Saturday, December 26, 2009

Action plan for the next three years.

All that BMC has to do is to fulfil its mandate of providing civic services :

1. Cleanliness - collecting, sorting and disposing solid waste in a scientific way. Associating NGOs and local people in every ward would help in cleaning Mumbai.

2. Water supply - rain water harvesting should be compulsory for all CHS and leakage to be plugged in every possible way.No new construction to be given water connection till after the next mansoon.

3. All contracts for roads and municipal works should be included in the BMC website for the information of the people - who won the contract, duration of the project etc. Recently President Obama has appointed Earl Devaney, the former secret service agent, as the head of the stimulous monitoring board, and Devaney is setting up a website so that people and journalists can monitor how every dollar is spent." The website will unleash a million citizen IGs( inspectors-general), says Devaney. If we had such a system, what happened in Thana would not have happened at all.

4. Encourage builders like Tatas, who offer houses for Rs.4 lakhs, to have cheap housing for the poor.

5. Promote more tree planting, gardens and play-grounds.

The suggestions were sent to Karmayog.

December 26,2009.

BMC Governance.



I entirely agree with Mr.Akshay Wadke that there should be transparency in all government activities. Everything should be available on its website for the citizens to monitor and interact with the concerned authorities.

Though RTI has given some access to the decision taken by the Municipal Administration, the RTI commisioners, who are mostly retired bureaucrats, have tried to protect their fraternity and their erstwhile masters, the ruling politicians.

Transparency in the administration and eternal vigilance by the people can only bring down corruption and bring about good governance. Without good governance,people will lose interest in democracy as is evident in the recent state election.

A comment sent to Karmayog.

December 26,2009.

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India's tax-GDP ratio among the lowest in the world.



That India's tax-GDP ratio is small is no doubt, true. Agriculture cannot get much revenue if it is taxed as it contributes about 20% to the GDP and most of the agriculturists are in dire strait.Almost 60% of the people depend on agriculture and their income is negligible. Yes, service sector contributes more than 50% and it is taxed now. The real problem is not the taxation but spending the tax money.The famous economist, Huge Dalton, ( he resigned as the Chancellor of Exchequer when his tax proposals were published before he could present it to the UK parliament) has said that the problem of public finance is not taxation but of expenditure. The government can always increase taxes, but how it spends it is more important. A recent headline says, 40% of the NREGA (National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme) is being siphoned off. This is the sad fact of India. Without good governance increasing the tax has no meaning.

A reply sent to Karmayog.

December 26,2009.

*****

 



How can the World Bank be useful to India?



The World Bank is a long-term funding agency and a lending agency at a low interest. It does not have any mandate to supervise how we spend the money. Since India does not have proper legislation to bring the politicians and the bureaucrats to account, public money is being wasted or misused. See the headlines in today's and yesterday's newspapers. Everybody is aware of Koda's Rs.2000 or 4000 crore scam. 

"Who sits on CVC corruption complaints ? Railways,Delhi Govt.top the list" says Indian Express (2/12/09). Last year the Central Vigilance Commission imposed 2649 penalties - the highest ever - on corrupt and errant Government officials. The CVC annual report tabled in Parliament remarks, "complete apathy" and " procrastination" by ministries and departments in processing these cases.

" PSU bank's NPAs since 2007 : Rs.25,000 crore" says Times of India (3/12/09).

Why do we want World Bank money. We have all the money in the world but we don't use it, but misuse it.

" Japan's PM to face political funding probe" says another headline in Today's Times of India. In Japan and other democratic countries nobody is above the law. Here in India politicians, bureaucrats and businessmen are above the law. Only peons and clerks are punished for corruption. How many politicians, bureaucrats and businessmen are behind the bars ?

All we want is good governance. We have to fight for it. World Bank cannot do anything about it. 


December 26,2009.

*****

Positive and negative developments in the Indian economy.



Karmayog, a website which promotes NGOs and reaches some 20,000 people had asked its readers for commnets on an article by Shri Subir Gokarn, who has been now appointed as one of the Deputy Governor of RBI, in the Business Standard on three positives and three negatives on Indian economy. I have sent the following response.  

Shri Subir Gokarn's views presented in the Business Standard are from the narrow perspective of the middle class. He said that there are three positives in the Indian Economy - massive increase in the economy's capacity to absorb shocks; economic developments do not depend on political developments;increase in the scope, depth and innovativeness of the private sector. The three negatives are : slow growth of the middle class; Indian economy is not yet an engine of growth in South Asia; growing mismatch between the demand on the state's resources and its capacity to deliver on them.  

Let us look from the perspective of a common man. How empowered is the common man today compared to his position a few decades ago.

The positives are :
Indians need not go to the ration shop to get food-grains;

middle class people can get their bike/cars off the shelf and need not wait for years;

almost 300 million people have a mobile and earlier phone was a luxury;

industrialists need not go to Delhi for every license and permit but of course they have to depend on the state governments for power,water,land etc which leads to conflict of interest ;

transport - air, bus and train- has improved but yet to get clean and decent airports, railway stations and bus stations.       

However, there are many negatives :

Almost 50 percent of the people in Mumbai and other cities live in slums;

There is water scarcity everywhere - cities, towns and villages; we have failed to use monsoon waters and harness our river waters

Village people are not empowered with health and education facilities and with employment avenues, and they come to cities and towns in search of work; 

Almost 60 percent of people depend on agriculture and agriculture contributes about 20 percent of GDP. That means 40 percent of people from cities and towns contribute 80 percent of GDP and there is vast gulf between cities and villages;

Agriculture is not remunerative and agriculturists have no knowledge of modern agriculture. They use more fertilizers, they use wrong seeds, they don't get credit at reasonable interest and commit suicide.

Focus should be on agriculture, empower village youth with education, not just literacy, but vocational education including modern agricultural knowledge. PURA - Providing urban facilities in rural areas - mooted by our former President Abdul Kalam should be adopted in all states. He has suggested knowledge connectivity (education), physical connectivity (roads) electronic connectivity (telecom) and economic connectivity (trade).

Lack of economic development in villages leads to Naxalite violence and slums in cities 

We cannot have island of prosperity in the midst of poverty.

November 23, 2009.

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Thursday, December 24, 2009

Who are Rakshasas?


A friend sent me the following query:

Please see the attachment and there is a link in the attachment pointing to Rigveda, a PDF file. I also found 18 references to Rakshasas in Rigveda, and you can find them in the attachment. I wonder who are raksasas? Are they our ancestors who fought against the invading Aryans? The blood flowing in our veins belong to raksasas? Time has come to reread our history. Rigveda is the first Aryan Sanskrit book and the hyms filled with how they drank 'Soma' and destroyed raksasas. The Avestan literature(old Iranian) said the Rakshasa (Asura) warriors fought against the Aryan invaders. Deepavali is a celebration Krishana killing Narakasura ( asura) warrior. Are we celebarting the death of our own warriors because history was written by Aryan victors? Reading these hyms gives the impression that Rakshas were the Bagath Singhs of their time. Were they warriors of noble kind?

I sent him the following reply :

I have gone through the attachment and your views on our history. I am no expert on history or Vedas. Hymns could be allegories. If an European who does not understand the nuances of the language may translate it literally and deduce different meaning. It is said that dashavatara is nothing but evolution of man and even many stages of man's life - from the conception to death.

One thing that our history professor told us in the college and school was that Indians or Hindus have not kept a record of their past. However, there have been considerable literature in Sanskrit and in Pali on contemporary affairs of that time. There were visitors from China and from the Arab World.- Huensang, Ibn Batuta etc. Then came the Muslim invaders and their chroniclers.So when the British came there was a fertile field for them and other Europeans to write our history. We read our history written by the Europeans.

Sometime ago I read about the famous book, "Orientalism" by Edward Wadie Said, famous Palestinian author and English professor in the Columbia University, where he argues that the studies of Europeans on the Arab and Islamic people were tinged with their prejudices and had implicit justification for colonialism and imperialism. Much the same could be said about the our own history mostly written by V.A.Smith and others. Now after Independence, many Indians have started writing it from the Indian point of view.

One of the thesis of the British historians was about Aryan invasion of India. This has been disproved by B.B.Lal, DG (Retd), Archaelogical Survey of India, in his paper, Why Perpetuate Myths ? You can read his other paper, Let not the 19th Century paradigm continue to haunt us, a paper he read at the 19th International Conference on South Asian Archaelogy,University of Bologna in July,2-6,2007. This you can access by goggling B.B.Lal.

Hindus or Indians have never been exclusive but inclusive. They believe every one has a right to his belief and the worship.That is why so many deities are in India - village deities and weird customs. One of the English writers, Valentine Chirol says : " The supple and subtle forces of Hinduism had already in prehistoric times welded together the discordant beliefs and customs of a vast variety of races into a comprehensive fabric sufficiently elastic to shelter most of the indigenous populations of India, and suficiently rigid to secure the Aryan Hindu ascendancy." You see two things here - one of appreciation for inclusion and also his prejudice - Aryan Hindu ascendancy. Contrast this with how the Americans and the Spaniards have dealt with Native Americans - most have been exterminated and now some live in small enclaves. Pope when he visited South America apologized for the same.

