As
India is getting ready to celebrate its 77th Independence Day, a
picture that was etched in my mind since my childhood by virtue of reading Andhra
Patrika, a popular Telugu newspaper of the fifties, flashed in my mind. It was
none other than the iconic image of Pandit Nehru on the red fort (placed alongside).
The other thing that I remembered is the comments of colonialists: India is a “mere geographical expression” and is “no more a united nation than the Equator”. For the colonialists, India, with its kind of ethnic, religious, linguistic, and developmental diversities, cannot dream of having self-government. They even predicted that if the British left, it would “fall back quite rapidly … into the barbarism and privations of the Middle Ages.”
Similar
trepidations—“forecasts of imminent dissolution, or of its descent into anarchy
or authoritarian rule”—continued to haunt the country even after it commenced
its independent journey towards its chosen ‘tryst with destiny’.
Not
surprisingly and despite these predictions, we have remained together —both in
our fight against internal and external threats and in progress. We have proved
to ourselves that ‘democracy’ is a cherished value to us.
And
the credit for this goes to Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru —the first Prime Minister Of Independent India—who at the stroke of midnight hour on August
14, 1947, when India “awakened to life and freedom” from years of suppression,
pondered thus:
The
future beckons to us. Whither do we go and what shall be our endeavor? To bring
freedom and opportunity to the common man, to the peasants and workers of
India; to fight and end poverty and ignorance and disease; to build up a
prosperous, democratic and progressive nation, and to create social, economic
and political institutions which will ensure justice and fullness of life to
every man and woman,
and his deputy, Sri Vallabhbhai
Patel, for whom the rulers of various kingdoms were “worthless … sycophants’
deserve to be dethroned by their people, in the larger interest of the nation, adopting
a diplomatic and pragmatic approach convinced the princes of the benefits of joining
the Indian Union and thus avoided the possible ‘balkanization’ of India.
The ‘unending quest’ that Pandit
Nehru launched 76 years ago and navigated the newly independent India through
democracy for the first 17 years assiduously, leaving behind a certain
‘something’ about his midwifery to the nation’s cause which even to date smells
sweet, is still firing the nation’s zeal, though one is not sure if we have
ended “poverty and ignorance and disease and inequality of opportunity.” Nor
could the nation wipe out “every tear from every eye,” for worries continue to
haunt rural India.
That
said, we must also note that the progress we have achieved during the last 76
years is phenomenal. Today’s India is more vibrant, confident, and
enterprising. Its economy which once almost stagnated under colonial rule for
more than a century, is today growing at around 6% plus. It has improved its
literacy rate, banished famines, drastically reduced poverty, achieved global
competitiveness in information technology, became a de facto member of the
nuclear club, and its democratic government’s commitment to secularism that has
taken the nation forward with all its inherent diversities has become its
hallmark.
Talking
of India’s accomplishment in managing its inherited diversities much against
the speculation of many skeptics, one is reminded of the strong foundation laid
by its maharishis of yore for nurturing the spirit of accommodating
diverse languages and lifestyles—all under a unifying umbrella of dharmic
principles enshrined in the Vedas and Upanishads.
Interestingly,
for these maharishis India is: Jambudweepe, Bharatvarshe,
Bharatakhande… For them India is a khand of chappanna-desh.
Each of them—Anga, Vanga, Kalinga, Khambhoja, Sourashtra, etc.—is encouraged to
live with its own language, its own customs, and practices, almost as an
independent state. But the use of local languages is just limited to the material
world. When it comes to their adhyatamic pursuits, right from
Kanyakumari to Kashmir, everyone has to resort to Sanskrit—God’s language
in which their dharma had been enshrined. They had no alternative and
that holds good even today.
In the
same vein, their epics are in Sanskrit. Nobody knows in what language Sri Rama
spoke to Sita. Yet, everyone knows him through Sanskrit. And so only he has
become the soulmate of everybody.
The
concept of Bharatvarsh and chappanna-desh is like
light and darkness. When light is there, darkness remains away. And in darkness
light becomes invisible. Similarly, when an individual is Bengali, the Indian
in him stays away. In the same way, when a Bengali becomes Indian, then Bengali
disappears. And as light cannot be perceived without darkness, an Indian cannot
be perceived without there being a Bengali, Gujarati, Malayali, etc., and vice
versa. The maharshis of yore have thus ingrained the concept
of ‘unity in diversity’ at the dawn of civilization.
It is
through such yoking together of diverse lingua franca by
subordinating their material living to the unifying dharma expressed
in Sanskrit, that the maharshis could succeed in creating and
sustaining Bharatvarsha.
And so long as India abides by these inherited values—the “loftiest Vedantic thought, Vasudeva Kutumbakam”, a certain kind of agnostic pluralism leading to universalism as against the “exclusive individualism” of the West—nothing can wean it away from its chosen path of being a free, all-encompassing, progressive and progressing nation.
**
Kaleidoscopic narrative of 70 years journey to the future. Well written.
ReplyDeleteThank you Dr Ramachandra for the visit....
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