May our thinking change after reading this piece.
A letter from Professor Raj Kumar, Vice-Chancellor of Panjab University, Chandigarh, to Dr. Niaz Ahmad Akhtar, Vice-Chancellor of University of the Punjab, Lahore.
Chandigarh 160017 Republic of India
Niaz Ji, Namaste,
If knowledge were truly the lost heritage of a believer, the central library of your university—established in 1882—would have had millions of books instead of just five hundred thousand, and the central library of my university—established in 1947—would not boast sixty-four hundred thousand (6.4 million) books. Your institution would be echoing its fame across all four corners of the world. But since this is not the case, the writer can only rub his hands in sorrow. At my university, right-wing and left-wing student organizations foster the growth of democratic values on the strength of intellect and manifestos. My university houses a total of four museums, including the Fine Arts Museum, whereas your entire university itself is a museum. My university has produced a NASA astronaut like Kalpana Chawla, a historian like Romila Thapar, and a founder journalist of Tehelka like Tarun Tejpal, while your university produces human-like beasts who celebrate the death of Mashal Khan. Out of the forty-five thousand students at your university, 44,950 do not even know the name of Har Gobind Khorana, who graduated from your university in 1943 and won the Nobel Prize in Medicine in 1968 for deciphering the order of nucleotides in nucleic acids found in proteins. However, all forty-five thousand of those students certainly know that Dr. Abdus Salam, who won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1979 for his work on the Grand Unification Theory, was a Qadiani and therefore a non-Muslim. Despite being the oldest university in Lahore and Pakistan, you have not established any chair in honor of Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar, who was born in Lahore in 1910 and won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1983 for his work on the evolution and structure of stars. In a university where students are only worried about not being able to sit in exams or get a degree without seventy-five percent attendance, how are they supposed to conduct research?
I hope you will not consider this letter an absurd interference, and will show no hesitation in coming to Chandigarh to learn from the Panjab University here about the difference between running a university and running a madrassah.
Well-wisher, Professor Raj Kumar.
From a memory of a few years ago.

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