21.How
Hindu Schooling Came To America (II): The Underground History of American
Education by John Taylor Gatto from archive.org
How
Hindu Schooling Came To America (II)
Andrew
Bell, the gentleman in question, used to be described in old editions of
the Britannica as "cold, shrewd,
self-seeking." He might not have been the most pious cleric. Perhaps like his contemporary, Parson
Malthus, he didn't really believe in God at all, but as a young man following the flag he had an
eye out for the main chance. Bell found his opportunity when he studied the structure
Hindus arranged for training the lower castes,
about 95 percent of the Indian population. It might well serve a Britain
which had driven its peasantry into ruin
in order to create an industrial proletariat for coal-driven industry.
Bell was fascinated by the purposeful
nature of Hindu schooling. It seemed eminently
compatible with the goals of the English state church. So as many
another ambitious young man has done
throughout history when he stumbles upon a little-known novelty, he swiped it. Before we turn to details of
the Hindu method, and how Bell himself was
upstaged by an ambitious young Quaker who beat him into the school
market with a working version of Bell's
idea, you should understand a little about Hindu religion.
After the British military conquest of India
(in reality a merchant conquest) nothing
excited the popular mind and the well-bred mind alike more than Hindu
religion with its weird (to Western eyes)
idols and rituals. Close analysis of Sanskrit literature seemed to prove that some kind of biological and social
link had existed between the all-conquering
Aryans, from whom the Hindus had descended, and Anglo-Saxons, which
might explain theological similarities
between Hinduism and Anglicanism. The possibilities suggested by this connection eventually provided a
powerful psychic stimulus for creation of class- based schooling in the United States. Of
course such a development then lay far in the future.
The caste system of Hinduism or Brahminism
is the Anglican class system pushed to its
imaginative limits. A five-category ranking (each category further
subdivided) apportions people into a
system similar to that found in modern schools. Prestige and authority are reserved for the three highest castes,
although they only comprise 5 percent of the total; inescapable servility is assigned the lowest
caste, a pariah group outside serious
consideration. In the Hindu system one may fall into a lower caste, but
one cannot rise.
When the British began to administer India,
Hindus represented 70 percent of a
population well over a hundred million. Contrast this with an America of
perhaps three million. In the northern
region, British hero Robert Clive was president of Bengal where people were conspicuously lighter-skinned
than the other major Indian group, having
features not unlike those of the British.
Hindu
castes looked like this:
The
upper 5 percent was divided into three "twice-born" groups.
1 .
Brahmins — Priests and those trained for law, medicine, teaching, and
other professional occupations.
2. The warrior and administrative caste.
3.
The industrial caste, which would include land cultivators and mercantile
groups.
The
lower 95 percent was divided into:
1.
The menial caste.
2. Pariahs, called
"untouchables."
The
entire purpose of Hindu schooling was to preserve the caste system. Only the
lucky 5 percent received an education
which gave perspective on the whole, a key to
understanding. In actual practice, warriors, administrators, and most of
the other leaders were given much
diluted insight into the driving engines of the culture, so that policy could be kept in the hands of Brahmins. But
what of the others, the "masses" as Western socialist tradition would come to call them
in an echoing tribute to the Hindu class idea?
The answer to that vital question launched factory schooling in the
West.
Which brings us back to Andrew Bell. Bell
noticed that in some places Hinduism had
created a mass schooling institution for children of the ordinary, one
inculcating a curriculum of
self-abnegation and willing servility. In these places hundreds of
children were gathered in a single
gigantic room, divided into phalanxes often under the direction of student leaders with the whole ensemble
directed by a Brahmin. In the Roman manner,
paid pedagogues drilled underlings in the memorization and imitation of
desired attitudes and these underlings
drilled the rest. Here was a social technology made in heaven for the factories and mines of Britain, still
uncomfortably saturated in older yeoman legends of liberty and dignity, one not yet possessing
the perfect proletarian attitudes mass
production must have for maximum efficiency. Nobody in the early years
of British rule had made a connection
between this Hindu practice and the pressing requirements of an industrial future. Nobody, that is, until a
thirty-four- year-old Scotsman arrived in India as military chaplain.
How
Hindu Schooling Came To America (III)
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