
Monday, December 10, 2007
The Tribune coverage
SPIC MACAY all set to expand in Haryana Aditi TandonTribune News Service
Chandigarh, October 15Twenty-nine years into the SPIC MACAY movement, Kiran Seth is beginning to feel apprehensive.
This time the worry is not so much about lack of money to see the programme through as about society’s reigning indifference to the intangible realm of our heritage.
“I think a lot these days about the tendency of the young to engage with the tangible. A student, for example, is more likely to spare time to teach a slum child than attend a SPIC MACAY meeting. I don’t blame them for that. It’s natural for people to make efforts that yield visible results. But as a professor of abstract mathematics, I can say this much with authority - one who understands the intangible, abstract domain understands everything in the world. Through SPIC MACAY, we strive to celebrate the abstract,” Kiran Seth said in an interview.
In Chandigarh for SPIC MACAY’s Haryana advisory board meeting, Seth spoke with urgency about the need to put children in touch with the lost heritage. With this in mind, SPIC MACAY recently launched two massive nationwide programmes for school students.
The first, National School Intensive, is designed to take children close to the masters.
“Twice a year, we select 300 students from India to attend a five-day spiritual camp in a chosen school. Here, they must lead humble lives, away from the spurious attractions of modernity. They stay in the company of inspired men and women and learn from it. We have people like Ustad Fahimuddin Dagar and Anjolie Ela Menon come over for such camps,” Seth said.
At another level, SPIC MACAY is running a programme for students of elementary level.
“This one was born out of the need for cultural grounding of children. Parents, these days, have literally outsourced the job of cultivation of “samskaras” to television and schools. We don’t want students to be deprived of the nuances of Indian culture, which they once learnt from grandparents,” Seth said, elaborating also on SPIC MACAY’s recent collaboration with the Riks Konsertene in Norway, which produces global classical music concerts for school students back home.
With the Konsertene, SPIC MACAY has produced “The Gateway of India”, featuring four legendary Indian artistes. Interesting it is that Norwegians pay in either case, when Indian musicians travel to Norway and when Norwegian troupes come to India. For Seth, the collaborations with western music and folk groups continue to be precious.
“Under this programme we have brought to India rare art forms like Noh theatre of Japan and Kun Chu opera of China. Shortly, a Hungarian group will be coming to India,” Seth said, after attending the Haryana advisory board meeting, which saw encouraging participation from top bureaucrats, educationists and industrialists.
With this meeting, SPIC MACAY is all set to expand base in Haryana, where the government has assured all possible help.
The plan is to hold SPIC MACAY’s next national school intensive in Haryana, besides constituting SPIC MACAY bodies in every district.
Earlier, Haryana Governor A.R. Kidwai had donated Rs 1 lakh to the movement, which may well get a portion of the publicity budget every department of Haryana government gets.
It is, in fact, the constitution of such advisory boards and their ensuing support that has salvaged SPIC MACAY from its worst-ever financial crisis.
Chandigarh, October 15Twenty-nine years into the SPIC MACAY movement, Kiran Seth is beginning to feel apprehensive.
This time the worry is not so much about lack of money to see the programme through as about society’s reigning indifference to the intangible realm of our heritage.
“I think a lot these days about the tendency of the young to engage with the tangible. A student, for example, is more likely to spare time to teach a slum child than attend a SPIC MACAY meeting. I don’t blame them for that. It’s natural for people to make efforts that yield visible results. But as a professor of abstract mathematics, I can say this much with authority - one who understands the intangible, abstract domain understands everything in the world. Through SPIC MACAY, we strive to celebrate the abstract,” Kiran Seth said in an interview.
In Chandigarh for SPIC MACAY’s Haryana advisory board meeting, Seth spoke with urgency about the need to put children in touch with the lost heritage. With this in mind, SPIC MACAY recently launched two massive nationwide programmes for school students.
The first, National School Intensive, is designed to take children close to the masters.
“Twice a year, we select 300 students from India to attend a five-day spiritual camp in a chosen school. Here, they must lead humble lives, away from the spurious attractions of modernity. They stay in the company of inspired men and women and learn from it. We have people like Ustad Fahimuddin Dagar and Anjolie Ela Menon come over for such camps,” Seth said.
At another level, SPIC MACAY is running a programme for students of elementary level.
“This one was born out of the need for cultural grounding of children. Parents, these days, have literally outsourced the job of cultivation of “samskaras” to television and schools. We don’t want students to be deprived of the nuances of Indian culture, which they once learnt from grandparents,” Seth said, elaborating also on SPIC MACAY’s recent collaboration with the Riks Konsertene in Norway, which produces global classical music concerts for school students back home.
With the Konsertene, SPIC MACAY has produced “The Gateway of India”, featuring four legendary Indian artistes. Interesting it is that Norwegians pay in either case, when Indian musicians travel to Norway and when Norwegian troupes come to India. For Seth, the collaborations with western music and folk groups continue to be precious.
“Under this programme we have brought to India rare art forms like Noh theatre of Japan and Kun Chu opera of China. Shortly, a Hungarian group will be coming to India,” Seth said, after attending the Haryana advisory board meeting, which saw encouraging participation from top bureaucrats, educationists and industrialists.
With this meeting, SPIC MACAY is all set to expand base in Haryana, where the government has assured all possible help.
The plan is to hold SPIC MACAY’s next national school intensive in Haryana, besides constituting SPIC MACAY bodies in every district.
Earlier, Haryana Governor A.R. Kidwai had donated Rs 1 lakh to the movement, which may well get a portion of the publicity budget every department of Haryana government gets.
It is, in fact, the constitution of such advisory boards and their ensuing support that has salvaged SPIC MACAY from its worst-ever financial crisis.
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