The quote from Valentine Chirol is from the book, The Hindu View of Life by Dr.S.Radhakrishnana. It is slim book of 105 pages and explains Hinduism in a nut-shell. It is based on his Upton Lectures in 1926 at Manchester College,Oxford.

December 24,2009.

*****

Tuesday, December 08, 2009

Caste& Hinduism.

Caste & Hinduism.

 

Kancha Ilaiah, professor of political science in Osmania University and the author of the book, Why I am not a Hindu, has said in a interview with Subodh Varma of the Times of India ( December 4,2009)  that Hinduism is in a crisis facing a kind of civil war due to the stranglehold of varnashram ( caste system)  which keeps 750 million Hindus subjugated and humiliated.

 

The learned professor has identified caste with Hinduism though Hindu scriptures and Hindu thought always proclaimed that every individual is a spark of the Divine Flame. The varnashrama or the caste system is not central to Hindu religion but was just a division of labour which degenerated into water-tight compartment much like our political dynasties distorting our democracy. We have to get rid of the caste system in our society as it is prevalent among all religious communities in India.

 

Some of the great saints and savants of Hinduism are half-castes and hybrids, says Dr.S.Radhakrishnan, the great philosopher and our past President, in his book, Hindu View of Life." Vasistha was born of a prostitute, Vyasa of a fisher-woman, Parasara of a Candala girl. Conduct counts and not birth." 

 

Hindu way of life seem to be gaining more adherents abroad, specially in USA, where in a  recent article entitled, "We are all Hindus now", Lisa Miller of Newsweek writes that 65 percent of Americans believe in many paths to God, 24 percent believe in reincarnation and 33 percent like to be cremated like Hindus. Yoga and meditation are more popular in USA than in India. Essential concepts of Hinduism like dharma and  karma will survive the ravages of time and outdated institutions.

 

December 8,2009.


******       

 

Sunday, November 29, 2009

Truth & Reconciliation Commission is the answer.

Truth and Reconciliation Commission is the answer.

 

Justice Liberahan Report has brought the Ayodhya issue once again to the fore. No actor in the Ayodhya drama has covered himself in glory – the Sangh Parivar and the Secular Brigade. The Hindu-Muslim divide is a historical legacy of the Moghul Rule which was accentuated during the British Rule. This resulted in the partition as well. While Pakistan became the homeland for the Muslims of the Indian sub-continent, India became a homeland for Hindus, Muslims, Christians, Sikhs,Jains and others. However, the partition itself increased the gulf between Hindus and Muslims – Hindu anguish on the destruction of temples which is visible all over the North India and the Muslim fear of discrimination and the fear of progress left them in a time-wrap. The periodical Hindu-Muslim riots were the most visible manifestation of the same. The Ayodhya was the most potent expression. The only way, we as a nation, leave the legacy of the past is to have a Truth and Reconciliation Commission to establish the truth and forgive the mistakes of the past in the same way that the Great Nelson Mandela did to unite South Africa. This has to be done not to incriminate anybody. We have to free ourselves from the feelings of guilt, revenge and fear. We have to face the facts. Truth liberates and prepares the stage for reconciliation and progress. If we don't learn from history, it will repeat itself.


November 29,2009.

 

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Monday, November 23, 2009

Positive and negative developments in Indian economy.



Shri Subir Gokarn's views presented in the Business Standard are from the narrow perspective of the middle class. He said that there are three positives in the Indian Economy - massive increase in the economy's capacity to absorb shocks; economic developments do not depend on political developments;increase in the scope, depth and innovativeness of the private sector. The three negatives are : slow growth of the middle class; Indian economy is not yet an engine of growth in South Asia; growing mismatch between the demand on the state's resources and its capacity to deliver on them.  

Let us look from the perspective of a common man. How empowered is the common man today compared to his position a few decades ago.

The positives are :
Indians need not go to the ration shop to get food-grains;

middle class people can get their bike/cars off the shelf and need not wait for years;

almost 300 million people have a mobile and earlier phone was a luxury;

industrialists need not go to Delhi for every license and permit but of course they have to depend on the state governments for power,water,land etc which leads to conflict of interest ;

transport - air, bus and train- has improved but yet to get clean and decent airports, railway stations and bus stations.       

However, there are many negatives :

Almost 50 percent of the people in Mumbai and other cities live in slums;

There is water scarcity everywhere - cities, towns and villages; we have failed to use monsoon waters and harness our river waters

Village people are not empowered with health and education facilities and with employment avenues, and they come to cities and towns in search of work; 

Almost 60 percent of people depend on agriculture and agriculture contributes about 20 percent of GDP. That means 40 percent of people from cities and towns contribute 80 percent of GDP and there is vast gulf between cities and villages;

Agriculture is not remunerative and agriculturists have no knowledge of modern agriculture. They use more fertilizers, they use wrong seeds, they don't get credit at reasonable interest and commit suicide.

Focus should be on agriculture, empower village youth with education, not just literacy, but vocational education including modern agricultural knowledge. PURA - Providing urban facilities in rural areas - mooted by our former President Abdul Kalam should be adopted in all states. He has suggested knowledge connectivity (education), physical connectivity (roads) electronic connectivity (telecom) and economic connectivity (trade).

Lack of economic development in villages leads to Naxalite violence and slums in cities 

We cannot have island of prosperity in the midst of poverty.

November 23, 2009.

****  



 

How to fix the politicians ?



How to fix the Indian politicians ?.

In the article," Six remedies to fix Indian politicians" Kannan Kasturi (Times of India, Nov.22,2009) has proposed some remedies to make our politicians accountable to the citizens of the country. The six remedies are : power to recall; the negatve vote; prosecution of public servants without prior sanction of the governments; stopping spending money exceeding the limit set by the Election Commission, punishment for supplying false information by the candidates and transparency in funding the political parties; information on government departments on its website; and legislators to be more accountable to the people rather than to the political parties.

Internal democracy in all the parties to be supervised by the Election Commission, funds of parties to be audited by Auditor General of India and published in newspapers, putting all decisions and expenditure on social and economic development on the website of the government, corruption charges on politicians and bureaucrats to be inquired into and to proceed against them if there is a prima facie case within a short period would largely ensure better governance and accountability.

The politicians would not initiate such measures and the Election Commission and the Supreme Court can only suggest. Who is going to bell the cat ? The buck stops at the door of the citizens. It is high time that all men of good will join together and agitate through public meetings, distribution of leaflets, seminars and signature campaign to reform our public life and make it accountable to the people. After 62 years of independence, at least 25 percent of the people are below the poverty line, half the country is without electricity and water and more than 60 percent of the people depend on agriculture which contributes only about 20 percent of the GDP. Farmers commit suicide and adivasis are starving. Almost 50 percent of the people in Mumbai live in slums. This is all due to the greed of the politicians and the lack of vigilance by the citizens.

November 23,2009.

*****



Sunday, November 15, 2009

The Tatas set an example.



The Tatas set an example.

It is heart-warming to know that the House of Tatas have set an example for others to follow by disbursing Rs.2.5 crore to the families who lost relatives at the Taj, CST, Metro junction and Cafe Leopold in the terrorist attack on 26/11 last year, reported the Times of India (13/11/2009). The Taj Public Service Welfare Trust, which was set up immediately after the attack, is also providing medical help, vocational training, educational grants and trauma counseling as well. The Trust has tracked down 360 families of the victims in slums in Mumbai and in the native places all over the country enlisting the support of 20 students from the Tata Institute of Social Sciences, and is providing more than 100 families with monetary help ranging from Rs.7500 to Rs.10,000 and that 30 children are being supported with school fees, books and transport is a testimony of the social responsibility that House of Tatas have assumed. In addition, the Trust has launched a micro-finance scheme to help the victims or their families, and has taken over a Industrial Training Institute to impart training in computers, baking and house-keeping to employ them in their group of companies. This is indeed in tune with Mahatma Gandhi's Philosophy of Trusteeship and he would have applauded this gesture. Kudos to the House of Tatas.

November 15,2009

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Thursday, November 12, 2009

Democracy demands an open government.

Democracy demands an open government.

The RTI (Right to Information) act has proved to be boon people suffering from maladministration in India. The act has enabled activists to expose many acts of commission and omission by the bureaucrats and the politicians which range from misappropriation of funds to delay in speed-post to decisions of ministers which help their own institutions. Some of the recent headlines in the newspapers says it all : " IAS officer pays power bills from fund for 1984 Sikh riot victims "; "Speed-post delivers at a snail's pace"; "Revenue Minister Patangrao Kadam took eight decisions within seven months favouring Bharati Vidhyapeeth, of which he is Chancellor".

However, it is a sad fact that only 27 percent of the queries have been given information. Now there is a move by the government to bring in an amendment to deny information on the grounds that the queries are 'frivolous or vexatious'. Both the expressions are subjective and could be used by the information commissioners, who are mostly former bureaucrats, to deny information on the acts of the government and the activities of the bureaucrats and the politicians. There is no need to amend the act but there is a need to fulfill the mandate of Act. The activists should prevail upon the government to appoint eminent persons from the public life especially from the bar and from among the retired judges to inspire confidence among he people.

