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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Friday, May 04, 2001 |
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Southern States
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A dream project for Urdu lovers
By J.S. Ifthekhar
HYDERABAD, MAY 3.
It was wishful thinking. A pipe dream at best. Even ardent lovers
of Urdu took it with a pinch of salt. A university at national
level, mainly to promote and develop the Urdu language is
considered an exercise in futility. Many felt such a step would
be nothing short of transporting the students into medieval
times.
Maulana Azad National Urdu University (MANUU) has proved the
doubting Thomases wrong. What is more, it has silenced the
critics effectively by choosing to reply through work.
Feasibility and ground reality are the two things the university
has not lost sight of and this helped it start from the scratch.
For a national university to function from rented premises with
no staff but just a Vice-Chancellor is a daunting task. Prof.
Shamim Jairajpuri rose to the challenge and today the
university's new campus is fast getting ready at Manikonda
village in Ranga Reddy district.
How the varsity, a dream project for Urdu aficionados, surmounted
the teething troubles to establish an identity of its own is a
story by itself. Prof. Jairajpuri is all smiles when he talks of
celebrating the foundation day on January 9 on the new premises.
The conventional mode of education would commence once the
university moves to its own campus.
Prof. Jairajpuri's is an unenviable position since he has not
only to give shape to the new university but also spread it
across the country. During the last couple of years 47 study
centres and three regional centres at Patna, Delhi and Bangalore
have been established. Three more regional centres are going to
come up at Srinagar, Lucknow and Mumbai. Today some 10,000
students are availing themselves of the university's distance
education programmes.
The university is taking care to ensure that the courses it
offers are relevant to market needs. Computers and IT figure high
on the agenda and so do technical and scientific courses. Effort
is also on to create a strong English and Hindi base along with
Urdu. "We are preparing our students for the 21st century
challenges," says Prof. Jairajpuri.
The university is under tremendous pressure to recruit staff both
on the academic and non-teaching sides. But Prof. Jairajpuri is
in no hurry as he feels recruitment should be in tune with the
work load. "In the new academic year we plan to have specialist
incharge of various departments," says he.
The university has done well to learn lessons from mistakes of
other varsities. It has spent a whopping Rs. 1.2 crores for
raising a boundary wall all along the 200-acre campus. "I know
how other universities have lost precious land," explains the
Vice-Chancellor.
Not just this. A master plan is also being finalised for
development of the university. This would help in systematic
growth of the campus in the years to come, it was said.
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