Rebooting
Our Roots
Ideas are more powerful than guns. We would not
let our enemies have guns, why should we let them have ideas?- Joseph Stalin
In the heated discourse on a saffron rearrangement of recent
history, and amidst the outcry that the very ‘Idea of India’ is being tampered
with, the reason should not be lost sight of.
The present regime is not rewriting history, but changing
the emphases, including the portraits of some of the dramatis personae, from
what it was, to what it needs to become. The narrative was earlier arranged in
a certain way, to serve a very different purpose. And now, that purpose has
changed.
This is believed by all, except those, who insist that this
government is a flash-in-the-pan, an aberration, that will be corrected, come
2019. Then, it will be back to the old ways, in one form or the other, meaning
a conglomeration of more or less socialist regional parties, including Congress.
So, this is a presumption and effrontery, on the part of a Johnny-come-lately-and-soon-be-gone
government. How this delusion can sustain in the face of constantly dropping
vote shares and election losses is anybody’s guess or a case of virulent,
panicked, denial.
But to many others, speaking up now, to attribute all
progress, to the vision and work of the Nehru dynasty, is seen as an open
travesty, an injustice to the contribution of very many others, including those
who run and belong to a lot of the regional parties, and make up a substantial
presence in today’s parliament.
Other charges, almost sneers, of this present regime being
under-educated, and its camp followers being anti-intellectual and of ‘low
quality’, are, in context, just a protest from parts of the long ensconced
left-liberal establishment, their prominence, pervasive influence, and
perquisites, now under threat.
And this, almost for the first time, not from voices in the wilderness,
but from a party, an alliance and a government in power, and those who support
it.
Notwithstanding all this, there is a need to reboot the
narrative, not only because the old story stands discredited, its distortions,
corruptions, and outright lies, exposed, but it has also gone stale and
unrepresentative.
The polity itself has rejected the main planks of the old
arguments, lethally voting its
displeasure. The voters have shifted, from the positions prescribed for them in
1947 by a monolithic Congress, spreading out, under the influence of the Sangh
Parivar, from the North Indian Hindi speaking areas, to the far reaches of the
country today. Much remains to be done, but the footprint is definitely
enlarging.
But for a lot of the decades since Independence, information,
and its flow, could be controlled and manipulated, hagiographies could be built-up,
mistakes air-brushed away, propaganda made to stick.
Nowadays, with multiple sources, a round-the-clock delivery,
a competitive formal and social media, satellite TV, computers, internet, smart
phones, all precluding any attempts at pomposity, censorship, or selective
messaging, while providing speed and instant access; that kind of erstwhile
I&B control, is a thing of the past.
Even films from Bollywood have given up the ghost on
socialist style ‘nation-building’ and ersatz patriotism, and turn out crowd
pleasers instead.
Other ideas, mostly towards a more majoritarian idea of
India, without however, queering the pitch for the minorities are extant. There
is a new bias towards a considerate capitalism, plus a more productive,
teach-a-man-to-fish welfarism. This, while caring for the weak and helpless, is
now seen as a corrective. But such nuanced ideas were not allowed to flourish
in the several decades following 1947. It was a statist model then, redolent of
the infamous Licence-Permit Raj.
Only the quaint and romantic notions, often more faddist, some internationalist, rather than fit for
nation-building, favoured by MK Gandhi, and J.Nehru, prevailed at independence.
These, over other, more dynamic and gritty possibilities,
held out by early stalwarts such as Patel, Bose, Krishnamachari, Tata, and
others.
At least, that is, till 1991, when, at an absolute nadir, on
the point of national bankruptcy, and sovereign default, the Congress
government at metaphoric gun-point, made a series of momentous,
and some say, World Bank dictated, changes in policy. But, it turned out to be
a happy day indeed.
Now, with the Nehru-Gandhi dynasty’s intellectual vigour and
political strength, at least as a national party, depleted, its fringes in the states breaking away, seemingly every
day; the prescriptive engines have ground to a near halt. A change of the old
order therefore, engineered by the only national party on the map, is in the
complete fitness of things.
Our newly independent country had no difficulty, after all,
in rejecting many of the shibboleths of the British Raj. Substituting them,
perhaps in keeping with the then prevailing wind, with a diluted Marxism, and the
atheist’s world view of the long-standing helmsman, Jawaharlal Nehru.
But along with the ideological emphases he adopted, came its
economic consequences. Today, many recognise that decades of the misnamed
‘Hindu rate of growth’, which was, in fact, a failed Soviet-model socialism,
was an avoidable humiliation.
It accounts, we know in hindsight, for our relative failure
to achieve to anywhere near our full
potential, and speaks for much of the still abject poverty around us.
But the fact is, the inability to stand up and be counted,
as a feature of our national character, goes much further back. Well before the
new-fangled universal franchise, not proportional representation, that Nehru
instituted from the start.
The culture and wisdom of our ancients – was scorned,
through 600 years of alien rule, during which we learned to believe what our conquerors
and rulers wanted us to believe.
