Tuesday, 1 June 2021
The Old Man and the GK
For Delhites GK is the abbreviation of Greater Kailash. This blog however talks of another GK .
Most Delhi University graduates of my age have either made it , or failed to make it like me ,to the IAS, which if nothig else, made us great in GK, i.e., General Knowledge.
GK was a compulsory paper in the wrtten exams and a favourite mind- teaser with the interview panelists. The Manorama Year Book was one of the the main sources and approaches to gain the bookish GK . Many bits and facts inputs were required to be learnt as GK . Examples: Babylonian civilization, marvels of scientific inventions and discoveries including Wagner's theory of the continental shift, milestones in world history, Hindu and Greek mythology, politics, plant , animal and sea life, evolution of the State from Plato to Marx and last but not the least current affairs. Famous authors and their works are another an important part of GK, like Kautilya's Arthshastra, Kalidasa's Shakuntalam, Milton's Paradise Lost, Gibbon's The Rise and Fall of The Roman Empire and so on which none of us have even heard about much less read. Perhaps this type GK was designed to make the IAS personnel know everything except Indian Adminisration which they would in any case learn later in their career from the political masters.
Talking of books, Ernest Hemingway's The Old Man and The Sea which has inspired me to title this blog after it with Gk in place of Sea though I have not read it.
In one of his recent pieces , Jug Saraya , the columnist for The Times of India, divides the modern age into BC standing for Before Covid and AD for After the Disease . My piece here is about both these divisions in my life .
My recent BC years were marked by personal mobility at my will and pleasure for shopping, haircut, attending concerts, evening meetings in our Society senior citizens group, taking morning/evening strolls in and around our residential campus, visiting bank ATMs and temples . Iwas particular about my attire choosing the right combination of shirts, short/long sleeved, and trousers. In the mild winetr months of Mumbai, I showed off with my wardrobe of blazers, scarves, shawls and sweaters. There was also the undisclosed agenda to present myself with charm and elan to the ladies of the Campus. Occasional academic tasks took me to a couple of local management institutions for delivering lectures, attending college development committee meetings etc, where I exhibited my extensive GK acquired for IAS exam to audiences sitting dazed at my wisdom. My questions at faculty selection or students admission meetings were not so much on the subjects like finance or HRD but based on the ever green GK gained years earlier for IAS. Except Current Affairs , most other GK has remained the same over the years.
My current AD life is marked by more or less solitary confinement in our home with strict Covid compliant prtocol behaviour enforced by the family. New skills have been learnt like washing the hands frequently with soap and sanitizers, wearing a mask all the time and speaking clearly for others to understand and keeping social distance. The last requirement was not new to us as my wife and I have always maintained cosiderable distance of body and mind between ourselves. Not only our Society was declared as local containment zone, we too have our inhouse cotainment zones with me sitting in the hall watching the TV and lazing while my wife is locked in another room talking endlessly on phone with her daughetr, sister living abroad and brothers and cousins and local acquinatances . The Mask has given rise to one more Murphy's law i.e the itch in the nose occurs more often when one wears a mask than when not masked.Other noticeable changes in my persona are overdue hair cut , a lackadaisical approach to dress and apperance and opinionated or polarised views.
It is said that the endemic will usher in new normals in every aspect of our familial, social, occupationalrelationships , behaviour and lifestyles.. Hope my accumulated GK would survive.
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I am sure it will...just as Upanishads have survived and have acquired many admires over the years..
ReplyDeleteBut where are you going?
Comparing the lofty thoughts in Upanishads and our GK?
DeleteLoved it Appa. I liked how you applied Murphy'law to the current times. Your observation is quite true. 😅
ReplyDeleteGot introduced to your blog today. Have bookmarked and will visit previous ones. Started actually with Raman Mama of the charity ashram. Found the FB page and also reference in FB Madhyamar. Re your overdue haircut, it may be feasible to invest in an electric groomer. I have been doing it for quite some years now. It helps that I am also bald ;)
ReplyDeleteSorry. Name is rajamani
ReplyDeleteNicely worded G K. Full of entertainment, advice and joyful life style.
ReplyDeleteThanks Prof saheb
DeleteThanks Rajamani/phantom 363. A
ReplyDeletesuggested pastime for you in Covid times, read all Rambler Raman blogs visiting www.avramanblogspot.com.rambler raman
An underlying pronounced contempt/disapproval for what the system expects of a civil services aspirant with a minimum fifteen years of school/collegiate education is seen in the blog. It appears that the entire system is seen as flawed.
ReplyDeleteAs part of studies in Indian History/Social studies, in middle/high school education, a civil service aspirant would have/should have definitely come across the names of Chandragupta Maurya, Kautilya- also known as Chanakya, King Vikramaditya and the nine gems in his court - Kalidasa included etc. There would have been a definite mention of Kautilya as Prime Minister of Vikramaditya , his work Arthasastra as also the works of Kalidasa. I do not think that this information, which gets etched onto one’s memory, gets obliterated in eight to ten years of time. Again as part of compulsory study of English language and literature in High School/ Intermediate/Pre-University/Degree (in Arts and Science) class, the aspirant would have definitely come across the names of Shelley, Keats, Byron, Wordsworth, Milton, Lake poets, William Shakespeare. Oliver Goldsmith, Charles Dickens et al and studied some extracts from works of some of them. It is surprising to read that a civil service aspirant would not have heard of these great personalities. Surely, the civil service aspirant would have and should have heard about Valmiki, Tulsidas, Kamban, Kalki, Kabirdas , Premchand, Maithili Saran Gupta, Thiruvalluvar etc also. On ’Decline (not ‘Rise’) and Fall of the Roman Empire’-- any book on World History would have definitely mentioned it under ‘Bibliography’ indicating the author as Edward Gibbon.
Scientific discoveries and inventions definitely enthuses a curious student. One does not get to know about them at one shot from a book on GK. It is information gathered and assimilated over a long period of time.
‘GK’, other than ‘current affairs’, remaining at the same level over decades needs introspection. It is true of subject/ language studies also. Even after the verdict is known on one’s performance in a competition- either way- one should look back and assess the inadequacies in one’s ‘knowledge’, ‘unlearn’ what has been incorrectly understood, start learning afresh etc. This is easily possible in the case of studies other than in science subjects. Several persons are known to have pursued their intellectual interest even while in service and also post retirement in a relaxed manner. A bureaucrat had even got a doctorate in Chemistry while in service. He had got permission to visit laboratories at IIT, Madras after office hours. Learning is a continuous never-ending process.
‘Current affairs’ is not confined to ‘politics’ alone. A perusal of the question papers of yester years on ‘General Studies’ in civil services examination—in both ‘preliminary’ and ‘mains’ - there are six of them every year- available at upsc.gov.in- will be assuring enough that what the UPSC expects a civil service aspirant to know is really ‘relevant’ to societal needs, is not asking for the moon nor is born out of fantasy.
When UPSC had invited suggestions for improvement in the system of examinations, a serving bureaucrat had suggested including a paper on ‘Ethics’. His suggestion was found acceptable and now part of Paper IV General Studies-Mains contains three or four questions on ‘Ethics’. Constructive suggestions, to make the examinations more meaningful and relevant, can be always forwarded to UPSC for consideration.
Thanks. Will benefit from your comments if any on the second part of the blog
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