The recent decision of the Supreme Court judges to declare their assets in the website and another decision by the University Grants Commission (UGC) to have all the reports of the expert committees that inspect universities on its website have given hopes of an open society in the country. Now all activists have to fight for a transparent governance with all decisions of the government departments on its website so that people would be able to access all information that affect them from the government websites. Only an open government will make Indian democracy successful.

November 11,2009.

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Sunday, November 08, 2009

Poor Management or only power!


Poor Management or only power !.

The two reports in the Times of India (7/11/09) ' Most victims still await compensation' and '11 months on,farmers' kids await education allowance' confirm the observation that India is a rich country poorly managed. That the government was not able to protect people from terrorists' attack is a reflection not merely on the government ( apathetic,even after repeated attacks on Mumbai) but the people of Mumbai as well ( UPA got all the seats in Mumbai). That the compensation for the victims of the attack has not reached the kith and kin even after almost a year and the announced educational allowance to kids are a matter of great shame. If the government cannot give compensation money in time and educational allowance for a year,there must be something radically wrong with our governance.

All the top bureaucrats and the ministers should be constitutionally and compulsorily go through management course of at least of a short duration. They should know how to keep their promises and to track them. The opposition or an NGO could have taken the credit by helping the victims' kith and kin, and the kids in Amaravathi, Akola, Yavatmal, Buldana, Washim and Wardha.by accessing the promised compensation. Our elite is too far away from 'am admi'; too attached to loaves and fishes of power. We have a democratic system, no democratic temperament. We have 'rulers', not representatives. What a farce ( or is it a tragedy ?), my countrymen! Gandhiji would have started a satyagraha.


November 8,2009

******


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Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Leakage of development funds.

Leakage of development funds.

 

Your report, " Rajiv was right: only 16p of re reaches poor" (TOI,15/10) is a severe indictment of Indian state's social sector investment strategy. Writing recently in the New York Times, Nobel Laureate Paul Krugman said " How did F.D.R. manage to make a big government so clean ? A large part of the answer is that oversight was built into New Deal programmes from the beginning. The Works Progress Administration (WPA), in particular, had a powerful,independent "division of progress investigation" devoted to investigating complaints of frauds. This division was so diligent that in 1940 when Congressional sub-committee investigated the WPA it couldn't find a single serious irregularity that the division has missed".

 

The billions of dollars that have been pumped into the US economy by its government in the last one year to stimulate US economy and it is being monitored more diligently than before. Earl Devaney, who heads stimulus monitoring board, is setting up the most complex government website in history which will enable journalists and citizens to monitor every dollar that comes from the government coffers. " The website will unleash a million citizen IGs (Inspectors-General", says Mr.Devaney. The Indian government should follow this example. India has many people of unimpeachable character who can head such a system and one of the software companies in India could be assigned to set up the same. This is more urgent than anything else that the government of India is doing just now as social sector spending is almost Rs.200,000 crore now. Without proper monitoring mechanism, tax-payers money would go to the corrupt politicians and bureaucracy rather than to the intended recipients, the poor.

 

One wonders whether dole in the form of 100 days of work is the best solution to poverty ? Is it not possible to devise another strategy of empowering people with skills which will enable them to earn their living ? It has been well-said that it is better to teach fishing than give fish.

 

October 20,2009.


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Thursday, October 15, 2009

Human rights and discrimination.

Human rights and discrimination.

Human Rights Watch (HRW) of USA wants India to take a lead in
proclaiming caste as a form of discrimination (TOI,15/10). It is not
clear what purpose will be served with that acceptance by India.
Indian constitution has already proclaimed social,economic and
political equality in its preamble and it has taken measures to uplift
scheduled castes and tribes. Of course, Indian society and the Indian
state have to take further measures to fulfill the constitutional
mandate to bring about complete equality. However, one would like to
know what the US government has done to stop discrimination to Native
Americans and African-Americans and how far the government has been
able to eradicate discrimination. Why US should not be a role model in
this area? How far discrimination against non-Muslims, non-Sunny
Muslims and women been eradicated in Pakistan and Saudi Arabia, the
most favoured countries of USA ? Without proper answers to these
doubts the HRW and Human Rights Council look like tools to defame
India.

October 15, 2009.

****

Wednesday, October 07, 2009

The Mahatma exposes hypocrisy on his birthday.

The Mahatma exposes hypocrisy on his birthday.

Mahatma Gandhi exposed the hypocrisy of his followers on his 140th
birth anniversary. His name has become a brand name for simplicity,
honesty, empowerment of the poor and the villages, dignity of man and
dignity of labour, truth and non-violence. However, his followers use
his name for other than what he stood for. He has become an icon of
worship, not to be followed but to be used to further their own
interest.

A descendent of Gandhiji sells his name to a luxury fountain pen
manufacturer to get money for his private foundation, of course, named
after the Mahatma. A minister twitters that there should not be a
holiday on Mahatma's birthday, immediately after coming from a luxury
hotel where he was waiting for his bungalow to be ready. The head of
the country goes with an entourage of 100 people to visit his birth
place and places of pilgrimage when the country is under a drought and
the government is supposed to be on an austerity drive.( Later, it is
clarified that the expenditure by the entourage would not be spent by
the government.) To top it all, the central government has named the
NREGA ( National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme) after him where
thousands of crore of rupees are being spent to assure 100 days of
work in a year which has been summed up by a recent headline in a
newspaper, " Centre's job plan falls prey to corruption, 40% of funds
siphoned off". It appears that Gandhiji has been made an accomplice in
their game of money and power.

The Mahatma stood for the empowerment of the poor (sarvodaya – welfare
of all and anthyodaya – unto the last) and self-reliant villages.
After 62 years of independence, majority of villages have no
electricity, no roads, no primary schools, no primary health-care
centres, no water for agriculture or for drinking purpose, women and
children have to walk long distances for a few hours to fetch water,
and no employment. India's villages have 60 percent of the population
and produce 18 to 20 percent of GDP – one can imagine the poverty in
the country. Villagers flock to the cities in search of work and stay
in slums. People are being given fish instead of being trained in
fishing. People are being made dependent on the powers-that-be with
doles and subsidies, even TV sets, not independent with vocational
education and training to stand on their own legs. Is this Gandhiji's
India ?

October 6,2009.

*****

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

The Stiglitz Report and Mahatma Gandhi's Vision.

The Stiglitz Report and Mahatma Gandhi's Vision.

A panel of economists headed by Joseph Stiglitz, Nobel-Laureate for
Economics, appointed by Nicolas Sarkozy, the French President, has
submitted its findings in the form of a " Report by the Commission on
the Measurement of Economic Performance and Social Progress". The
panel was appointed GDP (Gross Domestic Product) does not measure the
quality of life like leisure, happiness, environment and many other
things which money cannot buy. Commenting on the report, the Economist
of London, says, " Man does not live by GDP alone. A new report urges
statisticians to capture what people do to live."

The report has come at the right moment when the world has seen two
systems collapse ( state capitalism and finance capitalism) within two
decades bringing distress to millions of people .The Soviet Union, a
totalitarian system based mostly on fear, disintegrated in 1989-91 as
a result of its own internal contradictions. The international finance
capitalism, based mostly on greed, came to near collapse, especially
in the USA and the European Union in 2008/09.

Both the systems sought to address the economic man, the material
well-being of man, not the whole personality of man, which has other
needs, call it, psychological or spiritual. Both the systems are based
on the assumption that man is the master of the universe, not a part
of the universe and he can do what he wants. We see the results –
pollution, denudation of forests, and disappearance of wildlife and
climate change.

When man realizes that " no man is an island, entire of itself,
everyman is a piece of the continent", outlook changes. When man
realizes that he is a part of the universe, his perspective changes
and everything falls in its place in the puzzle of life – not just
other human beings, but all life, animate and inanimate, have a right
to live and have a role to play. Ecology and environment get their due
and get protected by man. Non-violence and brotherhood become a way of
life. Hindus call it Dharma, that which sustains the life of man and
the universe or " that religion which underlies all religions", as
Mahatma Gandhi says in his book, Hind Swaraj or Indian Home Rule,
first published in 1908. His secretary, Mahadev Desai, called it, "
the seminal book which contains the ultimate logical conclusion of the
acceptance of the twin principles of Truth and Non-violence."

Though educated in England, he was not enamoured by the wealth and
life in that country. He saw alienation of the factory workers and
hypocrisy of the elite. He found in the Indian rural life a life of
hard work, culture and dignity. In spite of many wars in India, Indian
villages had survived with their agriculture and handicrafts organized
by the village panchayats. He did not wish India to be a carbon copy
of the West. " What I object to is the craze for machinery, not
machinery as such….The supreme consideration is man..", he observed.
He promoted khadi and village industries even during the freedom
struggle. His ideal was sarvodaya – welfare of all – and he wanted to
reach the last man- unto the last. He said that there is enough for
everybody's needs but not for everybody's greed. He believed in simple
life and that government is the best that governs the least.

