At an India cultural function in the US recently, danseuse Anisha Rajesh was intrigued by the conduct of the father of a classical vocalist-instrumentalist from her native Kerala. The man insisted openly that his daughter be reintroduced with the prefix 바카라Dr바카라 she had the other day earned from an American university.
Anisha, as a PhD candidate in dance at Texas Woman바카라s University, has been researching on Mohiniyattam for the past five years. Its rigours have given her an idea of the US academic scene regarding doctoral studies in Indian classical forms. So, from where did this D.Litt come to the visiting artiste, wondered Anisha. Only a year ago had she noticed another Malayali Mohiniyattam dancer in their immigrant country 바카라suddenly adding Dr바카라 to her name.
바카라Of late, there are quite a few famous and not-so-famous artistes and performing Indian teachers in the US and India announcing their having received D.Litt from America. This country, one may say, has two such varsities,바카라 observes Anisha,who runs Upasana Performing Arts Center in Houston. 바카라Interestingly, these universities have the same address바카라leading to a retail complex for dinning and shopping in Honolulu, Hawaii. Both are upright in their claim that they are not accredited by an agency recognised by the US secretary of education. That way, the recipient is just taking a chance or is being fooled.바카라


(Anisha Rajesh, with guru Kalamandalam Sathyabhama)
 Three months ago, Anisha, who trains students in Mohiniyattam and another south Indian classical dance Bharatanatyam,broke the matter on social media. That invited shock and condemnation from many, especially Mohiniyattam practitioners, teachers, scholars and buffs.
Leading danseuse Neena Prasad said such fake doctorates exploit a de-humanised system that wants to objectivise art for the benefit of uncaring officials and bureaucrats. 바카라From festival committees to government institutions all the way to ICCR (Indian Council for Cultural Relations, autonomous under the India government) pernicious system has evolved that allows (and even seeks) to replace artistic merit with bland paperwork,바카라 she adds.
 Neena, who is a PhD (2001, from Rabindra Bharati University, Kolkata) and is a noted performer of the the Kerala dance known for its delicate feminine grace, recalls the dismay she felt when a major art festival organiser reassured her that he had insisted in the committee that no artiste less than a PhD holder be included for performance. 바카라As long as the system promulgates such an approach, shenanigans would thrive바카라both in recognised universities and the make-believe ones,바카라 she notes. This, 바카라when the field has already a dearth of genuine research in the subject.바카라


( Neena Prasad)
 Lawyer Mani G. Marar, who is an admin of a leading Facebook group on Mohiniyattam, describes the matter as a 바카라scamhappening in India바카라 with the US connection being flaunted for better prestige. 바카라A university cannot be just a website. It바카라s is a Tamil Nadu-based racket around Madurai,바카라 he adds. 바카라So, if its people have nothing to do with the US, then it becomes a matter of concern for UGC.바카라
Mani, who practices with the Kerala High Court, alleges the varsity charges Rs 50,000 to Rs 2 lakh for a D.Litt. 바카라When they get some dozen applications, they book a venue to hold a valedictory function in front of a banner,바카라 he adds. 바카라To add credibility, they invite a couple of accomplished and unsuspecting artistes as well.바카라
It바카라s a far cry from, say, the case of K.M. Abu, who submitted his PhD thesis in 2013 after painstaking research, and was awarded a doctorate by Kalamandalam (a deemed university) in mid-January 2015. The topic of the dancer, now 50, was on the life and times of Kalyanikutty Amma, considered the pivotal figure in the resurrection of Mohiniyattam in the mid-20th century after her training in the dance at the 1930-founded Kalamandalam, the state바카라s premier performing-art institution.
In complete contrast to such academic rigours was a November 2017 event that young dancer Divya Nedungadi has to shockingly recall from her native Palakkad. The east-central Kerala city saw the above-mentioned 바카라international바카라 varsity conferring a doctorate upon a dancer locally known for his skills in training school and college students for youth festivals.
Divya, 29, is a PhD from West Bengal바카라s vintage Visva-Bharati University at Santiniketan바카라the youngest Mohiniyattam dancer to have received a doctorate. From her alma mater comes Pallavi Krishnan, a Thrissur-settled Bengali who learned advanced Mohiniyattam in the 1990s from Kalamandalam in Cheruthuruthy near Shoranur. Pallavi notes that 바카라fake doctorates바카라 is a recent practice in the field. 바카라Don바카라t its beneficiaries ever feel guilty for cheating not the art fraternity,바카라 she asks. 바카라What kind of a message do they send to their own students?바카라
바카라Real shame,바카라 says Carnatic vocalist Renuka Arun.
Scholar-writer C.P. Unnikrishnan is of the opinion that D.Litt is anyway an insult to hard-earned doctorates. 바카라If you are honouring a great artiste, let it better be with a civil honour like Padma or Akademi fellowship,바카라 he maintains.
Boston-based medical practitioner Sapna Govindan, who performs Mohiniyattam, sees 바카라half-baked and downright bad바카라 dancers as teachers/experts around her. 바카라Many Indian parents feel a need to expose their children to native traditions, taking them to the dance teacher next door. Who looks at credentials or ability?바카라 Adds legendary danseuse K.J. Sarasa바카라s frontline disciple Rathna Kumar, who runs the Anjali Center for Performing Arts in Texas: 바카라By keeping quiet, we are condoning such wrong activities.바카라
Anisha says several classical dancers residing in or visiting India customarily donate money to organisations to get stage shows. 바카라Such performers get their finances as tuition gurus. A part of this money is channelled to earn fake doctorates, which give them an edge in winning awards, publishing self-promoting articles or making documentaries,바카라 she claims. 바카라The cycle continues.바카라