Move to merge Central Institute of Classical Tamil with Tiruvarur central varsity ?
CHENNAI: After the furore over
alleged imposition of Hindi and Sanskrit, the Centre is wading into
another controversy with a proposal to merge the Central Institute of
Classical Tamil (CICT), Chennai, with the Central University of Tamil
Nadu (CUT) at Tiruvarur.
This, detractors say, would reduce the autonomous institute of higher research functioning under the Ministry of Human Resources Development into just another department with limited functional flexibility.
The proposal was mooted by the central think-tank, Niti Aayog, which the MHRD has forwarded to the university.
When the matter came up for discussion,
one of the executive council members of CUT reportedly cautioned top
officials that this move would trigger vehement protest from Tamil Nadu.
When contacted, the office the VC of the CUT was tight-lipped about it.
It was the UPA government, in which DMK
was among the biggest partners, that accorded classical language status
to Tamil in 2004. From March 2006 to May 18, 2008, the institute was
functioning from the Central Institute of Indian Languages campus in
Mysuru. Then it was called Centre for Excellence of Classical Tamil.
After much efforts by the then CM and DMK president M Karunanidhi, it
was shifted to Chennai, and upgraded into the Central Institute of
Classical Tamil from May 19, 2008.
Karunanidhi was the first chairperson of CICT, and now Chief Minister ‘Edappadi’ K Palaniswami occupies the position.
“The CICT has powers to undertake many a
research works in topics as varied as agriculture, epigraphy, folklore,
anthropology etc., and the governing council of the CICT has powers to
take policy decisions. In short, the autonomy of this institution will
go,” said Dr R Kothandaraman, former Senior Fellow of CICT, explaining
the drawbacks of the proposed merger.
Though the four Dravidian languages,
Tamil, Telugu, Kannada and Malayalam, got classical language status,
this is the only institute that is exclusive for a language, he added.
“This identity will be lost if it becomes part of the Central University
of Tamil Nadu,” said the 81-year-old expert. VCK general secretary and
writer D Ravikumar told Express that merging the CICT with CUT would
curtail the administrative and financial autonomy of CICT.
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