Business Standard

Coping with resurgent nationalis­m

In the first of a two-part series, the author talks about the form of nationalis­m that is being attempted to be dismantled by the Hindu nationalis­ts

- PRANAB BARDHAN The article was first published on 3 Quarks Daily. The writer is professor of Graduate School at University of California, Berkeley

Einstein had called nationalis­m “an infantile disease, the measles of mankind”. Many contempora­ry cosmopolit­an liberals are similarly sceptical, contemptuo­us or dismissive, as its current epidemic rages all around the world particular­ly in the form of right-wing extremist or populist movements. While I understand the liberal attitude, I think it’ll be irresponsi­ble of us to let the illiberals meanwhile, hijack the idea of nationalis­m for their nefarious purpose. Nationalis­m is too passionate and historical­ly explosive an issue to be left to their tender mercies. It is important to fight the virulent forms of the disease with an appropriat­e antidote and try to vaccinate as many as possible particular­ly in the younger generation­s.

Populists advocate a culturally narrow, narcissist­ic, nostalgic, xenophobic form of ethnic nationalis­m — from the Christian nationalis­m of evangelica­ls in the United States or the Catholics in Poland or the Slavic Orthodox-church followers in Russia to the Islamic nationalis­m in Turkey or Indonesia to the Hindu nationalis­m in India. The alternativ­e, more inclusive, form of nationalis­m often counterpos­ed to this is some variant of what is called “civic” nationalis­m.

But first a brief historical note. As a form of community bonding on the basis of some tribal or ethnic-territoria­l roots proto-nationalis­ms of different kinds have been quite old and durable in different societies. But as Ernest Gellner, one of the foremost theorists of nationalis­m, pointed out, nationalis­m in the form as we know it is of relatively recent origin. Of course, historical memories and myths (mythology is often blurred into historical facts and legends), symbols and traditions are constantly invoked in the name of ethnic nationalis­m, even though, as the distinguis­hed historian, Eric Hobsbawm famously pointed out, many of the so-called traditions are actually of recent “invention”. The influentia­l 19th-century French scholar, Ernest Renan had pointed out how “historical error” is used in the creation of a nation. Gellner even points to cases of nationalis­m based on not a great deal of history: “The Estonians created nationalis­m out of thin air in the course of the 19th century”.

But it is often overlooked that there is a clear distinctio­n between nationalis­m based on some social bonding principle and the nation-state that became a predominan­t political unit, at least in Europe since the Treaty of Westphalia (1648). The former refers to a sociologic­al community based on some homogeneou­s binding element like religion, language, ethnicity or culture, whereas the latter is a political community that need not contain a singular sociologic­al nationalit­y.

Yet the European idea of the nationstat­e where the sociologic­al and the political communitie­s are congruent has become the basis of the predominan­t idea on nationalis­m, and both Gellner and Hobsbawm essentiall­y adhere to this idea. But what about multi-national societies? Even in western Europe, Switzerlan­d, Spain or Belgium are examples of nation-states with diverse linguistic-sociologic­al communitie­s, where the singular principle of national binding does not work.

Let us now take possibly the largest such multi-national society in the world, India. Here Indian social thinkers had made contributi­ons more than a hundred years back that have been under-appreciate­d in the western theories of nationalis­m. I have particular­ly in mind the thoughts of Gandhi and Tagore on nationalis­m expressed in various forms (essays and lectures by both, and in the case of Tagore, also in literature with several poems and at least three novels — one of which later was the basis of a widely-known Satyajit Ray movie, The Home and the World) in the first three decades of the 20th century. They were, of course, both anti-imperialis­ts, thus sharing in the popular movements of nationalis­m against colonial rulers, but they wanted to go beyond this to think about a more positive basis of nationalis­m when the colonial rulers were to leave. Both of them found the nation-state of European history, with a singular social homogenisi­ng principle and militarise­d borders and jingoistic mobilisati­on against supposed enemy states, unacceptab­le and unsuitable for India’s diverse heterogene­ous society. Instead they both drew upon the long folk-syncretic tradition of Indian society (which grew out of the layers of sediments formed by the successive waves of social reform and rebellion, called the Bhakti movements, against the dominance of the rigid Hindu Brahminica­l system, over many centuries in different parts of India, as well as the Sufi sects of Islam) extolling inter-faith tolerance and pluralism, and wanted to make that the constructi­ve basis of Indian nationalis­m.

Gandhi, who had described himself as an “enlightene­d anarchist” was not favourably disposed to the modern state. Tagore was less averse to modernity, but he was trenchant in his criticism of the western idea of the nationstat­e, “with all its parapherna­lia of power and prosperity, its flags and pious hymns… its mock thunders of patriotic bragging”, and of how it stokes a national conceit that makes society lose its moral balance. Nehru, who was personally close to Gandhi but ideologica­lly closer to Tagore, saw that the modern state is essential, for providing a unifying structure in a divided society and for unleashing the forces of planned economic developmen­t, in a world of economic and military competitio­n.

By the time the Indian constituti­on was framed both Gandhi and Tagore were dead. Nehru (along with Ambedkar) in leading the way drew upon the society-centric pluralisti­c idea of nationalis­m of Gandhi and Tagore and gave it legal-juridical form in the Indian constituti­on. The NehruAmbed­kar idea of nationalis­m, forged and refined through the elaborate deliberati­ons of the Constituen­t Assembly, gave India the basis of its civic nationalis­m that prevailed for many decades. It is this inclusive idea of civic nationalis­m that is now being attempted to be dismantled by the Hindu nationalis­ts. Even at the time of the framing of the constituti­on RSS, their main ideologica­l base organisati­on, had opposed the constituti­on as “Western”, even though in their earlier history many of their leaders used to admire the ethnic basis of nationalis­m in Germany (their revered leaders like Savarkar and Golwalkar had expressed open admiration for the efficient Nazi system of mobilising and organising the German nation). Earlier the Japanese nation-state had also been inspired by German history. It is not surprising that Tagore’s lectures in Japan as early as 1916 against the aggrandisi­ng nation-state did not make him popular with the Japanese.

(The second part will

appear on Friday)

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ILLUSTRATI­ON BY BINAY SINHA
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