| A
Time of Transition: Rajiv Gandhi to the 21st century by Mani
Shankar Aiyar is surely a book which needed to come out at this
time in the subcontinent to reaffirm the secular basis for Indian
democracy, as laid down by its founding fathers, Mahatma Gandhi
and Jawaharlal Nehru. This concept has been owned and carried
forward by the Congress Party, albeit without much conviction
at times. The secular basis has been reaffirmed strongly by
Rajiv Gandhi and the Congress leadership under Sonia Gandhi
and Manmohan Singh. The recent elections have underscored the
faith of the Indian electorate in a development agenda and a
secular polity. This scenario is highly reassuring for the people
of South Asia, who are multicultural and multiethnic, and could
not live peacefully in any less liberal and tolerant polity.
Mani
Shankar Aiyar is a ‘secular fundamentalist’ in his
own words. He has written a major book on that theme, which
argues strongly that the only possible underpinning for India’s
politics and governance is secularism, suitably modified for
Indian conditions – which is not ‘la dinyat’
or no religion but an acceptance that India is a land of many
religions and beliefs, and that they must all be accepted and
have mutual toleration; none can be majoritarian and intolerant.
Aiyar argued his case strongly and with tremendous credibility
in his earlier book, Confessions of a Secular Fundamentalist.
In this book, he has taken a slightly different angle on the
issue.
A Time of Transition is a collection of articles written by
Aiyar. After his defeat in the elections of 1996, when Congress
was in opposition, Aiyar became a columnist, first for India
Today and then the Indian Express. The columns published in
this volume were written for the Indian Express during the period
from August 1998 till the elections of April/May 2004. Aiyar,
a witty and opinionated writer, has put together a brilliant
and uniquely insightful commentary on the Indian political scene
of the era.
He
has chosen Nehru’s legacy of democracy and secularism
as the theme for this book, which is woven around Rajiv Gandhi’s
interpretation of Nehru’s ideas and ideals. Aiyar argues
that Rajiv was very aware that the philosophical basis for India
and the direction it should take had been set by Nehru, i.e.
secularism and democracy as the only possible direction India
could adopt, to reflect the essence of its its true nature.
The
book is dedicated to the late Indian prime minister Rajiv Gandhi,
who was assassinated by a Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE)
suicide bomber on May 21, 1991. It was his association with
Rajiv Gandhi that brought Aiyar to politics at the end of his
diplomatic career. He had been a schoolmate of Rajiv Gandhi
at the Doon School, and when Gandhi became prime minister after
the assassination of Indira Gandhi, he appointed Aiyar as one
of his closest advisers. Rajiv analysed the situation India
found itself in at the end of the 20th century and felt that
the message of Mahatma Gandhi and the legacy of Nehru –
the carefully worked out political basis for a healthy growth
of the Indian society – had been diluted, if not completely
lost. Rajiv Gandhi thus set out to re-establish the Gandhi-Nehruvian
principles for Indian polity.
We
are told that Rajiv felt strongly that, despite all the hype
about India being the largest democracy in the world, it was
still the least representative – a mere 5,000 or so legislators
representing nearly a billion people in the national and state
legislatures. In his view, India’s economic progress had
not benefited its masses: “The successful Indian has the
best style of life of anyone anywhere in the world, while the
unsuccessful Indian languishes at 128 on the Human Development
Index.”
Aiyar quotes Rajiv Gandhi’s speech at the Nehru Memorial
Centenary Lecture on November 13, 1989, which is so relevant
to conditions in Pakistan that I make no apology for quoting
it extensively:
“As
I travel around the villages of India, I feel the seething tension
of expectations being totally at variance with reality and realistic
possibilities. Because our young men and women have been brought
up to look to government authority as the provider of all things
good and bad, there is a kind of abnegation of responsibility
for one’s own development or the development of the local
community to which one belongs. There is, therefore, little
appreciation, in terms of resource mobilisation and resource
development, of what is required for the development process
to proceed apace. Unrealistic expectations are encouraged and
then matched to a widening belief that development is a matter
of establishing the right contacts, and hoping that nepotism
will bring results since the outcome does not appear to be related
to merit.”
