Abbreviation | DSOBS |
---|---|
Established | 1939 |
Type | Alumni association |
Legal status | Non-profit organization |
Location |
|
Members | c. 5,000 |
President | Sameer Dingra |
Vice President | Junaid Altaf |
Affiliations | Indian Public Schools' Society |
Website | dsobs |
The Doon School Old Boys' Society (informally DSOBS) is the alumni society of The Doon School, an all-boys boarding school in Dehradun, Uttarakhand, India, founded in 1935.[1][2] It is considered to be among the most influential old boys' networks in India, with its alumni including a former Indian prime minister, politicians, diplomats, officers of the defence forces, writers and artists.[3][4][5] The first president of the society was the Englishman Arthur Foot, who was the first headmaster at Doon.[6] Alumni of the school are known as Doscos and after graduating gain life-membership to the society.
In the media, it has often been described as "elitist", and in 1985 the Washington Post reported: "[It] raises the question of who should run India, and whether it is healthy that a minuscule elite exerts such influence on a democracy whose founders were determined to break from its caste-ridden, imperialist past."[7] In another report in The New York Times, Steven Weisman wrote: "Not surprisingly, Doon School people are sensitive to criticism that they are sharpening the worst tendencies in a country long burdened by caste and social hierarchies." This was followed by a quote from Ajit Narain Haksar, an old boy, who stated: "We are not an elite in the conniving sense...Merit is still the basic criterion."[8]