Eminent economists such as J.C.Kumarappa prepared a blue-print for the
revival of villages. Later in 1973, another economist E.F.Schumacher,
offered a similar scheme in his book, Small is Beautiful – Economics
As If People Mattered. He also highlighted dehumanizing effect of
single-minded pursuit of gross domestic product. He advocated '
sustainable development' and 'appropriate technology' which are in
tune with the Gandhian philosophy.

However, Independent India did not follow his vision of village
republics but adopted the western model not merely in political system
but also in the economic system. Today, after 62 years of
Independence, at least 30 crore people out of about 120 crore are
below the poverty line; half the population in the cities live in
slums and shanties; water is a scarcity both in towns and cities,
though India gets one of highest rainfalls in the world and has many
perennial rivers. Only 40 percent of the land is irrigated while 60
percent of the population depends on agriculture and contributes just
20 percent to the GDP. In our pursuit of industrialization,
agriculture has been neglected except during the Green Revolution.
Provide our farmers with water; they will produce enough and more of
food-grains, fruits and vegetables for all.

Our former President Abdul Kalam has mooted a new model of village
development which updates the vision of Mahatma Gandhi to suit the
needs of the 21st century, and it is called, PURA – Providing Urban
amenities in Rural Areas through physical connectivity ( roads &
power), electronic connectivity ( communications network), knowledge
connectivity ( professional and vocations training), and economic
connectivity ( providing best value for rural products and services).
Let us change our priorities. Let villages be the focus of
development. Let decentralization of power empower the people and let
us make every one take part in the development – economic, social and
political. This would be the true tribute to the vision of Mahatma
Gandhi on his 140th Birthday, October 2,2009.
September 28,2009

********

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Hind Swaraj : Gandhiji's Vision for India.

Hind Swaraj : Gandhiji's Vision for India.

"Before I leave you, I will take the liberty of repeating :
1.Real home-rule is self-rule or self-control.
2.The way to it is passive resistance : that is soul-force or love-force.
3.In order to exert this force, Swadeshi in every sense is necessary.
4. What we want to do should be done, not because we object to the
English or because we want to retaliate but because it is our duty to
do so. Thus, supposing, that the English remove salt-tax, restore our
money, give the highest posts to Indians, withdraw the English troops,
we shall certainly not use their machine-made goods, nor use the
English language, nor many of their industries. It is worth noting
that these things are, in their nature, harmful; hence we do not want
them. I bear no enmity towards the English but I do towards their
civilization.

In my opinion, we have used the term "Swaraj" without understanding
its real significance. I have endeavoured to explain it as I
understand it, and my conscience testifies that my life henceforth is
dedicated to its attainment."

This is the last para of the book, Hind Swaraj or Indian Home Rule,
written by Mahatma Gandhi in 1908, 101 years ago. The book contains
his thoughts on Indian struggle for Independence and the modern
civilization. In the preface to the 1938 re-print, Mahadev Desai, his
secretary, writes, : .it is best for Indians to study the seminal book
which contains the ultimate logical conclusion of the acceptance of
the twin principles of Truth and Non-violence."

Originally written in Gujarati in the columns of Indian Opinion in
response "to Indian school of violence and its prototype in South
Africa". Later, it was published in the Special Hind Swaraj Number of
the Aryan Path and had views of many prominent people such as
Professor Soddy, G..D.H.Cole and others who were given the text by
Shrimati Sophia Wadia. While intellectuals like Gerald Heard hailed
his non-violent struggle for independence, others like Middleton Murry
pointed out that his spinning wheel is a machine as well.

Non-violence and passive resistance.

While non-co-operation movement in 1921 was withdrawn after
Chowri-Chowra violence, it was successful in 1930 when Gandhiji
started his Salt Satyagraha. There were some violent incidents during
the "Quit India" movement. However, his non-violent agitations not
merely mobilized Indian people for Swaraj but threatened the British
throne like no other violent struggle could. Mahatma's non-violence
was not merely practical but ethical as well.

While admiring the courage of freedom fighters like Madanlal Dinghra
and Bhagat Singh, Gandhiji disapproved their methods as he firmly
believed in the efficacy of non-violence and passive resistance. He
was more concerned about the ethics of not merely the ends ( freedom)
but also the means ( struggle for freedom). " The means may be likened
to a seed, and the end to a tree; and there is just the inviolable
connection between the means and the end as there is between the seed
and the tree. I am not likely to obtain the result flowing from the
worship of God by laying myself prostrate before Satan….We reap
exactly what we sow," he observed. " I only wish to show that fair
means alone can produce fair results, and that, at least in the
majority of the cases, if not indeed in all, the force of love and
pity is infinitely greater than the force of arms. There is harm in
the exercise of brute force, never in that of pity." He also said that
those who take the sword shall perish by the sword. We all know the
how the bloody revolutions have ended – in a blood-bath without
creating a new man and new society.

Explaining the method of passive resistance, Gandhiji said, " Passive
resistance is a method of securing rights by personal suffering; it is
reverse of resistance by arms. When I refuse to do a thing that is
repugnant to my conscience, I use soul-force….If I do not obey the law
and accept the penalty for its breach, I use soul-force. It involves
sacrifice of self." He maintained that non-violence and passive
resistance is a weapon of the brave and not that of the coward. A
coward can never disobey a law that he dislikes. " If man will only
realize that," he said, " it is unmanly to obey laws that are unjust,
no man's tyranny will enslave him. This is the key to self-rule or
home-rule."

No wonder, Gandhiji's agitations based on these two principles, were
emulated by Nelson Mandela for the freedom of South Africa and by
Martin Luther King for equal rights of African-Americans in USA. In a
recent interview President Barack Obama expressed his wish to have a
talk with Gandhiji over a lunch when he was asked whom he would choose
among the great of the past and the present.

Modern civilization.

Mahatma Gandhi's views on modern civilization are rational and
logical. However, many today may not accept them as they are addicted
to the comforts and luxuries of modern life. According to him ' people
living in it (civilization) make bodily welfare the object of life'
and then, he gives some examples. People in Europe live in
better-built houses than they did hundred years ago. "This is
considered an emblem of civilization". Hundred years ago people wore
skins and used spears as their weapons, and now they use long trousers
and carry revolvers. Earlier, people ploughed their lands manually (
or used horses), now steam engines (or tractors) are used to amass
great wealth. " Formerly, men were made slaves under physical
compulsion. Now they are enslaved by temptation of money and the
luxuries that money can buy."

Gandhiji has been misunderstood on the issue of machinery. He
clarified " What I object to is the craze for machinery, not
machinery as such." He said, " The supreme consideration is man. The
machine should not tend to atrophy the limbs of man. For instance, I
would make intelligent exceptions. Take the case of Singer's Sewing
Machine. It is one of the few useful things ever invented, and there
is a romance about the device itself." When asked where would these
exceptions ( spindle & sewing machines) end, he replied, " Just where
they cease to help the individual and encroach upon his individuality.
The machine should not be allowed to cripple the limbs of man." In
this machine age, man has become a cog in the wheel of the modern
civilization and Gandhiji was pointing out the dehumanizing quality of
machinery and the resultant alienation of man from his work.

Gandhiji is a great critic of the modern institutions such as
parliament, the press, the railways, professions such as doctors and
lawyers. His insights on them are acutely penetrating.

His observations on the British Parliament are not very flattering. "
.. it is generally acknowledged that the members are hypocritical and
selfish.. When the greatest questions are debated, its members have
been seen to stretch themselves and to doze..Carlyle has called it the
'talking shop of the world'.Members vote for their party without a
thought….Parliament is a costly toy to the nation." Do we find a
reflection of our own parliament and assemblies in these remarks of
Mahatma Gandhi ?

Same goes for newspapers. " To the English voters their newspaper is
their Bible. They take their cue from their newspapers which are often
dishonest. The same fact is differently interpreted by different
newspapers, according to the party in whose interests they are edited…
What must be the condition of the people whose newspapers are of this
type ? " How true even today in India and now we have to add TV news
as well. No wonder the so-called 'fourth estate' can distort peoples'
mandate.

The railways have enabled the British to send their troops from one
end of India to another and they also spread bubonic plague, increased
the frequency of famines as food grains are sent to distant places to
get more money. Lawyers promote quarrels instead of solving them. "
The parties alone know who is right. We, in our simplicity and
ignorance, imagine that a stranger, by taking money, gives us
justice."

The doctors do not cure but help people to indulge, says Gandhiji.. "
I overeat, I have indigestion, I go to a doctor, he gives medicine, I
am cured. I overeat again. I take his pills again. Had I not taken the
pills in the first instance, I would have suffered the punishment
deserved by me and I would not have overeaten again…my mind became
weakened."

Of course, there is a positive side to all these professions. They
have enormous power to help people and they also have the power to
perpetuate strife or promote indulgence among the people. However,
there is no mechanism to ensure that all these people do their job
responsibly. That comes only from restraint on desire and greed. That
is what all religions preach but the acquisitive society that is built
in the world over in last few centuries does not promote it.