How true all this is for Pakistan too. It is almost an indistinguishable
situation.
Aiyar
further quotes Rajiv: “It is an explosive situation. The
only way of preventing the explosion from taking place is to
end the present alienation of the individual from the development
process. Paternalistic planning must give way to participatory
planning. Implementations from above must yield to implementation
in cooperation with the people and their representatives. There
must be representative institutions at the grassroots, entrusted
with real powers and real responsibilities, for administration
to be truly responsive to the people’s felt needs and
articulated aspirations.”
It has to be said that this analysis of the grassroots realities
of the subcontinent are as true of Pakistan as they are of India,
and it makes sense that solutions should be worked out together
for the people of South Asia to finally pull themselves up from
the quagmire of poverty and hopelessness. Aiyar gives us the
Rajiv Gandhi solution to these basic problems in four fundamental
principles on which to base the government policy. These he
identifies as:
1. Secularism
2. Democracy
3. Socialism
4. Non-alignment
Rajiv Gandhi and Aiyar give the principle of secularism the
primary position in the hierarchy of principles underlying Indian
polity. Aiyar bases the principle of secularism as a founding
principle of India on Nehru’s declaration in 1951: “If
any person raises his hand to strike down another on the ground
of religion, I shall fight him till the last breath of my life,
both as the head of government and from outside.”
The
author further quotes Rajiv Gandhi: “ … We in India
are the inheritors of a great historical experience in organising
a multilingual, multiethnic, multireligious, multicaste, multiregional
society. The global village of the new technology has to learn
from our experience the basic lesson of how humanity is to live
together, not in segregated states but as one human family.”
Rajiv goes on to talk of “unity in diversity” as
the chief characteristic of Indian civilisation. This unique
culture, he asserted, is open to the best of influences, and
its continuing theme has been synthesis. He concluded definitively
that “Secularism is our answer to those who seek religious
domination, to those who demand a position of privilege for
the dominant religious community as the quid pro quo for letting
the minorities even exist.”
India
has seen blatantly anti-secular and minority bashing activities,
both against Muslims (in the notorious demolition of Babri mosque
and the riots in Gujarat) and Christians (the active persecution
in the eastern states.) But the promise made by Nehru and repeated
by Rajiv Gandhi allows the moderate forces to recoup their strength
and remind the political forces that secularism is the foundation
of India’s status in the world.
Rajiv
was talking in an atmosphere in India that had been vitiated
by the pusillanimous conduct of the Congress government under
Narasimha Rao, who practically stood by in silence while the
Babri mosque was demolished and efforts were made to build a
temple on the site. On the paralysis of the so-called secular
Congress government, Aiyar commented: “The prime minister
has shown that death is not a necessary precondition for rigor
mortis to set in!”
It
was from this post-Babri mosque low in India that the Rajiv
Gandhi school of thought tried to rescue Indian politics and
bring it back to the secular path.
The
second of the four themes that Rajiv wanted to base his political
philosophy on was democracy. He believed that while India was
the world’s largest democracy, it was the least representative.
He wanted local empowerment and local decision-making so that
the Indian people felt part of the great self-governing experience.
Rajiv made panchayati raj the vehicle for delivering this part
of his programme. This was part of Mahatma Gandhi’s programme
for India, which was forgotten with his assassination. The Congress
under Rajiv wanted to revive that idea to ingrain democracy
at the grassroots level. Rajiv granted “constitutional
status, sanctity and sanction to panchayati raj.” Aiyar
claims that this ushered in an astonishing social revolution
on a scale without precedent in history or parallel in the contemporary
world. Noteworthy is the fact that Aiyar himself was a panchayati
minister in the Manmohan Singh cabinet from 2004 to 2009, helping
to realise Rajiv’s dream: “Deep-seated transformation
of inegalitarian economic and social structures cannot be undertaken
without deep-seated political transformation. We want to create,
at the grassroots, a responsive leadership which, because it
is responsible to the people, cannot hide behind the tired clichès
and well-worn formulae of the past, but has to find new solutions
relevant to the new challenges. We intend to endow these bodies
with maximum democracy and maximum devolution.”