At least, this was so, viewed from the outside, on our
public faces, often giving the Hindu, in particular, a reputation for venality
and chicanery. That the Hindu was out of power, for all of those 600 years,
may, of course, have had something to do with it.
It is true that, we Indians, also made a conquest of every
conqueror, basting him in the flavours and seductions of Hindustan, till very
little remained of his original self. It is a story as old as the assimilations
of our rich and varied heritage itself.
It has been said of the Afghans, who, like ourselves, were defeated
easily enough, many times, but never once, really conquered.
But, at another level, the brutal pushing aside of
everything we could take pride in, a second defeat of our minds and hearts, was,
ostensibly, very real.
Everything we valued had to be relegated to the outhouse. The
Vedas, Puranas, Epics, Myths, Kathas, Mantras, stirring legends, even popular,
orally transmitted history, Baul ballads, the Sanskars, the Neetis, the
classical music and dance forms, the martial arts and yoga, the architecture
and mathematics, the philosophy and craft, all were, and had to be,
scorned.
Foreigners who come to explore and learn from this treasure
trove, cannot understand our lack of knowledge and pride in our own heritage,
even today.
It wasn’t possible, of course, to give these things their
legitimate due, and yet keep the dominance of a military supremacy, a power
gained by the spilling of blood, the maintenance of might, and the
institutionalisation of fear. That it survived at all, despite everything,
including massive loot, plunder and appropriation, is indicative of a deep and
passive resistance to being swamped.
The Indian people themselves, like colonial peoples
everywhere, grew up in the privacy of
their homes, with their own icons, in their kurtas and dhotis, lungis and
pyjamas, eating their varied cuisines, cleaving to their customs, and praying
to their many Gods.
All our pride and prejudice was kept private, grandmothers,
mothers and wives whispering into our ears, in our childhood and youth,
quietly, in the suggestive dark. It was that; embedded, or lost - along with
our souls.
Ignored, our hugeness, under the powers that be, for 600
years together under the Mughals and the British, discarded, where possible,
suppressed at a minimum, ridiculed, shamed, rendered unfashionable, gauche,
labelled as so much clap-trap and superstition.
The Caucasian scholars of our ancient learning and wisdom,
Max Mueller, the Asiatic Society, other eminent ‘Orientalists’, painters,
writers, archaeologists, were contemptuously
held at arms-length by unsympathetic men with a job to do. They were derided; as indulgent follies, a
missionary zeal of a certain kind, of very Christian white man.
The power elite and structure of the times, believed,
officially, in ‘good, solid, Protestant, Christianity’, its innate superiority,
the imperial burden of the white man, and the flowering of the Renaissance.
European culture was the real McCoy. The native brain had to
be shamed out of its purportedly useless and uncivilised heritage.
This was, apparently,
a profound loss, but in fact, the suppression, at best, drove it underground. It
was the going through the doors, those portals to the outside, that induced the
necessary forgetfulness.
On the surface, it was allowed to stay lost, as continuation,
in a self-made cultural tyranny, an assassination of our pride,
post-independence.
But after 1947, it was carried forward by our own misguided
people. These men and women were of us, but not with us, hypnotised, bedazzled,
marionettes; creatures of the encouragement of an imperial power, even though
it was physically departed at last!
So, even after Independence,a Western induced modernism,
bracketed in the context of a Third World slotting, took hold, and moulded the
narrative.
It was meant to create a new India, leaving behind the
shackles of unfair privileges, of the feudal order, and imperial past. So, it
was out with the ‘obscure, and the obscurantist’, but actually the baby and
the bathwater, and in, with the ‘scientific temperament and temper’. We were to
build the much desired, ‘temples of modern India,’ the ‘commanding heights’ of
the economy, the heavy industry, This industrial base, and higher education,
are certainly worthwhile Nehruvian legacies. But did they come for too high a
price?
And for almost all of
these 70 years, that was that. Nehruvian/ Gandhian secularism that liked to
parent the minorities, degenerated gradually into the most blatant vote-bankism,
even as the quaint LSE brand of Fabian socialism kept being upheld as
honourable, equitable, right.
This NDA government is trying therefore, in the face of
enormous resistance from the old order, to shift the tectonic plates of our
self-image - to something entirely more technological, digital, automated, infrastructured,
militarily secure, and futuristic; for
now, and the future.
Fortunately, not only is it gaining traction, with voters in
new places, even the minorities are refusing to uphold the status quo of
yore. Many have shed their fear, particularly the Muslim women, and are
distancing themselves from the fear-mongerers and even the oppressors within
their own community.
This is, they realise, a free country, especially in
comparison to the reality in many others, and it belongs to them, as much as to
anybody else.
Democracy, indeed a liberal version of it, as envisaged by
Nehru, has certainly taken root, but there is no going back to the downside of
an empty hope without progress or substance.
For: The Sunday Guardian
(1,835 words)
June 7th, 2016
Gautam Mukherjee
(Gautam Mukherjee is a Delhi-based commentator
on economics, politics and trends)
No comments:
Post a Comment