The modern civilization emphasizes the freedom of man ( human rights)
but not the obligations of man to society. It makes him an automaton
and has no time for reflection. He wants to satisfy his wants, not
needs. In pursuit of his desires, he forgets values of life. Man is
born free but finds himself in chains – of wants and desires.

Indian Civilization.

Writing on Indian civilization, Gnadhiji points out that Roman and
Greek civilizations were annihilated, the might of Pharaohs was
broken, Japan was westernized and nothing could be said about China,
but " India is still, somehow or other, sound at the foundation".
Nothing can equal the seeds of sown by our ancestors, he observes. "
Civilization is that mode of conduct which points out to man the path
of duty. Performance of duty and observance of morality are
convertible terms. To observe morality is to attain mastery over our
mind and our passions. So doing, we know ourselves. The Gujarati
equivalent for civilization means 'good conduct'."

Gandhiji says that the mind is a restless bird, more it gets, more it
wants and still remains unsatisfied.
" Our ancestors, therefore, set a limit to our indulgences. They saw
that happiness was largely a mental condition. A man is not
necessarily happy because he is rich, or unhappy because he is poor."

Mahatma Gandhi was all praise for the Indian way of life which
consisted of the same kind of plough, same cottages, same education
system that existed for thousands of years. " We have had no life
corroding competition. Each followed his own occupation or trade and
charged a regulation wage… This nation had courts, lawyers and
doctors, but they were all within bounds. Everybody knew that these
professions were not particularly superior; moreover, these vakils and
vaids did not rob people; they were considered people's dependents,
not their masters….They enjoyed true Home Rule. "

In the appendix to the book, Gandhiji has quoted some appreciative
comments on the quality of Indian life made by Englishmen who were in
India during his time.

" The civilization was not perfunctory, but universal and
all-pervading – furnishing the country not only with political
systems, but with social and domestic institutions of the most
ramified description. The beneficent nature of these institutions as a
whole may be judged from their effects on the character of the Hindu
race. Perhaps there are no other people in the whole world who show so
much in their character the advantageous effects of their own
civilization. They are shrewd in business, acute in reasoning,
thrifty, religious, sober, charitable, obedient to parents,
reverential to old age, amiable, law-abiding, compassionate towards
the helpless and patient under suffering." ( J.Seymore Keay,M.P.,
Banker in India and India Agent, writing in 1883).

" If a good system of agriculture, unrivalled manufacturing skill, a
capacity to produce whatever can contribute to convenience or luxury;
schools established in every village, for teaching, reading, writing
and arithmetic; the general practice of hospitality and charity among
each other; and above all, a treatment of the female sex, full of
confidence, respect and delicacy, are among the signs which denote a
civilized people, then Hindus are not inferior to the nations of
Europe; and if civilization is to become an article of trade between
the two countries, I am convinced that this country (England) will
gain by the import cargo." ( Colonel Thomas Munro who served India for
32 years)

" The Indian village has thus for centuries remained a bulwark against
political disorder and the home of the simple domestic and social
virtues. No wonder, therefore, that philosophers and the historians
have always dwelt lovingly on this ancient institution which is the
natural social unit and the best type of rural life; self-contained,
industrious, peace-loving, conservative in the best sense of the
word." ( Sir William Wedderburn, Bart).

There are many more quotes including the one by Friedrich Max Muller
and another by Frederick Von Schlegel. Mahatma Gandhi was drawing
attention of Indians to their great civilization and the heritage of
village republics. Gandhiji with his charkha and village industries
sought to re-capture the spirit of the rural life in our villages and
the country to suit the present scientific age.

India is one nation.

Gandhiji dismissed the idea propagated by the British that India was
not one nation before the British established their rule in India. "
We were one nation before they came to India. One thought inspired
us.Our mode of life was the same. It was because we were one nation
that they were able to establish one kingdom. Subsequently, they
divided us."

" What do you think could have been the intention of those farseeing
ancestors of ours who established Setubandha (Rameshwar) in the South,
Jagannath in the East and Hardwar in the North as the places of
pilgrimage ? You will admit they were no fools…..they saw that India
was one undivided land so made by the nature. They, therefore, argued
that it must be one nation. Arguing thus, they established holy places
in various parts of India, and fired the people with an idea of
nationality in a manner unknown in other parts of the world."

Mahatma Gandhi also believed that the differences between Hindus and
Muslims were of no consequence for living together. " Should we not
remember that many Hindus and Mahomedans own the same ancestors and
the same blood runs through their veins ? Do people become enemies
because they change their religion ? Is the God of the Mohamedan
different from the God of the Hindu ? Religions are different roads
converging to the same point. What does it matter that we take
different roads so long as we reach the same goal ? Wherein is the
cause or quarrelling ?" The followers of Shiva and those of Vishnu
disagree but still they belong to the same nation. The Vedic religion
is different from Jainism but they do not belong to two different
nations. Further, he states, " Those who do not wish to misunderstand
things may read up the Koran, and they will find therein hundreds of
passages acceptable to the Hindus; and the Bhagawadgita conatins
passages to which not a Mahomedan can take objection."

The Mahatma's Vision.

Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi became Mahatma Gandhi when he identified
himself with the poor and illiterate peasants of India and offered
them Swaraj or self-rule based on their own tradition and heritage –
Ram Rajya. History of India is saga of plenty and prosperity. That is
why many invaders came to India from the Khybar Pass and by the
Arabian Sea. He made them aware of their own strength when he
mobilized them through satyagraha. As he repeatedly stated the weapon
of non-violence and passive resistance can be used only brave men –
men of character – who were nurtured by an ancient civilization and
culture.

Though educated in England, he was not enamoured by the wealth and
life in that country. He saw alienation of the factory workers and
hypocrisy of the elite. He found in the Indian rural life a life of
hard work, culture and dignity. In spite of many wars in India, Indian
villages had survived with their agriculture and handicrafts organized
by the village panchayats. He did not wish India to be a carbon copy
of the West. He promoted khadi and village industries even during the
freedom struggle. His ideal was sarvodaya – welfare of all – and he
wanted to reach the last man- unto the last.

Eminent economists such as J.C.Kumarappa prepared a blue-print for the
revival of villages. Later in 1973, another economist E.F.Schumacher,
offered a similar scheme in his book, Small is Beautiful – Economics
As If People Mattered. He also highlighted dehumanizing effect of
single-minded pursuit of gross domestic product. He advocated '
sustainable development' and 'appropriate technology' which are in
tune with the Gandhian philosophy. The latest to join the Gandhian
view of life is Joseph Stiglitz, Nobel-prize winning economist, who
headed the panel of economists appointed by Nicolas Sarkozy, the
French President, to measure the well-being of people as the GDP (
Gross Domestic Product) does not represent the true well-being.
Sustainability of economy, happiness and natural resources are to be
included in the measurement of progress. Commenting on the report, the
Economist of London said," Man does not live by GDP alone".

However, Independent India did not follow his vision of village
republics but adopted the western model not merely in political system
but also in the economic system. Today, after 62 years of
Independence, at least 30 crore people out of about 120 crore are
below the poverty line; half the population in the cities live in
slums and shanties; water is a scarcity both in towns and cities,
though India gets one of highest rainfalls in the world and has many
perennial rivers. Only 40 percent of the land is irrigated while 60
percent of the population depends on agriculture and contributes just
20 percent to the GDP. In our pursuit of industrialization,
agriculture has been neglected except during the Green Revolution.
Provide our farmers with water, they will produce enough and more of
food-grains, fruits and vegetables.

Our former President Abdul Kalam has mooted a new model of village
development which updates the vision of Mahatma Gandhi to suit the
needs of the 21st century, and it is called, PURA – Providing Urban
amenities in Rural Areas through physical connectivity ( roads &
power), electronic connectivity ( communications network), knowledge
connectivity ( professional and vocations training), and economic
connectivity ( providing best value for rural products and services).
Let us change our priorities. Let villages be the focus of
development. Let decentralization of power empower the people and let
us make every one take part in the development – economic, social and
political. This would be the true tribute to the vision of Mahatma
Gandhi.

September 20,2009.

*******

Sunday, September 06, 2009

A Grand Vision could have averted the Partition..

A Grand Vision could have averted the Partition ?

Jaswant Singh's book, Jinnah : India- Partition, Independence, has
raked up the issue of who is responsible for partition. If one goes
through the records of the event, all the prime actors (the British,
The Congress and the Muslim League) are responsible with various acts
of commission and commission. The British and the League almost forced
the partition upon the Congress. The British prolonged the responsible
government by giving power to the people in driblets 1909, 1919, 1935.
The thin end of the wedge was separate electorate introduced in 1909
which finally led to the partition. They followed two rules : 'divide
& rule' and 'carrot & stick'.

The Muslim zamindars especially in UP were afraid of socialism and
land distribution which Nehru talked about. Their mistrust became
stronger after the Congress refused to share power in UP in spite of
the earlier understanding. Gandhiji's agitations for peasantry
(Champaran & Kheda) for freedom ( Non-co-operation, Salt Satyagraha,
Quit India) mobilized public opinion for Swaraj. However, his support
for Khilafat led to riots, and his prayer meetings with 'Ram Dhun',
'Ram Rajya', and 'Iswar-Allah tero nam' alienated the socialists, the
communists and some intellectuals including Jinnah. Some Muslim
fundamentalists were dreaming of the revival of the Moghul raj. They
have not woken up to the empowerment of the individual through
democratic polity where the majority rules but the minority is
respected and protected.

