ASAS, Thrissur
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The Academy of Sharia and Advanced Studies, run by Malik Deenar Islamic Complex, in Thrissur

Islamic institute in Kerala’s Thrissur sets an example by teaching Sanskrit


Students in long white robes and white head-dresses in an Islamic institution unwaveringly reciting slokas and mantras in Sanskrit under the watchful gaze of their Hindu gurus, is what sets apart a Muslim educational organisation in Thrissur district of central Kerala.

Gurur brahma gurur vishnu, Gurur devo maheshwara, Gurur saakshaat param brahma, Tasmai shri gurave namaha,” one student recites the Sanskrit sloka on being asked to do so by his professor.

Uttamam (excellent),” the professor responds in Sanskrit, as another student finishes reciting a different sloka asked of him.

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Awareness about religions

All conversations between the students and the professor in the class are in Sanskrit. The objective behind teaching Sanskrit, Upanishads, Puranas, etc., is to inculcate in the students knowledge and awareness about other religions, Onampilly Muhammad Faizy, the principal of the Academy of Sharia and Advanced Studies (ASAS), run by Malik Deenar Islamic Complex (MIC), said.

Another reason for teaching Sanskrit to the students at MIC ASAS was Faizy’s own academic background as he had studied Shankara philosophy. “Therefore, I felt that students should know about other religions and their customs and practices. But an in-depth study of Sanskrit as well as the Upanishads, shastras, vedantams would not be possible during the eight-year study period,” he told PTI.

“Instead, the idea is to provide basic knowledge about these and create an awareness in them about another religion,” Faizy said. Important portions of the Bhagavad Gita, Upanishads, Mahabharata, Ramayana are selectively taught in Sanskrit to students over a period of eight years after they pass out of Class 10, he said.

Selected students

The selective teaching of these texts is because the institution is primarily a Sharia college where other languages, like Urdu and English, are also taught besides a degree course in Arts as it is affiliated to the Calicut University.

“The academic workload is huge. Therefore, we take in students who can handle it and also maintain strict standards. There is an entrance exam for admitting students,” he said.

Some of the students recently told the media that initially it was tough to learn Sanskrit, just like Arabic, but by continuously studying and practising, it becomes easier over time. “It is a tough task initially. Just like Arabic. But if we study it continuously, repeatedly practice it, just like with Arabic, it becomes easier over a period of time. The regular classes and the tests also help us to learn it,” one of the students said.

While there has been no objection from parents of the students or anyone else, a major challenge has been finding good faculty to teach Sanskrit, Bhagavad Gita, Upanishads, etc., properly to the students. “That is why we were able to start teaching Sanskrit just seven years ago and it is also the reason that it is being taught only at this branch — one of seven,” Faizy said. We have an excellent faculty here who have devised a good curriculum for the students, he noted. The response from the students too has been encouraging, the principal added.

One of the faculty, professor K K Yatheendran, told media when he was invited to teach there, Faizy “was concerned whether I would have reservations about teaching in an Arabic institution as I was a Hindu”. “I said there is no Hindu or Muslim issue here. I am coming here ready to teach. So, I have no such reservations,” he told the media.

People’s reaction

He also said that when people see him walking toward the institute with sandalwood tilak on his forehead, they ask why I am going there. “I tell them I am going there to teach Sanskrit and they say it is a good thing I am doing,” according to Yatheendran.

Faizy too said that he has not heard any negative or discouraging remarks from any quarter. “Everyone who heard about it has only praised it and encouraged us,” he added.

Dr Ramesh, who also teaches Sanskrit at MIC ASAS, said that students there had never heard of Sanskrit before coming there. “They have not even learnt it in school. But as we move from one phase to another, the students are able to speak a little in Sanskrit, learn padams and are able to understand some slokas also,” according to him.

The other faculty members are Dr C M Neelakandan, retired professor of Sanskrit Literature from Sree Sankaracharya University of Sanskrit, and Dr Shamseer P C, assistant professor, department of Sanskrit, Kerala University, according to the Facebook page of MIC ASAS. The visuals of the Sanskrit classes are also posted on the institute’s page.

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At a time when political parties in Kerala are at loggerheads over alleged saffronisation of higher education institutions or them becoming centres of communism, this Islamic institution is setting an example by teaching its students Sanskrit and the Bhagavad Gita along with Arabic and the Quran.

Hafiz Aboobacker, one of the coordinators at the institute, told a media channel: “It would help students to learn about and understand another religion through their history and Puranas. It would also help to sync our religious views with that of theirs. It would help to create a new beginning for a new India. That is the goal behind including Sanskrit in the syllabus,” according to him.

(With Agency inputs)

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