Dr. N. Radhakrishnan
In a few months from now humanity would be entering a new century which
also incidentally heralds a new millennium. A century is a period of one hundred
years and a millennium, a thousand years. Does a period of a hundred years
signify events and developments that alter irrevocably the course of human
history ? In varying degree it does. The manner in which the century which we
are pushing back down memory lane witnessed developments which in a big way
altered even the thinking process of those 'few' or 'many' who are credited with
original ideas and whose work affected substantial changes both in the life
style and material health of almost a substantial part of humanity. It is also
indicated that humanity is poised for changes which most of us are incapable of
comprehending at this stage, notwithstanding the futuristic projections that are
being made everywhere.
This century witnessed two world wars and several hundred
wars between countries which brought in untold misery. Science and Technology
illustrated boundless possibilities in combating some of the dreaded diseases;
also it developed nuclear arsenal with deadly ramifications. The world is shrunk
in size and is fast emerging as a global village. Colonialism is dead and
buried. Marx and Freud who offered new visions have also become just historic
milestones. Materialism and temptations of consumerism seem to be the
controlling factors of the emerging culture. The voices of those like Gandhi who
strove for alternative models get drowned in the din and glare of an
all-enticing globalism in whose grip the entire humanity finds itself now. To
add to the misery and helplessness, we are caught in the web of a unipolar
world. What guides the emerging culture is the MTV music, computer boys, cloning
and vulgar display of the wealth of the industrialized west and the neo-rich
while more than a half of humanity struggles in subhuman situations.
Talk about culture, ethics, spirituality etc. have become things of the past and
there is genuine fear and trepidation in the minds of a large number of people
all over the world they are really concerned. What kind of century would the
21st century be and would the new millennium be a coming time of happiness on
earth, as the compilers of dictionaries would have us to believe ?
The 20th century was a crucial period in India's history. The first half
witnessed the nonviolent national movement under Gandhi for political freedom
from an unwilling and deeply entrenched British regime while the second half was
marked by heroic efforts by the post-independence leadership to rebuild the
Indian nation which was divided, poverty-stricken, traditional and essentially
agrarian. The problems they inherited were stupendous and bewildering.
Many of the prophets of doom were
disappointed when the century registered impressive gain. Within fifty years, it
has enriched itself in all fields of economic progress and has become
competitive at an international level. It was in agricultural and food front
that India
attained spectacular success. Fifty years ago, India imported food. Much land
remained untilled. The silent but nonviolent revolution affected by Acharya
Vinoba Bhave through his unique Bhoodan movement brought about a much needed
climate for realizing "Land to the tiller". Without bloodshed, "the Gentle
Anarchist" and walking saint" amazed everyone by his 13 year long trek to the
remotest village and in the process checked the violent spirit generated by the extreme groups. The improvements on the agricultural front were spectacular. A
country that was begging for food in the fifties of the century became not only
self-sufficient in food but also emerged as a surplus nation soon, not
withstanding the phenomenal population explosion.
Taking advantage of this spectacular achievement, the government supplemented
these efforts by providing water and power through big irrigation projects.
Indian scientists, engineers and technicians, took pride in contribution their
mite. Together, everyone contributed to make India economically advance though
the benefits accruing from these could not be commensurate due to the population
explosion. Still there has been stupendous progress, which has covered the
backward areas too. The process of planning led to economic centralization of
power. The imbalance between the urban industrialized rich has yet to be matched
by the backward rural poor.
Poverty still stalks despite all the
earnest and honest efforts to keep wealth distributed. The alarming gulf between the
haves and the have-nots, the high rate of unemployment, the urban and rural
divide are issues that will continue to haunt the administrators and planners in
the new century.
What would
have Gandhi done had he been
alive today ? It is certainly a hypothetical question. Still if one ventures for
an answer it can be seen in the very life of the Mahatma but if the people of
India could not maintain the standards Gandhi prescribed, why blame Gandhi?
Despite all this, a fact which many may not dispute is that Gandhi
continues to be a living presence in varying degrees, and one could confidently
say that the Mahatma's presence and the impact of his gentle stride and
admonition still have the power to put sanity in his countrymen when ever they
get swayed by emotional issues. The near miracles he achieved in Noakhali and
other places, where men became beasts, is part of history and his leadership
inspires a considerable segment of Indian masses. The deep impression Gandhi was
able to make on the Indian psyche is also unparalleled.
How does one explain the force which
brings an estimated number of over 30000 people every day to Rajghat in Delhi
where Gandhi was consigned to flames fifty one years ago? Among those who come
there are men and women, children, youth, physically handicapped, from all
religions and all walks of life. There is nothing imposing to see there either
expect a slab and flame. The general feeling is that they don't come there like
tourists but come like pilgrims of peace and harmony. The eyes of many, as they go
round the marble slabs are found to be wet and once when this writer ventured
to ask what their impressions were on visiting this final resting place of the
Mahatma, two young men who came from the rural depths of Bihar
said, "He died
for us. This is a place of inspiration and introduction for us".