The British offered a loose federation or a partition. The Congress
rejected the federation idea as the British had taken over India by
playing one king against the other and wanted a centralized polity to
control fissiparous tendencies based on narrow loyalties. The
vindictive acts of the League – penal taxes on businesses mostly owned
by Hindus by the Finance Minister Liaquat Ali Khan in the interim
government and the call for ' Direct Action' by the League – made
Congress agree for partition. The British were in a hurry to leave
India and also wished to have a strategic foot-hold which was later
fulfilled by Pakistan which joined all the military alliances later
offered by USA, along with UK.

Hindus and Muslims share many things in common – language, dress,
customs, history and heritage except faith. Hindus always remembered
the atrocities committed by the Muslim rulers and Muslims were afraid
of retribution after Independence and hence sought reservation, later
parity. From parity to partition was a small step. The pain of the
past and the fear of the future could have been overcome with a grand
vision of the future on the basis of equality and brotherhood. Just as
Nelson Mandela constituted a truth and reconciliation commission to
lay a moral foundation for South Africa, a similar exercise to
denounce the past atrocities of the Muslim rulers who did not
represent Islam and a commitment to the ideals of equality and
fraternity by both Hindus and Muslims could have laid a moral
foundation for the future. Wisdom for such an act was available in
both the faiths – Hinduism accepts and respects other faiths while
Islam says that there is no compulsion in religion. Nobody, not even
Mahatma Gandhi, offered such a grand vision. His offer of the office
of prime minister-ship to Jinnah was neither here nor there.

Now there is no point in blaming leaders of that time. Now both the
countries have to look to the future – future of their people and
their aspirations. There is another grand vision now in the form of
SAARC – South Asian Association for Regional Co-operation- which
offers a great future for all the countries of the region (
Bangladesh, Bhutan, Maldives, Nepal, Pakistan, India, Sri Lanka,
Afghanistan ) if they maintain the status quo on all issues of
contention and promote co-operation in all fields – economic,
political, cultural and scientific. SAARC was inaugurated in 1985 but
has not yet got off the ground as Pakistan has reservations to join
hands with India as it still lives in the past. In Europe, after the
Second World War, Germany, France and other countries came together as
the European Coal & Steel Community in 1950 and which evolved into now
as the European Union of 27 countries with a single market for mutual
benefit forgetting the wounds of the two world wars. Here is an
example for SAARC to follow. Of course, it requires statesmanship of
Konrad Adenaur (Germany) and Robert Schuman and Jean Monet (France).
Pakistan has no statesmen, only mullahs and military who look to the
past, not to the future, thanks to continued financial and military
support of USA, the champion of democracy and freedom!

September 5, 2009.

*******

Monday, August 31, 2009

The Partition - Another Perspective.

The Partition - Another Perspective.


The publication of the book, Jinnah – India, Partition, Independence,
by Jaswant Singh, the former Foreign and Finance Minister in the NDA (
National Democratic Alliance) government, has created a storm in
India. While BJP (Bharatiya Janata Party) has expelled him for
praising Mohammad Ali Jinnah and denigrating Sardar Vallabhabhai
Patel, the first Home Minister of Independent India, Congress
supporters have not liked the description of Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru
and Sardar Patel as the main architects of partition. However, many
politicians and journalists in Pakistan have appreciated Jaswant
Singh's effort to be fair to  Jinnah  – a secularist who was forced to
demand Pakistan as Muslims were not given enough 'space' by the
Congress in the pre-independence negotiations.

It would be premature to judge the book without reading it. However,
after going through the main points which have been made known to the
public by the author at the release of the book and his interviews to
television and newspapers, one gets a fair understanding of the
arguments presented in the book.

The main ground on which Jaswant Singh blames Congress, Nehru and
Patel for partition was that -  they  favoured  a centralized polity
while Jinnah was asking for a loose federation where Muslim provinces
will have certain autonomy. Apparently, the author has not considered
the historic back-ground as to why the Congress leaders were keen on a
form of government where the centre has more powers than the states.
India had numerous kingdoms before the British and other European
traders came to India and fought among themselves to carve exclusive
zones and later, the British out-witted them and the kings to occupy
India over a period of time. India is culturally one for more than two
millennium but politically, religiously and linguistically diverse.
While the Congress leaders were concerned about all the people of the
country, the Muslim League was concerned only about Muslims. We all
know the unifying role of Sardar in bringing into the Indian Union
some 700 kings, small and big, with an appeal to patriotism and some
persuasion. Only three held out – Hyderabad, Junaghad and Kashmir.

The Partition – dramatic personae.

In India, Mahatma Gandhi, Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru and Sardar
Vallabhbhai Patel are the architects of Indian independence while
Mohammad Ali Jinnah is the creator of Pakistan and the villain of
partition. In Pakistan, it is the other way round – it is Jinnah who
wrested Pakistan, as a homeland for the Muslims of the Indian
sub-continent, from the unwilling hands of the Congress and the
British. This is the accepted version of the blood-soaked partition.

If we go through the long drama from 1906 when the Bengal Province was
divided ( and it was annulled in 1911 by the King) till 1946 when the
Muslim League gave the call for 'Direct Action' which led to the
killings of hundreds, all the leaders of the Congress and the Muslim
League and the rulers, the British, were tested and unfortunately
found wanting. Everybody was so sure he had the right solution for the
future of India that the talks between the three parties were more
like the dialogues of the deaf than between the normal human beings
with different perspectives who could compromise and find a solution.
The Congress always felt it represented all the people of India
including the Muslims while the Muslim League argued that the minority
Muslim interests would be safe only if there is a reservation in every
public sphere for Muslims.

The British, the past-masters in 'divide & rule' policy, like the
monkey which was given the right to divide the butter between the two
cats, always played one against the other to ensure its commercial and
strategic interests in the Indian sub-continent were intact. The
British adopted a 'carrot and stick' policy in India. They had
stringent laws to curb violence but at the same time allowing Indian
participation in the local and provincial democratic institutions. The
aim was to have a responsible government within the British Empire.
The British devised many ways to delay Indian independence and secure
their interests. The British over reaction which resulted in the
Jallianwalabagh tragedy in 1919 can only be explained by the constant
fear of the people that they were ruling. A religious congregation was
fired upon and hundreds were killed. The very fact that the British
allowed all kings the right to decide on the future relations between
them and the two dominions, after 'the lapse of  paramountcy', is an
indication of their intentions – an opportunity to those kings who
want be independent and a challenge to the leaders of the two
dominions.

It has been said by some observers that Nehru's talk of socialism and
land distribution after Independence was one of the main reasons for
the rich Muslim Zamindars in UP to support the League. The other
reason is the refusal of the Congress to share power with the League
in spite of an understanding between them before the election in UP
provincial election in 1937 which the Congress won.

Mahatma Gandhi mobilized public opinion for Swaraj through agitations
such as in Champarn in Bihar and Kheda in Gujarat  for the rights of
the poor peasantry. He also launched Non-cooperation Movement and Salt
satyaraha to take the message of freedom to the people. He awakened
them through his simple living – he lived the way they lived - and he
invoked religion to get through to people with his talk on 'Rama
Rajya', singing of 'Ram Dhun' and 'Ishwar, Allah tero nam' and his
prayer meetings. However, many intellectuals, including Mohammad Ali
Jinnah, were not happy with his agitations and religious talk. They
ignored the fact that these activities attracted millions to him and
to the cause of Swaraj. Mahatma also supported 'Khilafat' agitation to
indicate Congress' concern for Muslim interest which strengthened the
fundamentalist streak of Indian Muslims and alienated many Hindus as
it led to Hindu-Muslim riots, especially in Kerala where many Hindus
were killed during the Mopla Riot.

After the failure of the 1857 War of Independence, many Muslim leaders
like Sir Syed Ahmed  Khan were of the opinion that Muslims should take
to English education and support the British to promote Muslim
interest. He started Mohammedan Anglo-Indian Oriental College in 1875
which became the Aligarh Muslim University in 1920. Aga Khan led a
Muslim delegation to Lord Minto, the Governor-General, for separate
electorate, in 1906, and later in that year the Muslim League was
formed. The British government agreed to this demand  in the
Minto-Morley Reforms act in 1909. This was the thin end of the wedge
that finally resulted in partition. Muslim League never participated
in the freedom struggle and co-operated with the British for mutual
benefit.

Though Mahatma Gandhi through his unique way of mobilization of people
created  mass movement, there were many who felt that the British
would not give up power without an armed revolution. These
revolutionaries carried on many militant activities against the
British and some of them embraced martyrdom  -  that roll of honour is
long and a few have to be mentioned - Khudiram Bose, Vasudeo Balawant
Phadke, Bhagat Singh,  Rajguru,  Sukhdev, Madan Lal Dinghra,
Chandrashekhar Azad, Batukeshwar Dutt, and Udam Singh and many others.
They and the other great revolutionaries such as Veer Savarkar and
Netaji Subash Chnadra Bose have contributed immensely to weaken the
will of the British to continue their rule in India. INA trial in
Delhi, the RIN mutiny in the Navy along with the decline of the
economic and the military power of UK after the Second World War and
the success of the Labour Party in the election after the war also
contributed to the decision the British to leave India.

