Fate being a cruel tease, it came to light Saturday that Vadithya
Nehru, the IIT-Kanpur student who took his own life Thursday upon being
rusticated by his institute, would have been reinstated if only he had
asked to be. The dean of student affairs at IIT-Kanpur, A K Ghose,
told Express on the telephone that Nehru had been one of 24 students
who were struck from the rolls for failing to show a satisfactory
performance in their first year. All of them volunteered for
counselling and sought readmission. And they were readmitted with
corrective recommendations. All except Nehru. Ghose said, “We
give a chance to terminated students to apply again to resume their
courses. All the terminated students came back with their parents and
applied for readmission. We gave them counselling and recommended yoga
classes to them. They are all back in class, except Nehru. I don’t
know what happened to him. His brother came to campus and took him
away.” The shocking suicide of the 20-year-old student moved the people
of his tanda in Nalgonda district to take a pledge never to take their
own lives. In death if not in life, the boy did finally fulfill his
father’s wish that he be of service to Narlaga tanda. Hundreds of
villagers, many from Nehru’s tanda and many dozens from hamlets all
around, gathered in Narlaga for the funeral of the 20-year-old boy who
so tragically carried the burden of their aspirations. They vowed to
provide assistance to Nehru’s parents, Ramana and Panni. “We
thought we must take this pledge to send a message to youngsters in our
tanda. Several of them dream of pursuing higher education. We want them
to know that it’s not alright to take one’s own life,’’ said V Venkat
Ram, a tanda resident and headmaster of the local school. Numb with
grief, the boy’s father Vadithya Ramana and Panni watched impassively as
their neighbours took the pledge. Still only on the edge of
coherence, Ramana -- fan of Jawaharlal Nehru, and dreamer of his son’s
dreams - said he is determined to go to the IIT-Kanpur campus to know
what that led his boy to think there was no hope. Venkat Ram said
they would like to know what kind of counseling IIT-Kanpur had for
bright students who fell behind, such as Nehru. “We want to know if he
could have been saved,” he said.
By Mouli Mareedu
moulimareedu@gmail.com
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