"I shall work for an India in which the
poorest shall feel it is their country, in whose making they have an effective
voice; an India in which there will be no high class and low class of
people; an India in which all communities shall live in harmony. Women shall
enjoy the same rights as men... All interests not in conflict with the interest
of the mute millions will be scrupulously respected, whether foreign or
indigenous. I hate distinction between foreign and indigenous. This is the India
of my dreams", Gandhi wrote. With over forty percent of people living in
subhuman conditions and women who constitute almost a half of the total
population struggling for protection of basic human rights and gender equality,
has the Gandhian strivings for equality and his dream of social justice become a
cry in the wilderness or a distant dream? But then can we expect the Mahatma to
live ever with us or to be reborn to solve all our problems? Prudence and sanity
requires that we should emulate his life and work along the path he had shown
us.
Never before has the country's sovereignty, integrity, institution and the
values the country has been cherishing faced such a massive onslaught of sorts
as it is of today. There seems to be no part in India left untouched by the
growing tendency of terrorism, violence, caste conflicts, secessionism and the
rising tide of fundamentalism. The number of innocents who are being killed,
whole members of particular families done to death mercilessly is increasing.
Respect for authority, unfortunately, seems to be collapsing and anarchy and
lawlessness appear to have engulfed this country all of a sudden.
It is generally assumed that it is the growing consumerist culture, wrong
development policies, lack of Governmental initiative bordering on apathy
towards many of the current problems and the present education system which are
responsible for pushing the society to the brink and the younger generation
getting negative signals and inputs.
It is not that we as a nation have not
developed appropriate instruments in our structures to deal with the various
vexed issues that are confronting us today. Over the years the nation has
thoughtfully deliberated and developed various measures to usher in a just, corrupt-free
social order. But what happened over the years is that the same ingenuity with
which these measures were developed, we were able to scuttle them and make them nonfunctional
!
Gandhiji anticipated such a situation as early as 1937 and clearly and steadily
he was working towards launching the second stage of independence struggle when
the assassin put an end to his life.
When Gandhi said what we have achieved is
only political freedom he was not taken seriously. When he said a free nation
should have its own national education programme he was not taken seriously. Far
from it, his concept of education was never taken seriously by his countrymen.
This is not to deny the half hearted attempts undertaken in the name of basic
education. The reality is that at the earliest opportunity, in the face of some
opposition mounted by groups with vested interests and western-educated
intellectuals who always had difficulty in going along with the alternative visions
and strategies Gandhi experimented, the Gandhian pattern of education was given
up.
He wanted a National Language to be developed
and the reality is that even after Fifty two Years the only language through
which at least a considerable segment of Indians can communicate is English.
The 18 point Constructive Programme-the
biggest gift of the Mahatma to the Nation besides winning Freedom for the
country has also been taken only casually by his countrymen. The passion with which
Gandhi advocated these programmes had the familiar Gandhian stamp of holistic
development and development with compassion and without destruction.
It
took forty six years for the Nation
to implement Panchayati Raj - that great blue print of the second stage of
Revolution which Gandhiji was envisioning. That too, when it appeared, it was only
in a mutilated form. Still what is important is that it is there even though not
in the form it was expected. It was indeed a great leap and a sure step towards
empowerment of people and decentralization. This might bail out the nation which
has been remaining a silent witness to the appalling fall in values and
all-round deterioration marked by a disgusting and suffocating atmosphere of self
aggrandizement.
The manner in which the villages have been
neglected and devastated since independence despite some cosmetic changes
effected here and there, calls for immediate and sustained attention of all
those who are involved in developmental activities. Planning from bottom, power
to the people, involvement of people in the very process of development based on
local needs will certainly take into account not only the needs of each of
the villages but also the realities of the situation. The Gandhian dream
of development from bottom will give both economic fibre to the Society and
spiritual strength to the individuals. The ever-widening circles' which Gandhi
spoke about will offer sustainable and progressive character to life itself. It
is hoped that the villages, which during the last 50 years of our independence,
remained the backyard of our comparatively prosperous and unclean cities and
towns, will no longer be dependent on the cities and towns once local planning
will offer the village youth, peasant, women, craftsmen and artisans gainful
employment right in their own villages. Agriculture has to be given attention.
By agriculture what is meant here is not commercial agriculture but that
agriculture which will make the villagers self-sufficient in food. It should not
be market oriented. Its primary objective should be to give food to the food
growers. The example provided to us by Fukuoka in Japan should be a model. All
small land holding farmers will have to be provided some farmland for 'natural
farming'. This natural farming will not require chemical fertilizers, pesticides
etc. which in the long run destroy the quality and fertility of the soil. By
adopting natural farming, we will be giving, in the long run, both health and rest
to the soil long enough to enable it to regain its fertility. The One Straw
Revolution by Fukuoka offers immense possibilities for adoption.
