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The professor deserves better! | By Khalid Saleem

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The professor deserves better!

IT would be hard to find anyone who has not heard or read jokes featuring the (absent-minded) professor.

With the possible exception of the mother-in-law (about whom more some other time), the most popular subject for subtle, sophisticated humour intended to liven up any party remains the hapless ‘absent-minded professor’.

Pick up a joke book – any joke book – and you are bound to find a good number of hilarious jokes featuring the dignified figure of the professor.

These are the irrefutable facts that would form the bedrock of this dissertation. Be that as it may, one can hardly move forward without pausing to delve into the basic question: why does the subject of the absent-minded professor of all people particularly appeal to the wits.

To put it another way, with a myriad other samples of the species to choose from, why, in deed, pick on the hapless professor?

One can pose the fundamental question: why an absent-minded professor, when it could just as well have been a member of any other profession?

Surely there are other professions that are just as much, if not more, joke-worthy and/or susceptible to the state of absent-mindedness?

Why then zero in on the professor? Having withstood this somewhat convoluted reasoning this far, the reader may well be justified in enquiring what gives one the right to make this matter one’s business.

Considering that the joke in question is apt and good enough to provoke honest laughter why, then, go into unnecessary and irrelevant details?

One’s honest and simple defence is that one is obliged to go into all these sordid details simply in the interest of research.

What with the Higher Education Commission, in its heyday, having once declared that any one devoid of a research degree is not an asset but a liability for the country, one can hardly be expected to let such an opportunity slip by.

A good research scholar, one learns on reliable authority, never lets go of any such opportunity that passes within striking distance.

Coming then to the res, as legal eagles are wont to put it, one can also add that the professor probably got the nod because he happened to be a harmless creature and certainly in no position to strike back.

This type of adversary would be the obvious choice when one is faced with a state of confrontation (ask any general!).

What is more, ‘absentmindedness’ in the teaching profession can be justified by the observation that, given an earnest and single-minded quest for knowledge, the professor can be excused if he/she loses sight at times of the more mundane aspects of human existence.

There is this joke, then, about the absent-minded professor who decided to move house after having lived at the same address for some twenty years.

As he was leaving for the university on his last day in the old house, his wife turned to him and said, “Now look, dear, we have lived in this house for twenty years.

Today we are moving to a new house. So, do not forget that when you come back from work, you are not to come to this house, but to go to the new one we are moving into.

And just to make sure, I am taking away your old key and putting the key to the new house in your pocket.”

As was to be expected, the professor had forgotten all about it by the end of the day’s toil, and duly turned up at the same old address.

He tried the key; it would not fit. So he tried ringing the bell but no one answered. He peeped in through the window and saw that the furniture was all gone.

And, then, it suddenly all came back to him; they had moved to a new house. But, for the life of him, he could not remember the address of the new house.

He looked around and espied a little boy messing around with a football. So he beckoned him over and said, “Little boy, I have lived in this house for twenty years.

Today we moved to a new house. Do you, by any chance, know where we moved to? ” The little boy looked at him, nodded his head sadly and said, “Yes, dad; mum said this would happen!”

Then, there is tale of an absent-minded professor who was very much in love with his equally absent-minded wife (also a professor?).

It so happened that of an evening the two were relaxing in the lounge of their home – exchanging sweet nothings – when all of a sudden the doorbell rang.

The wife sprang up from the couch, turned white and gasped, “Oh my God, that must be my husband!

” Without a word, the professor got up, jumpedout of the window and vanished into the night.

There you have two classical examples of good-natured humour at the expense of the absent-minded professor.

These are just stray examples. This humour may be a trifle unkind, but the fact remains that the teaching community has accepted it with good grace over the years.

It is doubtful if members of any other profession would have exhibited equal accommodation.

Perhaps it is due to this spirit of graceful accommodation that professors have managed to maintain their dignity in a profession that has never been afforded the credit or the honour that it deserves.

And, who knows the absent-mindedness may be a veneer that professors tend to wrap around themselves in order to isolate themselves from all the inanities that go on around them.

It may perhaps be this very state of splendid isolation that makes it possible for them to excel in the intellectual pursuits that others around them can only aspire to.

And isn’t it about time that society gave some well-deserved recognition to the members of this (very under-rated) profession?

— The writer is a former Ambassador and former Assistant Secretary General of OIC.

 

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