The final act.

The decade between 1937- 47, was crucial for the Indian independence
as also for partition. The provincial elections were held and Congress
came to power in all provinces except in Bengal, Punjab and Sindh. But
it resigned after the British declared the Second World War on behalf
of India without consulting it. This left the field open for Muslim
League to come closer to the British. The 'Quit India' movement put
all Congress leaders in jail. Then came the Cabinet Mission with an
offer to give independence after the war which Gandhiji said that is
like  ' a post-dated cheque on a crashing bank'.

The Cabinet Mission offered a federation with limited powers to the
centre. After the war, Lord Louis Mountbatten came with a mandate for
a federation or a partition. When the interim government was formed,
Muslim League was given the finance ministry which presented a budget
which penalized  all industries and businesses which are mostly run by
Hindus with high taxes. The call for 'direct action' given by the
Muslim League when thousands were killed and maimed was the last straw
for the Congress. It felt there was no point in trying to run the
country with the co-operation of the League and it agreed for
partition. The worst fears of the Congress came true. In his
frustration, no wonder that Pandit Nehru observed that it is better to
cut the head to get rid of the headache, as mentioned by Alan
Campbell- Johnson, in his book, The Mission with Mountbatten.

Lord Mountbatten was in a hurry finish his mandate. The North-Western
Frontier Province under the leadership of Khan Abdul Gaffer Khan,
well-known as Frontier Gandhi, voted to be with India but it was
passed on to Pakistan. The provinces such as Bengal and Punjab were
divided as Hindus and Muslims were almost in equal numbers. Radcliff
who was asked to divide these provinces could not give proper justice
to the task. The Radcliff line was arbitrary and divided families and
houses as Sir Cyril Radcliff was given five weeks to divide these
states. The chaos created anarchy and many people were killed,
kidnapped and hounded out first on the Pakistani side which in turn
led to the killings on the Indian side.

The tragedy.

The partition was a tragedy of many dimensions. Indians and Pakistanis
have still to come to terms with it. They share many things in common
– language, dress, history, customs but differ only on the ways of
worship. A new India could have been built on the foundations of
equality, liberty and fraternity, which are the basis of all religions
– brotherhood of man and the fatherhood of God -,  forgiving the old
wounds for a better future for all. Why the partition became
inevitable is the gulf between Hindus and Muslims which the leaders
could not bridge.

Hindus could not forget the atrocities of medieval Muslim rulers who
killed Hindus and destroyed their temples. Muslims were afraid of the
retribution on them in the future. The Indian leaders missed the
wisdom of the South African leader Nelson Mandela who constituted the
truth and reconciliation commission which prepared the moral ground
for his country's future. No retribution and no reservation but
equality and brotherhood. Accepting and understanding the past and
preparing for a new future together. Kshama or forgiveness is a
religious virtue of both Hinduism and Islam. It blesses him who gives
and blesses him who receives. Hinduism accepts and respects other
faiths. Islam says there is no compulsion in religion. This wisdom
should have been used to face the facts of the past and chart a course
for the future together on the basis of brotherhood. As Maulana Abdul
Kalam Azad pointed out Hindus too are 'the people of the book'. The
Congress missed this opportunity to uphold truth and start a new
chapter for the country. The Muslim League did not want to confront
the truth and wanted an escape in the form of Pakistan. The dilemma
between the two communities continues as conflicts between the two
states now.

If the leaders had come to the conclusion that Hindus and Muslims
could not live together as brothers, they could have parted as
brothers but without violence. However, the suddenness of the decision
to partition the sub-continent by the British and stringency of the
cry, ' Islam in danger' by the Muslim League made it inevitable to end
in a bloody separation. Hindu Mahasabha had suggested exchange of
population in an orderly fashion but it was over-ruled by the Congress
as it was abhorrent to their secular belief. However, exchange did
take place with a massive violence. It was no less than a civil war.
All the leaders who took part in the decision to partition the Indian
sub-continent in a hurry have to share the blame and the major part
goes to the British who claim to be democratic and just, and Mohammad
Ali Jinnah, a secularist and a constitutionalist in the beginning  but
ended as the creator of a theocratic state. If the leaders have no
vision, people suffer for generations!

August 30,2009.

*******.

Monday, August 24, 2009

Indian Professionals Abroad- Can they empower India ?


I do agree with Mr.P.V.Hariharan that there are many problems with the politicians and the bureaucrats. In spite of these problems, industry has flourished in India especially after the liberalisation of Indian economy in 1991. What I was suggesting was that the government should take initiative to harness this resource, Indian professionals abroad, like the Chinese government.

Since India is a democracy, Indians and NRIs have the opportunity to take up initiatives in education - primary, secondary, college and university - at all levels. This will empower India, especially the younger generation. Let us remember that in China, only the government take initiative.

Corruption and poor governance are the reasons for most of India's problems. This could be tackled only by people themselves. NRIs can join the efforts.Transparency is the key and computer/internet/software have the potential to curb them, if not abolish them.

Many NRIs are helping education and health in many ways. It would be better if they form an association to become more effective and also bring it to the notice of the people.

I remember that the idea of connecting rivers was mooted during the time Dr.K.L.Rao was the water resources minister. If efforts were initiated at the time, our water problems would have been solved by this time. Floods and droughts are the recurring themes of Indian economy. If enough water is made available to our farmers, India could be the food basket of the world. If a programme of connecting rivers in a small way was undertaken, it would have given us the confidence to do it all over India. It would have created employment to a large number of people and given boost to agriculture. It is not too late even now.

India and Indians have to be bold and ambitious. We have the physical resources and skilled man-power. But we do not have a bold leadership.

( A response to Mr.P.V.Hariharan's sad and bad experience of Indian professionals who returned India who were not able to contribute because of political and bureaucratic indifference in karmayog.com).

August 23,2009.      

Village development.


I entirely agree with Mr.P.V.Hariharan that Indian state has not done enough for the development of villages. When Mahatma Gandhi said India lives in villages he knew what he was saying. In spite of all economic development, it is only some towns and cities have benefited. Since development has taken place only in these places, villagers flock to towns and cities giving rise to slums and shanties.

Gandhiji had constituted khadi and village industries development programme even during the freedom movement to employment. He used to say that if anybody who can grow two blades of grass where one grew before,he would be a great benefactor of mankind. If Indian government had taken measures to improve agriculture and other village industries, our villages would have been presented a better picture. We would not had to depend on American wheat during the 'fifities and 'sixties I still remember that S.K.Patil had to go to USA to get wheat from USA under PL 480 programme in what is called " ship-to-mouth" existence during those days. The Green Revolution can later after the great Bihar famine.

Our villages were small republics with a village panchayats and almost self-sufficient. They could withstand many invassions without much damage.

Our villages could still be made livable on the model suggested by our former President Dr.Abdul Kalam - Urban faciliites in rural areas with many connectivities -  physical ( roads),elctronics(telecom), knowledge (agriculture and agro-based industries) leading to economic connectivity. While keeping a window to the world, a village could be self-dependent with wind power/solar power/bio-gas power, tanks and wells to store water, primary health-care centre and primary school. If our villages could be empowered with these facilties, few would like to go to the cities and towns to live in unhygienic conditions.

The only problem with villages is the orthodoxy and conservatisim inbedded in it which Dr.Ambedkar had pointed out. With modren ideas of equality which is also to be found in our religion - brotherhood of mankind - this could be overcome in the coming decades.

Dr.Kalam's vision of PURA ( providing urban facilities in rural areas) is just a updated version of Mahatma's village panchayats. This has been successfully implemented in few areas. Our NGOs, NRIs and philanthropists can expand it many more villages. Our think-tanks can take it to the political parties to be adopted as a national plan.

( A response to the suggestion of Mr.P.V.Harirahan in karmayog.com)

August 23,2009. 

****

Sunday, August 23, 2009

"The greatest fantasy of our century"

"The greatest fantasy of our century"

 

Communism had attracted a number of intellectuals in the 20th century as it offered a better society – a society of the free and equals – " … free development of each is the condition for the free development of all" as the Communist Manifesto put it in 1848. It even offered a vision – withering away of the state.

 

However, many sensitive intellectuals were soon disillusioned during the Soviet Rule in Russia. Collectivization of agriculture could be enforced only after a large number of farmers were killed. Dissenters were made to 'confess' errors and later imprisoned and 'liquidated'. Leon Trotsky, a prominent dissenter, a votary of 'permanent revolution', was hounded out of Soviet Union and was killed in Mexico.  

