On the contrary the NCERT with the full backing of the education minister has launched a veritable attackon some of India's best historians. The NCERT director J.S. Rajput, a self proclaimed adoring shishyaof Murli Manohar Joshi, in a signed article (Hindu, 23 October 2001)says that the NCERT had been "takenfor a ride" for "the past several decades" by authors of particularly its history books whoallegedly were furthering their "narrow political agenda". He is thus maligning some of the mosteminent and internationally acclaimed historians such as R. S. Sharma, former Head of the History Dept. ofDelhi University and Chairman of the Indian Council of Historical Research, Satish Chandra, former Chairpersonof the UGC, Romila Thapar and Bipan Chandra, both currently Emeritus Professors of the Jawaharlal NehruUniversity. Also maligned thus is Prof. Arjun Dev a former Dean of the NCERT and author of some of the besthistory textbooks produced by the NCERT. Criticism of some of the finest scholars who have done India proud bya virtual nobody who no one had heard of till he acquired recent notoriety by attempting to introduce communalconsiderations in what is taught to our children by what the Editor of Hindustan Times calls the "Talibanising"of our education. (25 November 2001).
There is in fact a concerted attempt to malign and thus seek to delegitimise the major scholars who wrote thehistory textbooks for the NCERT. It is alleged that these historians monopolise official patronage and asTarun Vijay the Editor of Panchjanya (a mouthpiece for the RSS) puts it they go for the three Ps, i.e.,Paisa, Power and Prestige. It must be pointed out here that the prestige both national and international thatthese historians command is not a result of any official patronage. It is a result of their formidablescholarship and the large number of books and articles written by them that are read and cited all over theworld. One cannot imagine how they wield any power by writing textbooks. As for paisa, it is perhaps not wellknown that the authors received hardly any payments for writing these textbooks. Romila Thapar, for example,is reported to have received a princely sum of R.650/- for one of the books written by her for the NCERT whichhas sold several lakhs of copies. What most of the authors receive annually after they have revised theirbooks is not more than what they would make by writing two or three newspaper articles!