Thursday 4 December 2008

True Independence

Yeah, everybody is talking about it. Whenever I switch to the news it has essentially been the same catchphrase - "enough is enough!" (One realises that in three days, the news persons have not had anything else important enough to mention. So it dawns upon one that their normal reporting is so pointless!) Enough is enough? I'll tell you what there is enough of in this country - Hypocrisy!

Everything that we commemorate in the name of national pride, and hold high (except the national flag, song and emblem) are but shams. Why even the national anthem makes little sense to me. 'Thou art the ruler of the minds of the people.... ". It is often reported that the anthem was sung to mark the arrival of king George V, which it definitely wasn't (in the words of the great poet himself). However, it is not Jana Gana Mana that echoed in the hearts of people when they fought to free the country from enslavement. It was our dear national song that was adopted by the great martyrs to honour mother India. Vande Mataram should become our national anthem.

In addition, celebration of Independence in this country is hardly justified. When our great forefathers envisioned independent India, it was not one of mere self governance. They were against the British rule because it did not tender the interests of the Indian populace at large. How then have the politicians of today done justice to that pure vision? They have abused and ravaged the nation to the worst possible depths, making her diseased to the bone with the pestilence of dishonesty.What we have done is replaced corrupt British officials with locals who are even worse. Our Independence is the highest form of glorified and latent racism that I have heard of.

And coming back to the bomb blasts, the Pakistani government, having nurtured terrorism to such an extent, is as helpless about routing its proliferation as the mumbaikars are of the underworld in their city. The mafia has done enough and more damage to the city of Mumbai to have cried and protested like this a thousand times over. The people seem mute to these unscrupulous criminals in our own soil. Why? Because here, like the politicians of Pakistan, they are as much a part of the system. Now there is hardly a difference between a terrorist and the underworld - both of them exploit the poor to loot our nation. And at the helm, the underworld and the terrorists are closely knit, which becomes very evident when you think of Dawood's connections.

And finally, the root cause for all this remains to be the common man, who is ranting and wailing with card boards screaming, topped off with lipstick and make-up! In a state where the citizens are honest themselves, there can be nothing that can shake their status. I am reminded of times like the Salt Satyagraha, where the British were absolutely helpless in the face of righteous struggle. The non-cooperation movement went to such an extent as to reform the British, who saw that there can't be anything achieved out of fighting a force so righteous. So think twice before you bribe the next cop on the road. Stand up for your rights at the RTO and get your licence without subscribing to bribe. Realise that the root of all evil is deep within the common man; within those people who are protesting its very existence on national television so that people who have nothing better to broadcast can make a pretty penny out of the glorious display.

True Independence shall that day be achieved, as described by the great poet himself in Gitanjali, -

Where the mind is without fear and the head is held high;
Where knowledge is free;
Where the world has not been broken up into fragments by narrow domestic walls;
Where words come out from the depth of truth;
Where tireless striving stretches its arms towards perfection;
Where the clear stream of reason has not lost its way into the dreary desert sand of dead habit;
Where the mind is led forward by thee into ever-widening thought and action--
Into that heaven of freedom, my Father, let my country awake.
I continuously look forward to that dawn which shall see this vision being realised.

Vande Mataram.

11 comments:

Half-Light said...

Well written, and I agree. But I have to ask, realistically what can people do to make our country better, if 70 year old thatha's can't let their pride go and step out of politics

Unknown said...

It is a pity that we have egoistic dunderheads suceeding those martyrs who have given up their lives so that we can lead one. Nepotism, Egotism, Corruption and even Senility! The list just goes on...

Layfield said...

No one ever uses "Indian" in a pride context. Except maybe food. :(

Bhargav said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Bhargav said...

Let loose a herd of sheep on open pasture-land unattended and next thing you know, the sheep are gone, and they've taken all the grass with them. It is not justified to blame the sheep now, is it?

It is in the nature of men to take shortcuts, and in a country like ours, where basic necessities are hard to come by, Rs.50 is all it takes to get one's dirty work done.

The Indian man is not responsble for his degradation. The trash that we elect to form the government has made us the kind of people that we are- selfish and corrupt, with no regard whatsoever for any kind of authority.

Our country needs governance and democracy has not worked. We are just not ready for it. What we need is a government, irrespective of the means it uses to come to power, with a sense of purpose and the will to do whatever it takes to change the common man.

Unknown said...

I absolutely disagree! The only pride India has left is its democracy. The means to achieving the end becomes releveant; just think of Pakistan where military coups and subsequent wars that end in defeat are the order of the day.
What we don't need is favouritism and ways to circumvent morally righteous laws. We need to have parties nominate their prime ministerial candidates and also have televised debates; to put the media to some use atleast.