 

The earliest Indian intellectual who expressed his distaste for the totalitarian regime which suppressed all dissent and freedom of speech was, Minoo Masani, who founded the Swatantra Party along with C.Rajagopalachari and N.G.Ranga to oppose the socialist pattern of society adopted by the Congress Party in its Avadi session in 1955. Masani had written his famous essay, 'Socialism Re-considered' in the 1930s. With his characteristic clarity, he used to say that he opposed not the aims of socialism but the methodology of socialism – concentration of all power in the hands of the state, which means the ruling party or the ruling faction. The Congress adopted socialist pattern of society and the results are there for all to see – average 3.5% GDP growth from 1950 to 1990, permit-license raj till Prime Minister P.V.Narasimha Rao ushered in liberalization of Indian economy in 1991 through Dr.Man Mohan Singh, his Finance Minister, who was an academic and later a bureaucrat of the Indian state or the UNO.    

 

After the second world war, many books were written by the ardent supporters of Communism repudiating their faith. One of book was, 'God that Failed', a compilation of six essays by writers and journalists of repute – Arthur Koestler, Ignazio Silone, Richard Wright, Andre Gide, Louis Fisher and Stephen Spender. George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four, a novel on the repressive totalitarian regime made famous phrases such as "Big Brother", " double- think", and "newspeak". His satire, Animal Farm, is a scathing indictment of freedom and equality in a totalitarian regime – "All animals are equal, but some are more equal than the others". Another book which exposed the Communist rule was by an insider and it was called 'The New Class: An Analysis of the Communist System' by Milovan  Djilas, who was the Vice President of the Federal People's Republic of Yogoslavakia, where he describes in detail how the Communist Party has become a new class with all privileges and perks of a ruling class.

 

I was reminded of the above books when I read the obituary of another disillusioned Marxist, Leszek Kolakowski, who passed away on July 17th 2009 in the Economist (August 1-7) and Financial Times (23/7). He was a Polish-born philosopher, who fled Poland in 1968 after an anti-Semitic campaign by the Communist Party, with his wife, Tamara, a Jew. Born at Radom, near Warsaw in 1927, but his schooling was interrupted after the German invasion of Poland. After the war, he studied philosophy at the University of Lodz and finished doctorate at the Warsaw University in 1953. He spoke out for greater democracy but his books were banned. Later, he was a professor at McGill University in Montreal and then Berkeley University in California, and finally, he became a fellow at All Souls College, Oxford.

 

His magnum opus was the three-volume study, "Main Currents of Marxism : Its Rise, Growth and Dissolution" where he has demolished the pillars of Marxist thought – the theory of value, the idea of class struggle and  the historical materialism. He described Marxism as "the greatest fantasy of our century", and that the "monstrous tyranny of Stalinism was not an aberration, but the logical  consequence of Karl Marx's call for a vanguard of intellectuals to take charge of revolutionary change". " The only medicine communism has invented," he observed, " the centralized, beyond social control, state ownership of the national wealth and one-party rule, is worse than the illness it is supposed to cure; it is less efficient economically and it makes the bureaucratic character of social relations an absolute principle."  He dismissed the idea of "democratic socialism" as " contradictory as a fried snowball".

 

His distaste for communism did not make him an evangelist for free-market economy. He was too inquisitive, skeptical and irreverent to support any particular doctrine strongly. He was critical of those who relied on science for answers to the big questions about life. He criticized the emptiness of secular materialism. He was convinced that religion, in some form or the other, was a necessary part of human existence.

 

"One of the crucial European traditions is the ability …to look at one's own civilization with eyes of others," he said in an interview in 2005. "We should be able to look at ourselves self-critically. If we are unable to do that, our civilization will destroy itself".

 

One of his best known aphorisms is: "We learn history not in order to know how to behave or how to succeed, but to know who we are."

 

While Financial Times hailed him as the " Latter-day Erasmus inspired overthrow of communism", The Economist said, : " Having spent his youthful years as an ardent communist and atheist, Leszek Kolakowski, one of the great minds of modern era, turned into Marxism's most perceptive opponent, and one with a profound respect for religion".


August 22,2009.

 

*****                        

 

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Indian Professionals Abroad : Can they empower India ?

Indians Professionals Abroad : Can they empower India ?

 

Recently, China appointed Yi Gang, a former Indiana University professor, as the head of an institution which manages the country's vast foreign exchange reserves. The appointment of expatriate Chinese experts is a part of a new initiative called "Thousand Person Plan" which seeks to lure Chinese   experts under the age of 55 with doctorates from foreign universities. If they work in state companies, educational institutions or businesses, they are given handsome pay and perks.

 

China is trying lure back its bright and creative professionals from its Diaspora with a red-carpet to help it join the ranks of the developed countries within a decade or so. The 'sea turtles', as these returning expatriates are called in China, are likely to make China a technological society to rival USA.

 

Can the Indian government think of similar plan to entice experts in the Indian Diaspora back to India ?  India has notched up their economic growth after economic liberalization and it did it long after China did. By inviting experts in various fields from abroad, India too would be able reap rich dividend in terms of knowledge pool. If some in the academic field are brought back to our universities, Indian students who seek education abroad would be able to access it India itself saving billions of dollars for the country. If India embarks on a large-scale infrastructure projects ( roads, railways, airways, port and air-ports ) and encourages private sector to expand in all manufacturing ( including defense) industries, there would be no problem in finding good jobs for engineers, software experts, management and financial professionals.    

 

According to the National Knowledge Commission, 160,000 students go abroad every year, especially to USA ( 104,000),UK ( 97,035) and Australia (25,905). A survey by Assocham ( The Associated Chambers of Commerce) estimated in 2008 that these students spend about  $10/13 billion every year in fees and living expenses. The students go abroad not merely to study but also to secure jobs in these countries as they do not find suitable opportunities in India. The time has come for India to liberalise the educational field as well. The private sector too should be involved in the establishment of autonomous schools, colleges and universities to meet growing need and demand for education. Expansion of educational sector would itself provide jobs for about 10 to 20 million, says Assocham survey.    

 

Since the National Knowledge Commission has identified the need to increase the number universities to 1,500, the government can establish a few universities headed by the expatriate professors who can bring skills, knowledge, and academic network which can make these universities among the top in the world in a few years. These universities should be funded adequately and invested with autonomy that is enjoyed by the universities abroad. Indian businessmen, NRI technocrats and philanthropists should be encouraged to fund colleges and chairs in these universities. An educational revolution has to take place in India to reap the demographic dividend from young Indian population.

 

Economic liberalization has opened many new avenues for expatriates both in China and India. Many Chinese and Indian professionals are returning to their countries. "It is a fast growing trend", says Vivek Wadhwa, a researcher who has done a survey on the subject for Kauffman Foundation of USA. " My prediction is," Wadhwa adds, " that 100,000 skilled workers will return, both to India and to China, over the next five years or so. I call this reverse brain drain."

 

Though recession has slowed down India's economy, it is projected to be about 7 percent annually till 2025. It is expected that the urban middle class would grow to be some 384 million, a population larger than that of USA.

 

Already a small stream of skilled people has started to go back to India. India Abroad, a weekly magazine, published from New York and other cities of USA, has profiles of a dozen people who have chosen to go back to India under the title, "Return of the Native"(July 31,209). "They are 35 years of age, they are highly educated, the majority of them have Master's and PhDs, all of them have been successful here and they are doing better back home" finds Wadhwa.

 

However, their experience has not been very positive and so their plans are tentative.  Their views says it all : " In India for now" ; " Back to stay but you should feel the US is within reach"; " I am going to definitely push myself as hard as I can"; " Settled in India "; " We really are not happy here"; " We want to live in Japan and Germany next" ; " Moved back to US in 2009". Only one is happy to be back in India, two have returned and the others want to keep the option of going back to USA. However, the expatriates who have gone back to South Africa and China are more positive : " I'm just having the time of my life"and " more diverse, tolerant, transparent and materially more abundant compared to what I remembered".

 

Indian authorities have to figure it out why NRI's are less positive than the others from China and South Africa. Of course, Indians missed Scharfen Berger chocolates, olive oil, bagels, cheap beer, peace and quiet, the greenness, the empty streets, work culture, libraries, kid-oriented stuff, lack of change ( same shanties, same sewage) etc. Most of hese things can be changed by the concerned citizens and the expatriates together by taking part in civic affairs.

 

It is not all bleak scenario.There is some appreciation for things Indian as well : " Being with the family"; " kids schooling is great" ;  " Delhi is an amazing city .. It's evolving before our eyes"; " I am much more comfortable than in the US." etc.

 

A Chinese expatriate who returned to China told the Financial Times columnist, Michael Skapinker,  " China has changed a lot, from infrastructure to people's thinking to the government's approach to managing the country". What made her return ? Work opportunities, family, patriotism ? " It is rather more complex than just three factors," she says. There were aging parents, a longing for "country, culture, friends and food" and the feeling that " America had never been the same" since the attacks of September 11,2001.

 

The NRIs do not have the same opinion about Indian economic and political development The Indian political establishment – the government all levels, political parties, bureaucracy, NGOs – should work together to improve our civic life and make our cities and towns livable. Only this can lure our Diaspora back to India to empower the country. Work opportunities, family and patriotism are not enough.


August 11,2009.

 

*****