"We must at present do our best to form a class,"
Macaulay wrote in his famous Minute of 1835, "who may be
interpreters between us and the millions whom we govern; a class of
persons, Indians in blood and colour, but English in taste, in
opinions, in morals, and in intellect."
Now, many of the strictures in his Minute were
entirely to the point: the texts which were in use at that time in
Arabic and Sanskrit schools were out-dated, they were teaching
notions about geography, astronomy and the rest which had been
superseded by recent researches. And in this sense, modernising the
syllabus and imparting education through English, opening our eyes
to the world was indeed to raise Indians.
But there was another aspect to the Minute: utter
scorn for all that had been written or developed here. And more than
the knowledge they imbibed of the world, it is this disdain for
everything Indian that the products of the new education system
internalised.
"...the dialects commonly spoken among the natives
of this part of India contain neither literary nor scientific
information, and are moreover so poor and rude that until they are
enriched from some other quarter it will not be easy to translate
any valuable work into them," Macaulay wrote. "I have never found
one among them (the proponents of continuing to stress oriental
learn- ing)", he wrote, "who could deny that a single shelf of a
good European library was worth the whole native literature of India
and Arabia." "It is, I believe, no exaggeration to say," he wrote,
"that all the historical information which has been collected from
all the books which have been written in the Sanskrit language is
less valuable than what may be found in the most paltry abridgement
used at preparatory schools in England...."
With the British gaining supremacy several things
happened. The scorn, falsifications and caricatures of our culture
by the missionaries had a free field. They were buttressed by the
sway the British acquired in the political sphere - even apart from
the assistance this gave to missionary propaganda, political
tutelage bred inferiority among us, a feeling that our culture was
inferior as it had led us to enslavement. Such acquaintance that
educated Indians came to have with our tradition was what they
learnt from western books and missionaries. How pervasive the
effects of the system were and how they have endured to our very day
will be evident from a single consideration: although each is among
the simplest of the hundreds upon hundreds that can be set out,
every single example cited above - descriptions of our land in the
Vedas, Puranas and epics, Shankara's journeys, the Granth Sahib, the
linkages between temples and pilgrimages -- will be a surprise to
most of us, educated Indians today.
The scorn was deepened in part because of the
truimph of western science and technology, but even more because of
the fact that educated Indians acquired just a smattering of
anacquaintance with even this new learning -- they concluded that
the 'scientific temper' and 'reason' were all; they knew next to
nothing about our culture... The scorn was made repudation by the
spread of Marxist ideas: for these ideas every feature of our
culture was an expression of, indeed an instrument of a system of
exploitation. Crude and vehement examples of this attitude can be
had by the ton from the writings of communists and fellow-travellers
right upto the 1980s as also from those of editorialists and
pontificators right upto today's newspapers. But the effects did not
spare the outlook -- and therefore the writings and, when they
attained office, the policies -- of the very best.
Pandit Nehru is the most vivid example of the type.
He was the truest of nationalists. His sacrifices for our
independence compare with those of anyone else. But he had little
acquaintance with our tradition -- his description of it, even when
they seek to laud it, do not go deeper than the superficial cliche:
one has only to read his account of even a relatively
straightforward text such as the Gita alongside that of Sri
Aurobindo or Gandhiji or Vinoba to see the chasm. There was in fact
more than a mere absence of acquaintance. Deep down Panditji felt
that whatever worthwhile there might have been in tradition had long
since expired, that it had now to be replaced by the "scientific
temper" and "reason". It was not just that the Bhakra-Nangals should
be "our new temples," but that the old temples were nothing but
spreaders of superstition and devices of inequity and
exploitation...
Lack of acquaintance with our tradition was one
factor. But this new class was -- and remains to our day -- equally
ignorant of, and distant from the life of our common people. In
addition therefore to not seeing that which was common in our past,
it did not, it does not today, as we noted earlier, see the
commonalities in the life, in the beliefs and practices of ordinary
people across the country.
Giants such as Swami Vivekananda, Sri Aurobindo and
Gandhiji did all they could to awaken us to the essential elements
of our tradition. They saw the essence behind the forms, their eye
took in the whole, it did not get stuck at the parts. Others -- from
Ramakrishna Paramhamsa to Ramana Maharishi to the Paramacharya at
Kanchi -- lived that essence. But after independence offices of
State and even more so public discourse came to be filled by the
other sort -- the best among them only Macaulay's children.
The result is before us: for seven hundred years to
talk of the essence of our tradition was blasphemy; for a hundred
years it was stupid; for the last forty years to do so has been
"revanchist", "chauvinist", and, the latest, "communal".