The
third plank of the Rajiv agenda, as explained by Aiyar, was
socialism. In his tribute speech for Rajiv Gandhi, Aiyar stated
that socialism had lost its position as a leading political
system in the wake of the fall of the Soviet Union. But there
was, according to Aiyar, space at least for socialist ideas
and its ideals to temper the hard and cruel world of triumphant
capitalism. Rajiv, Aiyar tells us, actively supported Indian
socialism: “He believed deeply in our socialism, not perhaps
the socialism of the well-known text books, but socialism based
upon compassion for the common man, a socialism based upon using
the gifts of knowledge, of science and technology, for the advancement
of the humblest and the poorest.”
Aiyar
goes on to mourn the passing of the great ideal of socialism:
“I regret its passing. Perhaps I am alone among my peers
in proclaiming myself a socialist.”
He
argues that the poorest of the people in India need socialism
to rise from their trap of poverty, and that capitalism cannot
provide the same tools to help the umpteen millions who grind
out their lives at the very bottom of our society in South Asia.
He places Rajiv at the centre of the idea that the socialism
of Nehru needs to be revamped and revived to get India out of
its poverty trap. Unless the poor are given the support they
need to escape from the lower strata of society, goes Aiyar’s
philosophy, India can never realise its true potential. I think
the following particular paragraph of the book is equally true
of Pakistan’s situation post-independence:
“…
Everyone then saw that a century-and-a-half of unimpeded liberalisation
and unfettered globalisation as part of the British Empire had,
indeed, given us enclaves of unprecedented prosperity and world
class infrastructure (the largest rail network in the world,
for example), but left the nation as a whole growing at an annual
average of no more than 0.73%–1.22%, a byword for death
by famine, a cesspool of misery. The state … had to intervene
if India was to be raised from her wretchedness.”
Aiyar
asks: “What of the 836 million who are not strong enough
to stand on their own in even the domestic, let alone the global,
marketplace?” The present day ‘successful Indian’
– the present day middle-class – rose out of poverty
using the tools provided by socialist policies of education
and opportunity, yet they then became so adamantly capitalist
that they denied those very tools and that ladder to those who
were still in the poverty trap. Rajiv saw panchayati raj or
local self-government as the best way out of powerlessness and
deprivation. He believed that the state needed to reach out
to the people by promoting grassroots development through grassroots
democracy, and that the people needed to be given a common stake
of political stability and economic progress.
The
fourth point of Gandhi’s agenda was non-alignment, an
idea initiated by Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt, Tito of Yugoslavia
and Nehru of India, that was realised in the Non-Aligned Movement
(NAM) and created a neutral bloc in the time of the Cold War.
After the collapse of the USSR in 1991, however, the world is
now unipolar and it is difficult to see the way forward for
non-alignment. But perhaps the resisters of the unipolar world
could find some relevance in the idea. Certainly, Aiyar himself
did try when he started the negotiations for the Iran-Pakistan-India
gas pipeline agreement, which was sacrificed for the India-US
nuclear deal and for which he lost the petroleum ministry once
that plan went through. Non-alignment no longer seems to be
an aim of Indian foreign policy.
Mani Shankar Aiyar
has brought out a very relevant book for our times and for our
part of the world. Pakistanis need to take note of it almost
as much as the Indian reading public. But apart from the philosophy
and the ideas, which are surely the most suitable for our conditions,
the book also provides extremely interesting articles about
Indian politics in what Aiyar calls the ‘time of transition.’
With its superb writing and wit, this book is hugely entertaining
and instructive reading. |