|        Hari Vasudevan: Historian, Gentleman and Beloved Teacher Jawhar Sircar     Hari Vasudevan, 1952-2020. Photo: sangbad.in
 He earned for himself the distinction of being accepted  by academics and policy makers as a reliable expert on Russia and the East  European countries. It was only late last night when the hospital sent me a short report on Hari  Vasudevan’s precarious condition that I realised he had a middle name as well,  Sankar. Caught between a more placid Vishnu and a temperamental Shiva, Hari  must have opted quite early for the tranquil deity, for everything about him  was so unflappably cool, soothing and gentle. Hari did his Tripos at Christ’s College, Cambridge and then earned his  Master’s and Doctoral degrees from the same university. Along with history, his  years in Cambridge ensured he spoke the real English. No airs, no acquired  accent, just a gentle insistence on speaking the language as it should be  spoken. Our good-humoured mimicry had absolutely no effect on him and he  continued to give his students the additional advantage of being trained,  rather inadvertently, in correct spoken English, at no extra charge. His  marriage to Tapati Guha Thakurta, his outstanding student, five years younger,  incidentally, followed a rather hallowed tradition in his discipline where  Presidency and Calcutta universities were concerned. Hari Vasudevan earned for himself the distinction of being accepted by  academics and policy makers as a reliable expert on Russia and the East  European countries. After the collapse of the Soviet Union, he utilised his  specialisation to also focus on the Central Asian republics that had broken  off, as a new fertile area of research had opened up. He extended his beat  further to East and Southeast Asia as well. Central ministries dipped into his  knowledge of these territories quite freely and frequently, and I remember how  more than one professional diplomat told me in confidence about his remarkable  grasp. I stand accused of similar unpaid exploitation of Hari Vasudevan’s  expertise, when I was secretary of the ministry of culture. But he did not mind  as it was for a national cause and there was always the India International  Centre where such debts could be sorted out.   Hari Vasudevan. Photo: Courtesy Vasudevan Family
 Except for a three-year stint as professor of Central Asian Studies in Jamia  Milia Islamia, between 2003 and 2005, Hari spent almost his entire academic  career in Kolkata, right from 1978. He taught for decades at Calcutta University  where he was certainly one of the most popular teachers. Hari will always be  remembered by several generations of students and scholars as a very accessible  and warm person. In Kolkata, he served and excelled as director of the Maulana  Abul Kalam Azad Institute of Asian Studies, an autonomous centre of the Union  culture ministry, between 2007 and 2011. In fact, the-then prime minster, who  was also in charge of this ministry at the time, expressed his unequivocal  satisfaction when he came to Kolkata in 2010 to formally inaugurate the new  campus of this institute. In 2005, Hari was invited by the Union human resources development ministry  to chair the textbook development committee for the social sciences of the  National Centre for Educational Research and Training (NCERT). This meant  skating on thin ice. While he worked with a large team and consulted widely to  produce a set of textbooks that were applauded by teachers and students, he was  incensed when changes were made later without his knowledge. First, some  cartoons removed by busybodies during the UPA regime. Worse was to follow,  however, when the NDA arrived and went on merrily distorting history with their  saffron hues. As an honest academic, Hari was not one to put up with this. Hari ended his teaching career at Calcutta University, as UGC Emeritus  Professor of history. Needless to mention, he worked and taught for short  spells at several universities and academies abroad — from Cornell to Uppsala,  and many others. He was chairman of the Board of the Institute for Development  Studies, Kolkata, and a distinguished fellow at the Observer Research  Foundation in Delhi, till his untimely death due to COVID-19. Hari doted on his daughter Mrinalini, and was a devoted  husband to Tapati, an internationally-acknowledged professor of art history.  Both are in a state of shock at how this lively, humorous man could just  disappear forever in four short days. The coronavirus does not even give a  chance to say goodbye. His countless friends and wellwishers will surely miss  him for years to come. Hari Vasudevan was among the last few upholders of a  dying legacy at Calcutta University, to enrich the faculty with teachers from  ‘outside the state’. How he managed to thrive for a full four decades in the  present, increasingly-parochial era remains a wonder. But he did so with élan,  holding his own among rather argumentative Bengalis spluttering loudly in  Bangla, while Hari kept talking in his soft, proper English, laced with his  very sweet, accented Bengali. Jawhar Sircar is a former IAS officer who was secretary, Ministry of  Culture, Government of India Courtesy: https://thewire.in/history/hari-vasudevan-historian-gentleman-and-beloved-teacher Back to Home Page May 13, 2020 
       Your Comment if any |