Jawaharlal Nehru and his troubled legacy
Jawaharlal Nehru’s contribution
would have had a much longer life had not members of his family systematically
tarnished it. From breaking the Congress organization in 1969, to the
declaration of Emergency, to the initiation of caste wars, to the encouragement
of Sikh militancy, to the decision on Shah Bano, to the opening of the Babri
Masjid, and the list goes on, it was Nehru’s bloodline that most effectively
downgraded his memory. Experts and commentators connived in this for they were
blindsided by the family connection and failed to see the break that was being
repeatedly wrought on Nehru’s memory first by his daughter, then his son and
then his daughter-in-law and great grandson. So when the time came, and come it
would, the haters and baiters of the first prime minister easily positioned his
memory in the short hairs of their blunderbusses and shot it down. As it is,
Nehru tripped himself up on a number of policies he had staked his reputation
on. In times of economic crisis or border threats—as from China—he sidestepped
non-alignment and turned to America first. Or, when it came to socialism, he
made it known that he would never stand for the Soviet model and preferred the
mixed economy instead. That this position was supported by India’s fledgling entrepreneurs
of the time only made Nehru’s claim to be a socialist”’ somewhat contrived.
Even if socialism were to be interpreted as “welfare statism”, he did precious
little on issues like universal health and education. Nehru, however, played a
sterling role in keeping India together in its most critical years after
Independence. He was not alone in this, but without his whole hearted support
to the making of the Indian Constitution, we would have been a poorer Republic.
He weighed in heavily in favour of anti-untouchability, minority rights, and
the abolition of feudal privileges which, together, make our Constitution so
outstanding. India was a young Republic in 1950, but it looked, talked and
walked like a seasoned democratic nation-state. True, he was not alone in this,
but as Prime Minister, it was Nehru, more than anybody else, who fleshed out
these most singular aspects of our Constitution. It would have been the easiest
thing to renege on them given the tensions and uncertainties India faced in the
early post-Independence years, but Nehru remained firm. What made Nehru stand
out was his insistence on the principle of fraternity. Unfortunately, it is not
difficult to undermine him on this score as fraternity is fashioned on
intangibles; it is not made of brick and mortar, nor can it be measured
monetarily. Yet, without this all important attribute, neither liberty nor
equality makes much sense—they actually ring hollow. Nehru’s contribution to
fraternity came through in his insistence on secularism which went all the way
from anti-casteism to anti religious sectarianism. He made no compromises on
any of these but, unfortunately for him, these can easily be shafted in the
name of political expediency. And this is exactly what his daughter, grandson
and the succeeding generation did. Secularism has been the single greatest
casualty in the five decades of Congress rule after Nehru. It is for this
reason that ‘secularism’ today has become the butt of ridicule, and even half
literates have a field day in mocking it. Nehru’s industrialization programme
required a long gestation period which people, with a limited time horizon,
found difficult to accept. Further, for the mixed economy to succeed, state
enterprises had to be super efficient in infrastructure creation. Without
laying out this groundwork it would be difficult for the other half of the
mixed economy to come of age. This was the true meaning of self-reliance as
Nehru saw it and all autarkic versions of it put out by his enemies, and some
admirers too, are contrary to this vision. None of this could be accomplished
overnight by token gestures and oratorical flourishes; they all required
careful calculation, and hard core research and development. Mistakes were
made, plans recalibrated, Constitutional impasses overcome and before any of
these could be firmed up, Nehru was goes
COMMENT:- In times of economic crisis or border threats—as from China—he sidestepped
non-alignment and turned to America first. Or, when it came to socialism, he
made it known that he would never stand for the Soviet model and preferred the
mixed economy instead. That this position was supported by India’s fledgling entrepreneurs
of the time only made Nehru’s claim to be a socialist”’ somewhat contrived.
Even if socialism were to be interpreted as “welfare statism”, he did precious
little on issues like universal health and education. Nehru, however, played a
sterling role in keeping India together in its most critical years after
Independence.
Rahul kumar Gupta
PGDM,3rd SEM
Source:-MINT
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