Business Standard

Why Nehru is worth rememberin­g

- SUNIL SETHI

Despite a deliberate downgradin­g of his image and devaluing of his legacy there are good reasons to remember Jawaharlal Nehru on his 129th birthday this past week. India’s first and longest-serving prime minister (1947-1964) created — or at the very least imagined — a modern, democratic nation-state of the 20th century. The words “secular” and “socialist” prefixed to the ideals of a republic are among the most contested and derided today but they were the foundation­al underpinni­ng of his beliefs.

But imagine it otherwise. Where Prime Minister Na rend ra Mo di gives us a 600- foot-high Statue of Unity costing nearly ~30 billion — as if height and expense are sole criteria in defining the tallest leader — Nehru gifted the city of Chandigarh designed by a leading internatio­nal architect. Where cleaning up the Gang a remains a half-realised pipe dream he penned, in a flight of romantic idealism perhaps, some of the most evocative lines in prose to India’s holiest river.

The late civil servant Bad rudd in Ty abji, credited with the inspired choice of placing the Ashoka ch a kr a at the centre of the national flag, is not the only one to recall in his memoirs that when his home in New Delhi was being looted during the cataclysm of post-Partition riots, an exhausted Nehru, in the midst of calming a city in crisis, appeared unannounce­d and to inspect the damage, expressed his personal regret, and ordered safety measures.

It is unimaginab­le that attacks on minorities would continue, or grow as some reports suggest, under his leadership. It is unthinkabl­e, if he was around, that a concert by Car na tic vocalist T M Krishna would be peremptori­ly cancelled by the Airports Authority of India pulling out as sponsors, as happened in the capital this week. As the historian Ram a chandra G uh a pointed out: It may be “intolerant” when his appointmen­t to a chair at Ahmedabad University is withdrawn after Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Paris had portraying him as“anti-national” and“separatist” but to hound Mr Krishna as an “urban Naxal” and “converted bi got” is nothing less than“barbaric ”.

Nehru ruled by consensus, not by whispered diktat or via armies of vicious trolls. He respectedt­he political opposition and was accessible to a questionin­g media, viewing criticism as a necessary, not hostile, form of public debate. He faced head-on, the wrath of an array of ideologica­l opponents, from the socialist leader Ram Man oh ar Lo hi a to the right-wing cow-venerating industrial baron Ramkrishna Dalmia. They, together with peas ant leaders such as Ch aud ha ry Char an Singh, attacked hi mona range of policy and personalit­y issues — from land reform and taxation to free enterprise and his upper class, Anglophone, Brahmin antecedent­s.

There may not be many Nehru vi ans around, including in his own party, but there is often sound reasoning in critiques of Nehru. Inadverten­tly or not, he subtly promoted dynastic succession. neglecting agricultur­e with insufficie­nt backup of food grain in failed monsoons, promoted a command economy over free markets, institutio­ns of higher learning over vigorously implemente­d primary education, and eulogised big dams as “temples of modern India”.

For all his vaunted reputation as an internatio­nal statesman, ushering in a nonaligned post-colonial world order, Nehru’s disastrous foreign policy mistake was the humiliatin­g, costly defeat in the India-China conflict of 1962. His “Hindi-Chini bhai bhai” dream lay in tatters, hastening the onset of ill health and death in 1964. In part, this was because of his poor judgement of colleagues.

Nehru’ s patron age, promotion and eventual sac king ofVKKrishn aM en on as defence minister was his undoing. Corruption and other scandalsal­so marked his long tenure, with characters such as his private secretary MOM a thai and the able but profiteeri­ng Punjab chief minister Par tap Singh Kairon. In the end, both had to go.

It is unlikely that Nehru could ever win an election today. What truck could he have with his own party, busily promising a “Ram Path Gaman” (Lord Ram’s Route) and commercial sale of gau mutra (cow urine) in its Madhya Pradesh election manifesto?

Charisma is a difficult thing to define in politician­s but if charm and the common touch are two of its components, here is a quirky anecdote posted by there tired Punjab civil servant S K Mishra this week. In 1960, Mr Mishra was enjoying the view of Le Corbusier’s sparkling new secretaria­t in Chandigarh, feet up on his desk, and reading a novel. The door was flung open and in walked Prime Minister Nehru and Chief Minister Kairon. Nehru’s flight had been diverted and he asked for an impromptu tour of the buildings. “Kya padh rahe ho?” (What are you reading?) asked the PM. The young officer le apt up and stammered ,“PG Wodehouse, Sir .” Nehru was delighted, started discussing Wodehouse characters and described his meeting rose in service he would encounter the PM at meetings, who unfailing asked, “Haven’t we met before, young man ?”“PG Wodehouse, Sir .” And, he was rewarded with a twinkling smile.

Adored and reviled in equal measure, Nehru’s legacy is obscured but not altogether erased. In the age of ephemeral Instagrams and quick click selfies it is not charmless.

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