A contentious decision by the Bihar Education Department to truncate festival holidays from 23 to a mere 11 between September and December has ignited a conflagration of controversy. Citing the Right to Education Act (RTE) as the rationale, the department’s notification seeks to bolster educational quality by curtailing holidays, leaving the festive landscape in disarray.
Notably, holidays including Durga Puja, Diwali, and Chhath Puja have been imperiled by this move, triggering a chorus of dissent from various quarters. BJP leader and Union Minister Giriraj Singh, taking to the digital realm, decried the abrogation of these holidays, fearing an erosion of Hindu cultural observances and evoking concerns of a potential imposition of contrary ideologies.
The notification, unveiled on a somber Tuesday evening, underscores the need to uphold the sanctity of educational days mandated by the RTE Act of 2009, prompting the reduction of holidays during the stipulated period. Festivals such as Raksha Bandhan, Teej, Jiutiya, Vishwakarma Puja, Janmashtami, and Guru Nanak Jayanti have fallen prey to the scalpel of truncation, as educational continuity vies with celebratory respite.
The ideological battleground has escalated with allegations of “politics of appeasement” levied by Bihar BJP State president Samrat Choudhary. He contends that the decision is emblematic of appeasement politics pursued by both Nitish Kumar and Lalu Prasad, implying a compromise of cultural values for political aspirations.
Sushil Modi, a seasoned BJP leader and Rajya Sabha member, boldly brandished the term “anti-Hindu identity,” asserting that the government’s actions undermine the sanctity of Hindu festivals while allowing Muslim festivals to remain unscathed. The reduction of holidays is purportedly justified by invoking the RTE Act, raising eyebrows within the educational landscape.
As the debate rages on, questions linger about the balance between educational imperatives and cultural preservation. The cacophony of voices, echoing through the corridors of political discourse, underscores the complexities of reconciling educational exigencies with the tapestry of cultural observances, in an ever-evolving societal landscape.