|
October
2, 2001
|
|
India’s
tribute to gandhi is a lesson in the art of forgetting
|
Bapu,
you count less and less with the nation
Bapu,
if you come here on your birthday, you would not recognise the country
you once led to freedom. We are now a high-flying nation. We have
the bomb — the possession of which you unequivocally condemned and
forbade after Hiroshima. What you would notice straightaway is that
we do not have the outmoded belief that wrong means will not lead
to right results, our faith is that ends justify the methods. Success
is important to us, not how we achieve it.
We are completely opposed to the peaceful approach which you taught
us. Communists as well as non-communists, both seem to imagine that
a principle can only be stoutly defended by the language of violence
and by condemning those who do not accept it. For both of them there
is only black and white — no other shades. We have forgotten the
approach to tolerance, of feeling that perhaps others might also
have some share of the truth.
The new factor that has crept in our life is the contempt for what
might be called the moral and spiritual side of life. Our standards
and values have changed. Simple living and high thinking which you
advocated does not fit into our modern ways. We are different now,
result-oriented for our families and ourselves. We weigh everything
on the scales of money — goodness, fame or advancement in life.
We admire the rich and it does not bother us how they accumulate
wealth. We never socially boycott racketeers. We go to the party
of the most corrupt or the most unwanted if the table is large.
Honesty is a relative term. What you considered honesty is considered
a fad these days. Our standards are peculiar. It is not the intrinsic
honesty we are after. So long as a minister or a bureaucrat is not
caught, he is honest. Our rulers may not come up to the modicum
of honesty you had in view. But they are vociferous in denouncing
corruption. They and their family members have played havoc with
the country. Their collaborators, the dishonest public servants,
have besmeared the country’s face. Bapu, we want to tell you that
we are the fourth or the fifth corrupt nation in the world and we
have the distinction of adulterating life-saving medicines and food
grains at ration shops and godowns. Sab kutch chalta hai
(everything is acceptable) is now our motto.
It is difficult to pin point when it happened but the dividing line
between right and wrong has now disappeared. Nothing deters us from
taking the law in our own hands or violating the norms of morality.
We are now a nation without the awareness of what is right and we
do not have even a desire to act according to what is right. I recall
the days when people sacrificed all to free India, to usher in a
new era which you promised would be without tears on anybody’s cheeks.
Western economics as you told us, have little bearing on our present
day problems. That also goes for Marxist economics which is in many
ways out of date. We have to do our own thinking, profiting by the
example of others but essentially trying to find a path for ourselves
suited to our own conditions.
Your disciple Jayaprakash Narayan came round to accept this viewpoint,
although at one time he was a revolutionary. He tried a bit to bring
about changes in the economic scene. But he could only devote his
attention to political freedom. He helped people get back their
liberty and died before he could attend to the problem of bread.
You said bread is good. Because to a hungry man — we have millions
of them — there is nothing more important than the daily meal. But
we now face a strange situation: overflowing godowns of food and
people dying of starvation. And the government is busy debating
whether people are dying of starvation or malnutrition.
Bapu, you count less and less with the nation. We celebrate your
birthday or death anniversary. Otherwise, your name is seldom mentioned.
The present rulers are not of the same genre. Many from their party
had denounced you. Still they invoke your blessings because you
still live in the heart of the common man. Neither the RSS headquarters
at Nagpur, nor the CPI(M) office at Kolkata (it was Calcutta in
your days) has your picture. But then they are so cut off from the
people that Vir Savarkar to the first and Joseph Stalin to the second
are the frontline heroes.
I recall that the first day I reached New Delhi from Pakistan I
went directly to the Birla House to see you — just to see a person
who not only gave us freedom but also dignity. I did not go near
you. Nor did you notice me. You were pacing up and down in a verandah,
resting your hands on the shoulders of the two girls walking on
either side of you.
I did not stay there for long. But those few minutes evoked strange
feelings within me. I have narrated all this to my children and
grandchildren as if those few minutes are my proud possession —
my heritage.
|