Your defence of the Indian people clearly illustrates our ability to take shortcuts, for this is what people on the roads, confronted with their unscrupulous deeds, will offer as lame defence. Note that it is not those who struggle to eke out an existnece who contribute to the vast coffers of black wealth. It is well-to-do citizens, whose eyes glitter with greed unparalelled, who are the culprits. We need to revamp the education system to emphasise on values of honesty and non-violence for herein also lie the principles of contentment. Every Indian home must teach its newly annoited citizens these values, and of course, lead by example.

This has been incorporated in Japan with remarkable results.


@ Lay - Airtel doesn't deter to use the same as long as the money is good.

Bhargav said...

I can't manage to find pride in Indian democracy no matter how hard I try. There is too much socio-economic disparity for it to be effective.
It's like averaging 0 and 1000 and obtaining a result thats close to niether of them.
Even if candidates are nominated for the PM post, it would serve no real purpose. They would still be shackled by their parties.

I am not against democracy per se, but India is a democracy only on paper; it in no way reflects the will of the people.
They ask you to cast your vote, to be a responsible citizen. Its a sham, an eyewash to keep people happy. The votes that matter are bought anyway.

I do not glorify the common man, neither do I justify his actions. I merely say that he is a product of the power that rules him. People are moulded by the system they interact with.It is much harder to incite a change up the order than down, especially with the diversity we Indians boast of and the kind of foothold the system has in India.

I do not have faith in the Indian public. It would require a revolution to change the Indian mind. The ends seem more achievable if changes come from higher up.
Take the smoking rule for instance, all it needed was enforcement. Our people are not ones to listen nicely, they need policing.

And education can do only so much in India, given that most of its populace can't afford drinking water, let alone education. Every home does teach morals and values. Sadly there are not many who follow them. Japan is a different scenario in so many ways.

It is much harder to incite a change up the order than down. The onus is with the government. It is their responisbility to revive the spirit of Indianness.

Unknown said...

On the other hand, it is the people of a nation who form the government. It is by the sways held by the people that the government runs. For instance, there is a rule against culling street dogs in our country alone, because the people of this country are inherently more non-violent when it comes to gruesome death.

Where has the education system helped in the principle of non-violence? We just learn it as part of history, something that maybe preferably forgotten. As for morals taught at home, it defeats the purpose if the parents themselves show acts of dishonesty. That is why morals at home fail.

I agree it is much harder to change up the order as you have repeatedly mentioned which is why I am starting at grass roots - the education system.

Losing faith in the Indian public is an option that we do not have, for as I have mentioned, it is who is down who decides how his superior is, when it comes to democracy.

The little progress that India has shown has been seen to follow the ways in which education has progressed in this nation, to a very large extent. As for democracy, I personally feel that the 5 years of governance we had before the "Congress-Left" coalition came into power was much better. There was better law enforcement, better deployment of troops, bold action against terrorists like the Kargil war and implementation of the POTA when it was necessary. The communal politics played by the congress has no end. To this effect, my vote tomorrow will make a change. The democratic system is alive and kicking! Take the state for instance. Deve-Gowda has been held by the throat and thrown out of the way during these assembly elections. The people of India are not as ignorant of their status as you seem to think.

Bhargav said...

How can you defend our electoral system when the common man, as you say, is the root cause for all India's problems?

Yes, education will make a major change to the way the country works, agreed. But how will a corrupt government, elected by corrupt men, provide for the kind of educational revolution that is required.
Education as meaning only if it can be applied, and the system allows for anything but an honest man to do an honest day's work to earn his bread. The system itself requires change, in order for education to be empowered.

The very fact that Deve Gowda's government was reelected despite his previous utter failures at both the state and at the centre is testimony to how easily people can be bought over, literally. So much for democracy.

Unknown said...

And yes... we also need to do away with uncompromising cynisism and hopes for miracles to suddenly revamp the nation.

Mirage said...

I absolutely agree to the fact that vande mataram should be our national anthem.
Everything was to please the outgoing foreigners. Tagore's popularity and connection with West over powered patriotic sentiments of Vande Mataram.
Do we actually believe they got nothing in return to leave our country? We can't be so dumb.
But i am sorry to say as a critic that our indian independence struggle even though considered to be one of the greatest , was sabotaged to an extent a common man brain washed by the people about everything won't understand.
Today when we go beg to the western countries to protect us from Pakistan I wonder how much sadistic pleasure they derive out of seeing these two countries fight and that they have succeeded in inhibiting us from becoming powerful in the world.
Tactics. Politics. Everything planned by British while leaving India is coming true. Thanks to the so called "great" leaders.