Politics
The argument thus far has been as follows: the core
of our tradition was the spiritual quest; the core of this spiritual
quest was Hindu; the way in which this core manifested itself in the
life of our people was the religious. To the western educated Indian
the spiritual was just mumbo-jumbo, religion was just opium to
entrap the masses, and Hinduism just a particularly pernicious form
of that opium. That which was the very essence of our nationhood was
thereby denounced. The character our politics too compounded the
evil.
When examined closely enough every aggregate
disaggregates -- even the atom disaggregates, as do the components
into which it disaggregates. A society, a country is an aggregate
too: it consists of groups that have both -- features that are
common to them and features which differentiate them one from the
other...
A Gandhi focusses on that which is common to them,
where he sees distances between groups he builds bridges to span
them. On the other hand a Jinnah insists that because there are
differences, the groups just cannot live together, and he bases his
politics on this premise or calculation. A Nehru tries to turn all
the groups to values and pursuits -- "our temples, the Bhakra
Nangals" -- which vault over those differences. On the other hand, a
Ramaswami Naicker, a Lohia, a VP Singh, a Mulayam Singh, a
Shahabuddin sees an opportunity in those differences: he focusses on
them, he exaggerates them, he enflames in the group he sets out to
bamboozle into following him the feeling of having been wronged, of
being in peril unless it "preserves its identity" vis-a-vis the
engulfing ocean.
In one type of politics the whole is the focus, in
the other the parts are -- to the point that the "reality", the very
existence of the whole is denied, the very notion that it exists is
denounced as a device which has been fabricated to crush the parts
one by one. Our politics since Jinnah's time, and even more so since
the passing of Panditji has been of the latter kind.
In a word, that which was the essence of our
nationhood had come to be denied and denounced already. since then
the refrain has been that the parts -- of castes, of religious and
liguistic groups, of this class and that -- alone are "real"....
For eighty years, for instance, the Marxists talked
in terms of a lofty "internationalism": classes are the only valid
category, they said, and these cut across national or
state-boundaries. But the moment the War broke out, workers
everywhere reacted entirely along reactionary "nationalist" lines --
the German proletariate most of all. "the Only Fatherland" -- the
Soviet Union -- too relied wholly on stoking natinalist passions to
save itself. Mao's fight against the Japanese, that of the
Vietnamase against the Americans, and later against
brother-communists, the Chinese -- all these were nationalist
strugglers. The name they chose for them were told the tale: they
were Wars of National Liberation. The theory was "internationalist",
the practice was nationalist. At home here the chasm was even
greater: while the resolutions were lofitly "internationalist", in
practice the politics of the Marxists was dependent on fanning the
sectional demands of "sub-national" groups and caste-groups. Their
espousal of the Muslim League's demand for Pakistan was typical:
their calculation was that this would endear them to Muslim youth,
but they dressed it up in "theses" of Stalin! The Muslims are a
separate nation they concluded -- on the basis of an article written
by Stalin in 1912! -- and so they must have their separate country.
But on Stalin's authority, "A nation is a historically evolved
stable community of language, territory, economic life and
psychological make-up manifested in a community of culture." The
Bengali Muslims and Punjabi Muslims, to take just two groups which
were to be yoked to form Pakistan, had not even one of the four
factors in common -- neither language, nor territory, nor economic
life, nor "psychological make-up". What they had in common -- and
that too, as was to be soon evident, only in a notional sense -- was
religion. But that the Guru, Stalin, had not included among his
criteria. Yet the demand for Pakistan was espoused and everyone
opposing it was denounced as reactionary communalist wanting to
establish Hindu-hegemony. The same hypocrisy continues to this day
-- their "internationalism", for instance, keeps these progressives
from taking up the cause of the one people who qualify as a nation
by their oracle's definition, the people of Tibet; while their
calculations goad them to fan the demands of "sub-national" and
caste groups in India. As this hypocrisy continues, so does the
vehemence.
The case of the liberals is no different. They
denounce Hinduism in public but consult astrologers in private and
get paaths and havans done in closets. They glorify the "masses" but
denounce the sentiment of the masses for Rama. They denounce our
tradition, donning modernism, but hail every politician with a
casteist plank. They proclaim, "India is not one nation," and give
as proof the Muslim's different perceptions of our past. And
simultaneously proclaim, "Muslims are an integral part of India,
they are as loyal to India as anyone else," and give as proof the
performance of Muslim soldiers in wars against Pakistan. Every
effort to remind us of our commonalities, they denounce as a design
to swallow up the minorities. And then the absence of a fervour for
those common elements they proclaim as the proof of our not being
one nation!
Thus, out-doing what they said the last time round,
and in many cases, factors of a much more personal kind account for
their proclaiming the perverse And hypocrisy and the apprehension
that if they allow the discussion to proceed they will be caught out
are what account for their
vehemence.