Wednesday, 14 August 2013

THE UNNATURAL NATION


                           India : The Unnatural Nation

“The first and the most essential thing to learn about India is that there is not, or never was an India, or even any country of  India possessing, according to any European ideas, any sort of unity, physical, social, political or religious.”
                                                                          Sir John Stretchy(1888)

The scholar from Cambridge, who also happened to be a member of Governor General’s Council(1888), thought that the difference between the countries of Europe are much smaller than between the ‘countries’ of India. Scotland is more like Spain than Bengal is like Punjab. He, along with some other historians, political analysts and top army officials of British India confidently predicted that India, the unnatural nation would not survive even a single decade. But, amidst vast differences of race, religion, caste, creed, class and language and against the backdrop of the largest mass migration and communal violence resulting from the unfortunate partition of Bengal and Punjab(not exactly India) , India did survive. Frequent attacks by its neighbouring countries, a dangerous fascist regime in ‘70s, poor governance, clouds of corruption, inequality and poverty....... and India still survived.
The midnight of 14-15 August,1947, when the Union Jack began its final journey down the flagstaff of Viceroy’s House, New Delhi, heralded the approaching end of the Age of Imperialism. A new world was coming into being that night, the world that would go with us across the threshold of the new millennium, a world of awakening continent of people of new and often conflicting dreams and aspirations. India, with all her diversity, emerged as the symbol of this new and enthusiastic world.
India’s independence was(is) a process, rather than an instance. The midnight of 14-15 August,1947 only marked the halfway of this process. A process that has not yet been completed even after 67 years it saw the halfway mark.
People blame Nehru(and to some extent Gandhi) For allowing India to be divided. But, they tend to forget that Nehru and Patel laid the ‘Idea of India’. They brought more than 500 princely states and thousands of groups with separate cultural identities under the umbrella of that idea. Over the years, India saw governments being formed and fall, a rather slow economic growth, corrupt political system, encroaching poverty, riots and violence, internal conflicts. Still, the idea of India grew stronger and stronger.
67 years down the line, the experiment called India might be counted as a success, a moderate success. Poverty prevails in some(admittedly broad) pockets, yet one can now be certain that India will not go the way of Sub-Saharan Africa and witness widespread famine. Separatism movements are active here and there, but there is no longer any fear that India will follow former USSR and break up into a dozen parts. The powers of the State are sometimes grossly abused, but no one thinks that India will emulate neighbouring Pakistan, where the chief of army staff is generally also the head of the government. I simply believe that so long as the Constitution is not amended beyond recognition, so long as elections are held regularly and fairly and the ethos of secularism broadly prevails, so long as citizens can speak and write in the language of their choice, so long as there is an integrated market and a moderately efficient civil service and army and – lest I forget – so long as Hindi films are watched and their songs are sung, India will survive.
The modern India is an ocean of dreams and opportunities. The modern India demands better infrastructure, economic growth and a corruption free stable democracy. Here comes the concept of  ‘ Ram-Rajya’, the model of perfect State, which in fact was the dream of Mahatma Gandhi, the father of the nation.  While the construction of perfect state is almost impossible, the efforts to construct one is what India needs today. India needs to complete the process of independence  asap and for this mammoth task India needs politically conscious citizens, who know that candle light marches are for Enlightment and Enlightment should be followed by Action, that they must be the change they want to see in India.
   HAPPY INDEPENDENCE DAY.

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