Mahatmas with a small m
Through my pre-teen and teenage years, I
spent a lot of time with my grandfather. He was a medical doctor, a
theosophist, a Congress party activist and a compassionate human being. He was
my ideal.
One summer when my siblings and I were visiting his home in Surat , someone told him I
had eaten meat. Grandfather wasn’t incensed or censorious; he simply said “We don’t eat meat.” I was in awe of this
man who attracted eminences like Rabindranath Tagore, Annie Besant, George
Arundale, among others to his home. When he said something, I listened,
deferentially.
However on this occasion his comment
rankled. Grandfather seemed to be suggesting that because of caste and
religious strictures, our family was vegetarian. Having eaten a mutton samosa
at a friend’s house, I thought to myself that his reaction was over the top. I
knew he was tolerant and liberal; his extensive library included books by
Bertrand Russell and other free thinkers.
Thanks to him, we were spared worst traditions of caste and religion.
This incident haunted me over the years.
Since I admired him, I dismissed the episode as a one-off occurrence.
Nevertheless, it came back to haunt me in the mid-1970s, when I was living in
the US . Our high-profile India Forum group in Chicago became a magnet
for NGOs and activists of all types, looking at times for financial support but
mostly to spread the gospel of the jholewala alternative. I termed it “the rise of righteous reaction.”
The ascent of the righteous activist
posing alternative, mostly woolly and impractical models, was like a riptide
generated by the Navnirman wave. Led by
Jayaprakash Narayan, a Congress party dissenter, the movement was against the
perceived corruption and, in a phrase cherished and propagated by the
jholewala, ‘anti-people’ development policies of the Indira Gandhi government
of the time.
Training his guns on Prime Minister Indira
Gandhi, Narayan called for “Total Revolution,” a Maoist-style leap backward into
anarchy which prompted the imposition of the Emergency in June 1975. Condemned
worldwide as a dictatorial regression, the Emergency destroyed the government’s
credibility. The Congress Party was defeated in the general election of 1977.
However, even before the first
non-Congress government assumed office in Delhi ,
things had begun to go awry. During what he thought was a revolutionary war;
Narayan had called on the armed forces to revolt against the government. That’s
when the steady erosion of his vastly inflated stature began, helped in no
small measure by the subsequent fumbling and ineptitude of the Janata
government which came to power in 1977.
Narayan’s movement had its roots in the
margins of the Gandhian movement. The Mahatma’s success with the independence struggle
allowed him to exhume and propagate an anti-Western, anti-modernity ideology drawn
from his 1909 tract Hind Swaraj. Mohandas Gandhi challenged Jawaharlal
Nehru’s modernization agenda, recommending simplistic notions like village
republics, self-sufficiency, nature cure and vegetarianism as national
alternatives.
Like many students who studied in the US after him,
Narayan became a Karl Marx admirer. However, when he returned to India he found
his position pre-empted by Nehruvian economic policies that emphasized central
planning and nationalization of core industries. For him and his acolytes, it
was a short step to the vituperative and impractical edicts of Hind Swaraj.
The Navnirman movement was confused at
birth. It combined the anti-Western, anti-modern strains of Gandhian utopianism
and the anti-market, anti-constitutional Marxist dogma. This weird and
unsustainable campaign fell apart as casually as it was formed.
After the failure of Narayan’s movement,
the role of righteous reaction became marginal. The protest against the Narmada
Dam project led by a global coalition of NGOs gave it a second wind. Through
the 1980s, the Indian jholewala brigade became involved with relatively benign
campaigns against child labor, deforestation, and for employment generation, education,
healthcare, among others.
In 2004, the newly-elected UPA
government, recognizing their contribution to social welfare and poverty
alleviation, sought to co-opt the jholewala brigade into the National Advisory
Council (NAC). The NAC’s deliberations focused on welfare and (Citizen’s) rights
rather than the legitimacy of the government and the political system. But a
more virulent strain of Jholewala activism
surfaced with the appearance on the national stage of Anna Hazare and his disciples.
The Hazare protest went further than
Narayan in challenging the legitimacy of the Constitution and the credibility
of the political system. Sophisticated in the use of propaganda, the rural
chieftain and his jholewala acolytes cleverly projected their protest as being
against corruption when actually it is a political assault on the UPA
government and its leading party, the Congress. Like Narayan, Hazare
over-reached and today, his protest has degenerated into a media relations
effort.
Is the tradition of smug righteousness so
deeply ingrained in the Indian psyche that it can only be contained, never
eradicated? Who will be the next mahatma (with a small m)?
This Article appeared in the Education World magazine in August 2012 issue.
www.educationworldonline.net
This Article appeared in the Education World magazine in August 2012 issue.
www.educationworldonline.net
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