
I was similarly jolted by another conversation last week. Two bright girls from Bangalore, both studying law and doing summer internship in Delhi, met me at a friend’s place. They had been closely following media reports on the alleged illegalities of Pratibha Patil and her various institutions — the bank that went bust, the sugar factory that defaulted on loan repayment and had to be sealed, the trust that siphoned off money from its own educational institutions, a government-supported working women’s hostel that rented out space to commercial entities, the diversion of MP’s local area development funds to a family-controlled trust, the murder case, the suicide case . . . the list is growing by the day. “Is it impossible,” the girls asked me, “to bring about a change for the better in India? Why do unscrupulous people triumph in our country? We have grown up believing that young people should be idealistic and work for a better India. Are we naïve in our belief?”
I responded to the question as honestly as I could. However, the two interactions reinforced a troubling awareness in me about a growing divide between Political India and Young India. The youth, by and large, are no longer inspired by the political establishment. They are mostly aloof from every mainstream political party, since none of them is today capable of nurturing and animating, on a large scale,...


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