students were after packages. Teachers were after
tuitions. It was a world of the go-getters. Those
who had money could get seats in medical
colleges.
It was here that the growing civilization
completely shed its idealistic credentials. Now, the
teachers, the students and even parents had only
one passion. Job. Money was no consideration.
And during these times, we gave legitimacy to a
thousand things which were considered taboo in
previous times. The most important thing were
money and success, followed by a sense of
freedom, which shook the family from its
foundations.
Today, the teachers have lost all idealistic
orientation. Religiosity has increased, though its
internal content is missing. There is more and
more knowledge and great and great success, yet
students and even teachers lack basics of human
behaviour. In other words, knowledge has given
them fat marks sheets, top positions, without
bringing to them the most precious virtue which
was essential to make life meaningful: wisdom.
Today, we have a generation which has no faith in
wisdom. We have administrators who have no
faith in creativity. Paperwork, data, and keeping
the teachers busy is the basic framework of
educational policies. We know a thousand things,
without understanding the basics of human
character. The electronic revolution and now the
AI have further reduced the man-hours which man
could use for himself. The great issue today, in my
opinion is, man has no time for himself, for his
family, and for his mind. It is the phase when
philosophy is dead, the philosopher is dead. The
academic has been reduced to a paper tiger. He is
forced to become a scholar where his only job is to
cut and paste the available knowledge, which
makes no sense to the man in the street.
We are passing through the worst phase of human
development where facilities have increased, but
man’s humanity is in decline. We need to arrest
this fall. We need to return to a routine where we
have free time for ourselves. Where we could slow
down the pace of time. We need to revert back and
retrieve the values we have lost in our passion for
growth.
Dr. Jernail Singh Anand, with an opus of 180 plus
books, is Laureate of the Seneca, Charter of
Morava, Franz Kafka and Maxim Gorky awards.
His name adorns the Poets’ Rock in Serbia. Anand
is a towering literary figure whose work embodies
a rare fusion of creativity, intellect, and moral
vision. He is an alumnus of SCD Govt. College, Ludhiana (Punjab)

