Once, during my first year, I had a little bit of extra food on my plate, an extra roti. Instead of throwing it in the dustbin, I gave it to a dog. I was caught doing this and my college ID card was confiscated, which I had to collect from the principal. Since I am a philosophy student, the principal asked me for a philosophical argument as to why I broke the rule of not feeding dogs. I gave him an intentionalist account, saying that I hadn't broken the spirit of the rule. The rule was created because visually challenged students would step on the dog, and it would bite them. I told him that I had only fed a dog, which didn't bite me back. Since childhood, I have been taught never to waste food and in all of this, everybody including me, the dog, my parents and the visually challenged are happy. I asked him, who is unhappy here? He was quite impressed and gave me my card back.
The second time, there were protests in my college regarding the discriminatory standards between the girls and the boys hostel. The issue was timings for the girls hostel, which were different from those of the boys' hostel and we found it unfair. We intended a democratic dialogue with the college authority but the entire thing culminated into a General Body Meeting where the principal said that girls and boys are like stones and eggs, hence the difference in standards and rules. As a result of all this, the authorities introduced residence interviews, where after every year you need to prove whether you are qualified for residence. This is basically a tool of control. Students who were a part of the protests were thrown out of the residence, including me. It became quite clear that if you go against the principal, you will be losing your housing.
What was the motive behind starting the online magazine, St. Stephen's Weekly?