Unless enough employment opportunities are created in
each of the villages, we will soon face a situation which will not only create
city life which has already become miserable due to over-crowding, pollution, increasing
crimes, over burgeoning of slums but also the disguieting trend of unemployed
youth falling into the hands of those who offer immediate 'Revolution' and other
avenues bordering on terrorism and other escapades, is to be taken note of. We
should learn enough lessons from three of the recent developments when the truck owners, milk suppliers and vegetable growers in the neighbouring states of Delhi
went on strike pressing their demands on different occasions. Life almost came
to a stand-still besides rising prices in these items which forced the common
public to go without vegetables and milk, sending shock-waves all-round. It is a
fact that the cities do not produce any of the essential items of food; they
depend on villages and when those items produced in the villages do not reach
the urban centres both the urban and the rural centers suffer. The situation in the villages is very
alarming and there is no point in quarrelling with the observations made by some
of the planners recently that during the last 50 years the face of rural India
has not improved, it has only shrunk because of malnutrition and lack of
attention. Unemployment and poverty stalk every village and stare menacingly at
over 40 percent of Indian population.
When Gandhiji offered the Charkha, he did not consider it as
a magic wand which will remove the poverty of India at one stroke nor did he
view it essentially as something that would meet all the economic needs of those
who take to spinning. It certainly had an economic content but its ability to
reform individuals and shape national character is the key to radical
transformation of society where exploitation still exits in some form or the other. Gandhi believed that the Charkha would restore our national vision which, for various reasons now has been distorted. Much more than any of
these, he hoped, it will bring back the message of plain, simple and honest living. It will be an instrument for transforming our society into a
nonviolent, classless and egalitarian one. It will also act as a self-dependent
healthy social organism. How far are we today from this dream, is the question
each one of us has to ask? Those who scoff at the Charkha should be able
to offer an alternative. It may be noted that until today, nobody has been able
to offer a credible alternative to the Charkha. It is here that the relevance of
the Charkha
and much of what Gandhi propagated and lived for come in.
It may also be debated as to what is the relevance of
Gandhi's insistence on simple living in the light of the growing consumeristic
culture. Is Gandhi out of time with the changing times or is he not reminding us
of the law of Nature?
''Indeed, I believe that independent India can only discharge
her duty towards a groaning world by adopting a simple but ennobled life, by
developing her thousands of cottage industries and living at peace with the world. High
thinking is inconsistent with complicated material life based on high
speed imposed on us by Mammon worship. All the graces of life are possible only
when we learn the art living nobly", Gandhi wrote in Harijan on
September1, 1946.
Not that everybody is silent and nothing happens. All over
India small and meaningful efforts are being undertaken by well-meaning and well
intentioned institutions. Strengthening of Panchayati Raj institutions and
empowering people to voice their grievances and involve them in developmental
activities and in the planning process itself have been gaining ground. Proper
support to those who are prepared to stand up and fight is also discernible in
many parts of the country. This is a welcome development. What the nation needs
is an honest introspection to find out where we have gone wrong and what could
be done to stem the rot before it further eats into the vitals. Introspection is
the need of the hour. We need to think seriously of the seven social sins which
Gandhi highlighted:
Politics without principle
Pleasure without conscience
Wealth without work
Knowledge without character
Commerce without morality
Science without humanity
Worship without sacrifice
Gandhi stood like a sentinel between the warring communities and by shedding his blood at the alter
of communal harmony. He effected a truce which acted like a cementing force until
determined groups of politicians and self-styled religious leaders who
are motivated by political ambitions have created unprecedented situations of
suspicion and hatred leading to violence is by continuing the unfinished work of
the Mahatma in the field of communal harmony, removal of untouchability,
ensuring social justice and by launching a massive campaign to eliminate gender
inequality.
The amazing manner
in which social structures have been changing particularly during the latter
half of the 20th century, thanks to the breathtaking developments in the field
of science and technology, have added, in the wake of these developments, new
anxieties for the entire humanity. These winds have been sweeping across India
as well in a big a way. In a sense, a new civilization, a new world order, a new
style of living have almost set in, whether anyone likes it or not.
Gandhi's
contribution or relevance needs to be viewed in the light of these
emerging scenarios as well as the basic rhythm of life. To some, Gandhi was a
dreamer, utopian, pacifist whose formulations are impracticable. The number of
those who believe that he was eminently practical is very large. His work in south Africa
for 21 years and 32 years of work in India reveals unmistakably that what we said
and did were complementary.
Gandhi knit
the 'ethnic museum' of India into a modern nation from a motley crowd of ethnic
and linguistic identities who had lost their courage to stand up and fight for
justice. He infused courage into the people to discover themselves and shed
fears. In this process he became the voice of the voiceless and a slave nation
suddenly found its utterances and he thus moulded a new generation of freedom loving people who were not afraid of torture, jails or death. He also offered
a
credible non-violent alternative and in a way he was challenging all those who
scoffed at him and paved the way for a new civilization to emerge. It is for us to
draw our lesson and shape our destiny. Do we have the courage that is the big
question staring at each of us as we enter the new millennium?
Source: International Workshop on Nonviolence
in the twentieth century and their lessons for the twenty first October 5-12,1999.
New Delhi
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