DOWned Spirits.
The recent issue regarding Dow Chemicals has created sharp divisions in the campus. Actually it would be an exaggeration to say divisions. It has taken shape of a face off between one very small but highly vocal anti-Dow campaigners and the rest of the institute who very unfortunately haven’t bothered to speak up loud enough. I belong to the big group who feel Dow should be allowed in the campus. No, I haven’t sold my soul to the devil. Neither am I a right conservative with no solidarity for the people of
It all started with the innocuous notice about the proposed presentation regarding placement by Dow. Immediately a host of individuals launched a protest regarding how Dow has a number of liabilities regarding the
A lot of water has passed down the polluted Adyar since then. Petitions have been sent around. Discussions were held and numerous damaging media reports published. I personally spoke to the people involved in this and got a clear picture of the whole issue.
The primary argument is that its time the institute has a screening process for recruiting companies. It should start with Dow with clearly documented evidences of corporate negligence. Then the example should be extended to other companies off ill-repute like Halliburton, Lockheed Martin. Some were even suggesting that Tata Motors and Reliance too shouldn’t be spared.
The route adopted by the protestors had its glaring irregularities. While a coordinated campaign for informing students through films and literature is totally acceptable, there were some steps which the engineering student community found shocking. Let’s start with the signature campaign. A majority of the people who signed the petition were from the humanities department. How much thought the students put behind the signature is questionable. I doubt whether they had conferred with the students whom this petition was going to affect directly. Neither did they make any effort to understand how placement works. They read it, and signed it. An attitude many of us feel extremely irresponsible especially when it was an issue which didn’t concern them directly.
The biggest irony of this skewed and ill-conducted signature campaign was its representation before the media. Students were astonished to find themselves reading on rediff and the Telegraph about the ‘growing consensus’ among students from IIT Madras against Dow. Two IIT alumni hold a press conference in
Reflections took it upon itself and organized a panel discussion. The anti-Dow campaign managed to emotionalize the issue brilliantly by bringing in victims from
Let’s get to the arguments now. Dow has responsibilities. It’s true. When they bought Union Carbide in 1999 fifteen years after the
Dow is the biggest chemical company in the world. There is hardly any hour when we don’t use an item which might be somehow be related to a Dow innovation. Plastics, paint, Styrofoam and rubber products form a major part of it. If one is that indignant about a company’s practices wouldn’t the logical approach be to boycott its products? But then everyone knows it would make life virtually impossible and we come back to the question of doing what is easy and doing what is right.
Once we ban Dow where does the buck stop? The production of napalm by Dow for the
I have to state that the faculties who have supported this cause have shown poor judgment of the placement process and student sentiments. They have placed the placement team in a huge quandary. This team works throughout the year and spares no effort to get the best and the biggest of multinationals from every corner of the world. It is to the credit of the placement office that we have one of the most well-organized placement sessions in the country. The placement committee and the elected representatives were left stranded after the sudden rush of irresponsible media reports. Dow has already begun to show its reluctance to come to IITM. In view of the total absence of any such protest from most of the IITs and the media scrutiny on IITM, the obvious reaction will be to recruit from the other institutes. Hence inspite of an overwhelming opinion in favor of having Dow in the campus, due to the actions of a very few, our students will most probably miss out on an opportunity to work with the biggest chemical company. The argument that if one is really interested to work for Dow, can apply off campus clearly shows how out of touch the faculty in the HS department is with the career sentiments of the engineering students. They have no inkling of the anxieties through which batches go during the placement week and how the only concern is to get a good job as soon as possible. Applying off campus is an indication that one has been rejected in all the on campus interviews. Which student would like to risk that?
These incidents are terrible PR gaffes. They act like prior warnings to other MNCs who would rather stay away from IITM and avoid probable embarrassment. The only one losing out are our students. Dow is setting up a 100 million dollar R&D facility near Pune. If it doesn’t get researchers for that lab from IITM, it will take them from somewhere else. The Indian government who is supposed to fight for
Finally this is what it all boils down to. The campus agrees that informing students about a company and its activities is a fair idea. What is not agreed to by a huge majority is the following.
- Petitions led by departments who do not have the real stake in the issue.
- An extremely unfair representation before national media about campus mood.
- Ignorance about placements procedures and student sentiments but interfering in the whole process.
- Lack of consultation with elected student representatives and jeopardizing their year long efforts.
- And the biggest one of them all is judging students from the perspective of their moral high ground.
I was clearly told that the whole thing has come down to whether we choose to show solidarity with the victims from
This is nothing but a throwback to the sixties and seventies where anything associated with the west is evil. The desire for success is considered unnatural. Eyebrows are raised when students vie for the best jobs. Aspiration for a better lifestyle is translated to selfishness and disregard for the fellow being. I would like to request these people to see the real world around them which has drastically changed. We aspire to better our lives. And that means a better
13 comments:
Yay! Filter Copy counter-point is ready! Danke danke! :P
Trivially Filter Copy.
People forget that Honorable minister Arjun Singh was the Chief Minister of Madhya Pradesh when the union carbide plant was constructed bang in the middle of the city(he essentially was the one who gave the go ahead).Since he's the education minister now...by the shady logic adopted by some german profs in insti..people shouldnt even study in iit..
Every company will have skeletons in the closet if you dig hard enough.So dont.
Filter copy!!! I was told by Kini that Filter Copy doesnt accept 'blog articles'!!?! !%!@#%
Nice article
Why didn't u say all these things in the reflections meeting?
Even I belong to the bigger, silent group as you do. But for argument sake just one point to refute:
'We know banning Dow from the campus is not going to get any extra relief for the victims. It won’t change anything.'
Not really. If the director of IITM issues a statement banning DOW, it imposes pressure on the other IIT's even to do it. So if not this year, atleast next year they will do it and this would spread. After all, who are the prospective employees of DoW in India?
But, I agree this is not the way to carry on protest if at all its warranted.
Matter of fact: The RO water filter in IITM has some components made by DoW. And, DoW holds a monopoly in making those components (Courtesy:Pota) :)
Very well written!
truly an eye opener...
wish i were there for the reflections meeting
deserves a more serious space than filter copy
haa re - i never knew all this . Amader ekhaneo ekta conference er sponsor hocchhe DOW. so they were making this petition to send to the director to remove them from sponsorship. Shobai sign korchilo oble aamio sign kore diyechilam :) . Tor article ta pore, my views have changed. Ekhon aami giye sign ta kete dicchhi.
Very well written.
Small question though. Is FC widely circulated among the faculty? Can you not just nail it to their doors, ala Luther and the 95 theses?
Brilliant piece of writing man.
Brilliantly written, point well made.
Somebody has to speak it out!
the article really changed my take on the issue, simply because i never knew everything that there was to know on the issue...may be i still don't, but i definitely know better :)
Please print the argument supporting ban on DOW written in The 'Fourth Estate' along with this counter-point so that people who read your article will get a broader picture on the issue.
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