Updated On: 11 April, 2023 05:45 PM IST | Mumbai | Sucheta Chakraborty
Tearing out Muslim figures and whitewashing assassins from school textbooks will only create a generation of people who are intellectually emaciated, say historians while calling out NCERT’s fresh deletions

Illustration/Uday Mohite
The history lessons being taught in schools continue to be the subject of debate and discussion. Where last year the Karnataka government made news for “saffronising” textbooks, this week the National Council of Educational Research and Training (NCERT) was in the eye of the storm for dropping certain chapters from the Class XI and Class XII textbooks in Uttar Pradesh, as part of its “syllabus rationalisation” exercise.
What has detractors criticising the NCERT’s decision is the fact that the deleted content is in some way or another in line with the ruling party’s current views, be it the Mughal rule in India, the assassination of Mahatma Gandhi or the history of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS).