‘What India needs: IRMA, not
IIMs, IITs’ Monday April 17 2006
12:27 IST
ANAND: They might not get the lucrative
offers and hefty pay cheques their IIT and IIM
counterparts do, but that doesn’t take away from the
importance of being IRMA passouts.
The 25th
annual convocation ceremony of Institute of Rural
Management, Anand, the country’s lone rural management
institute was held on Sunday. The 89 students who passed
out were thrilled with what R A Mashelkar, CSIR
director-general, had to say in his convocation address:
‘‘India needs IRMAs more than its IITs and IIMs now.’’
Mashelkar said that after green revolution and white
revolution, the country needs ‘‘connectivity
revolution’’. Pointing to important revolutions taking
place in rural India, he called upon the need to have
more IRMAs, at least one each in Uttaranchal, the
North-East and Orissa to harness creativity and
innovation at the grassroots. He called upon IRMA
graduates to be not only managers, but also to emerge as
development and social entrepreneurs.
Citing the
case of the National Innovation Foundation (NIF) which
had mobilised 50,000 innovative and traditional
knowledge practices, he regretted that few had become
the basis of socio-economic enterprises. He called for
new enterprises which could be set up by IRMA graduates
with NIF investing capital.
Addressing the
spotless white kurta-churidar clad graduates in their
kolhapuris, Mashelkar was all praise for IRMA chairman V
Kurien’s role and for IRMA, which he termed as the
nation’s pride. ‘‘I strongly believe the legacy of Dr
Kurien has never been more relevant than today when the
influence of globalisation is squeezing the space for
local and community action,’’ said
Mashelkar.
IRMA’s new challenge, he said, is to
expand its vision to other sectors of Indian economy
which need outstanding managers imbued with social and
communitarian spirit and can transform rural
India.
IRMA may increase PG programme
seats
IRMA acting director L K Vaswani on Sunday
said the institute is likely to increase its student
intake capacity to about 120 students for the two-year
post-graduate programme in rural management. ‘‘We are
likely to increase our (student) intake capacity to
nearly 120 students,” Vaswani said. ‘‘We have already
obtained AICTE approval in this regard,’’ he added.
Currently there are about 90 seats for the rural
management programme at the institute.
I have no
regrets in life, says Kurien
VERGHESE Kurien,
IRMA chairman, addressing the students, said he had “no
regrets in life”. The father of India’s dairy movement
and former chairman of Gujarat Co-operative Milk
Marketing Federation said, “Looking back, I do not have
to regret anything. It has been an exciting, rewarding
and eventful experience.” Kurien said, ‘‘In the name of
liberalisation and globalisation, I wonder if we are not
giving up, one by one, all that we fought for in our
struggle for freedom under a policy framework of
self-esteem. I ask myself if we are inviting a new form
of colonialism.’’ Kurien further sounded a warning note
to the graduates saying they are entering a world which
is harsh and perhaps even
hostile. |