Published 5/22/2026, 4:41:29 PM · Updated 5/22/2026, 7:00:09 PMBy TheBriefWire Editorial Team
Key points
The Supreme Court on Friday observed that Council for Educational Research and Training (NCERT) textbooks are not an appropriate space for cartoons and directed a committee headed by a former judge to review such content.
The observation came during a suo motu hearing before a three-judge bench headed by Chief Justice of India Surya Kant, where Solicitor General Tushar Mehta flagged the presence of cartoons in some NCERT textbooks.
Read Full Story Arguing before the court, the Solicitor General said that while there was no objection to cartoons in general, their inclusion in school textbooks raised concerns as they would be viewed by children of an “impressionable age”.
“It may not be proper to have these cartoons.
A textbook is not a place where you use cartoons,” he argues, while raising a broader question of whether satire or lampooning should be part of school learning material.