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The Karnataka government has announced that it would include teachings of the Bhagavad Gita as part of moral education in schools from December this year.
B.C. Nagesh, the state’s primary and secondary education minister, said the government has amended its earlier proposal to introduce Gita as a separate subject in schools and decided to teach it as part of moral education.
However, some section of the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party has objected to introducing the Hindu scripture only as part of moral education and not as a separate topic in syllabus.
However, Nagesh said the government has already appointed an expert panel to give their recommendations and suggestions after consulting with various stakeholders.
The minister also hinted that some historical mistakes will be corrected in the textbooks like the lesson on Baba Dudan-giri, a holy place of Muslims in Chikmagaluru to ‘Inam Dattatreya Peeta,’ a Hindu pilgrim center in the same hills. The text books will have more information on some local kings and their kingdoms too, he added.
Last year, several school days were disrupted on account of the hijab row by Muslim girls and attacks on some Christian schools for propagating Christian principles in schools.
Father Faustine Lobo, the spokesperson of the Catholic Church in Karnataka, said he welcomes the government decision to teach Bhagavad Gita in schools as part of moral education, but it should not be aimed at promoting a single culture.
All regions teach moral principles and India being a multi-cultural country, it is not right to look at morality from only one angle, he pointed out.
“The government should be committed to include moral values from other religions too, if they are really concerned about a moral society based on ethical values and pluralism,” the Catholic priest asserted.
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