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January
24, 2001
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Republic
Day will be a little cloudier than the previous year
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Where
are the healers?
By
all means consign the pseudo-secularists
to the dustbin of history, but spare a thought for a generation
that needs to rise above sectarian prejudices
While
you are in India", V.S. Naipaul admonished his sister in 1949,
"you should keep your eyes open." More than five decades
later, we still need to keep our eyes as well as our ears open.
Today, millions of people grope in the dark, as they have done for
so long, in search of food, water, shelter and health care. Indeed,
the problems afflicting the nation are no different from what they
were in the first year of the millennium. What is different now
is the renewed threat to communal peace from scores of sants and
sadhus, backed by the VHP-RSS combine, who have raised the communal
temperature over the construction of the Ram temple at Ayodhya.
Historians
are no prophets but the writing on the wall is for everybody to
see. Social and political grievances will be heightened across the
board because of farmers unrest, the feverish pace of liberalisation,
resurgence of militancy in Kashmir, and the erosion in the popularity
of the BJP-led National Democratic Alliance on account of its poor
record of governance. To add to the growing uncertainties, new alignments
and a massive mobilisation of caste and communal sentiments will
precede the assembly elections that will take place in five states
this year.
Was
India basking in the glory of spectacular political
stability for the past 15 months? This is surely not
the perception of the 17,461 interviewees (conducted by India Today-Org-Marg)
spread across 514 parliamentary constituencies in 16 states. Apart
from their scepticism over the so-called idyllic stability of the
government, the mere fact of a fragile coalition being held together
by the prime minister brings no comfort to, among others, the Dalits,
the backward castes and the minorities. The persecution of Christians
in certain pockets continues unabatedly, whereas the Sikh establishment
is up in arms against the activities of the RSS in Punjab. Whether
it is Kashmir, Punjab or the Northeast, majoritarianism in any garb
will lend weight to divisive forces and add credence to the belief
that Hindutva is the new mantra of civil society.
In
short, the hope and optimism that had brought Atal Bihari Vajpayee
to the centre stage have been belied by the lacklustre performance
of his ministers. His own strenuous efforts to project himself as
a liberal no longer carry conviction. Starting with his ill-fated
plea for a nation-wide debate on conversion and culminating in his
ill-advised remarks on the so-called national sentiment
over the building of the temple, the prime minister has not been
able to break free from the RSS stranglehold. Acharya Giriraj Kishore,
senior VHP vice-president, has already dismissed his belated plea
from Kumarakom for a shift from contention to conciliation and from
discord to concord.
Surely,
a diverse and disparate nation needs to be anchored in an ideological
frame provided by the Constitution. Surely, the architecture of
peace and prosperity can be founded on the basis of an inclusive
and pluralist agenda. If so, the governments responsibility
is to allay the fears generated by the exercise to review the Constitution.
Sonia Gandhi struck the right note in pointing to the danger from
within, from those elements that challenge the very basis of the
social character and social sacrament that was put together by the
framers of the Constitution. Similarly, the CPI and the CPI(M) have
rightly criticised the prime ministers suggestion for a fixed
term for our legislatures.
This
would, if accepted, sound the death knell of parliamentary democracy.
Besides such ominous warnings, we need to underline that higher
education has also been the prime casualty over the last 15 months.
Doubtless, we require major structural reforms, but there is no
reason why the state should retreat from its long-standing commitment
to supporting higher education. By all means ensure the flow of
private funds, but please do not make it a norm to be enforced in
all disciplines and in every college and university. It is true
that middle class opinion has largely veered around the idea of
privatisation, but its legitimisation, which is inherently based
on the exclusion of the less privileged sections of society, may
well turn out to be the countrys nightmare.
Perspectives
on education, as indeed on other social sectors, must not be determined
by market forces but informed by an understanding of the needs of
a developing society and the empowerment of its backward segments.
My sense is that the politician-bureaucrat combination in Shastri
Bhavan does not adequately recognise its own role in bringing about
a major socialisation of our society. Having frittered away the
opportunity to learn from past mistakes and initiate corrective
measures, they have chosen to seek refuge in fanciful ideas and
theories that reflect the idiosyncrasies of an individual or two.
A weary
Republic, caught up in the quagmire of politicians, needs symbols
of unity and harmony not to paper over the existing divisions but
to nurture the vision envisaged by its founding fathers. Instead,
we invoke sectarian leaders who preached hatred, bigotry and intolerance.
Indeed, we may well confer upon them the highest national honour.
This is not all. Recently, Amartya Sen talked of Indias tradition
of scepticism and the statement of hereticism and heterodoxy. To
the very protagonists of our cherished ancient
traditions, these values seem to have lost their relevance when
it comes to extending patronage, funding research projects, rewriting
history textbooks, or not letting the Towards Freedom be published.
By all means consign the Marxists and pseudo-secularists
to the dustbin of history, but spare some thought for a generation
that needs to rise above sectarian prejudices and beyond the painful
historical memories that are revived to create a climate of hate,
violence and aggression. A cry goes out from the ramparts of the
Red Fort where the National Flag was first hoisted: Somebody has
to provide the healing touch to a beleaguered nation.
January
26 will be yet another day in the life of a nation, though perhaps
a little more cloudy and misty than the previous year. It is important
to salute the memory of the freedom fighters, and yet we must not
forget what a poet, far removed from the corridors of power, wrote
at Freedoms Dawn:
Where
did that fine breeze, that the wayside lamp
Has not once felt, blow from--where has it fled?
Nights heaviness is unlessened still, the hour
Of mind and spirits ransom has not struck;
Let us go on, our goal is not reached yet.
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