A Call for Balance: Reservation, Reform, and the Right to Opportunity
Published on May 24, 2025
By EMN
- Education has always been regarded as the great equalizer,
the one tool through which individuals, regardless of their background, could
shape their future. With this belief, I pursued my academic journey with
dedication, completing both my Master (M.A) and Bachelor of Education (B.Ed.).
As a member belong of the Rengma community, which is small and often left
unheard, I knew that I would have to work twice as hard to make a place for
myself in the competitive world.
- Throughout my school, college and university, I consistently
performed better than many of my peers (although not a Topper). My marks,
attendance, and involvement in academic life all reflected my commitment. I
stayed up late preparing for exams, sacrificed time with family, and pushed
myself every single day, not because I was competing with others, but because I
was competing with my own limitations and dreams.
- Yet today, I find myself disheartened and disillusioned.
- Many of those who scored significantly lower than me in
school, college, and university exams are now holding secure government jobs.
They have moved on with stable careers, while I am still struggling, submitting
application after application, sitting for exam after exam, and waiting for
that one opportunity to prove myself.
- I do not blame them. Nor do I oppose the idea of
reservation.
- Let me say this clearly, I am not against the reservation
system; I fully understand why it exists. India’s caste and community-based
disparities have historically excluded many from opportunities, and reservation
is one of the ways to address that injustice. It is a constitutional provision
that has uplifted many and rightly so.
- But when a system becomes rigid and starts benefiting only
those who have already risen above their challenges, those who now have
economic strength, good networks, and access to coaching and guidance, it
begins to create a new kind of injustice, a silent one. And unfortunately,
people like me are at the receiving end of it.
- The Rengma community, like several others, is often overshadowed
by larger, more politically influential groups. We don’t have strong
representation in decision-making spaces, and we lack the socio-political
leverage to demand what is due to us. Many of our young people are highly
educated, yet unemployed. They are losing faith not just in the system, but in
the very idea that hard work matters.
- And the emotional toll is not small. Imagine putting in
years of effort, only to realise that your qualifications don’t carry the same
weight as a certificate of category. Imagine feeling invisible not because you
haven’t done enough, but because the system doesn’t recognise your struggles.
- This is not a call to end reservation; this is a call to
reform it. To make it more dynamic, more just, and more inclusive. To ensure
that it reflects the current ground realities, not just historical narratives.
- We need a reservation policy that includes parameters like
income, geographic remoteness, and educational disadvantage factors that cut
across community lines. We need a system that identifies and uplifts the
actually marginalised, not just the technically eligible.
- Our youth deserves better. Our efforts deserve recognition.
And our voices deserve to be heard.
- I still believe in education. I still believe in fairness.
But above all, I believe it’s time for a conversation on how we can build a
system where no deserving individual regardless of community is left behind.
- This is not a complaint. It is a truth.
- This is not an attack. It is a plea.
- And this is not anger. It is a cry for justice.
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- A Shyerhunlo Lorin
- (A concerned citizen)