Deccan Chronicle

Memories of a gentler era

-

The touching manner in which George Herbert Walker Bush, America’s 41st President, is being bid farewell as politician­s set aside difference­s to honour him is a wistful reminder of an era that has passed, where the world’s most powerful individual could be gentle and graceful too. Over 25 years have passed since he unsuccessf­ully sought re-election, and a decade since his son George W’s second term, but he’s still remembered with affection. It symbolises how the world has changed since Bush Senior co-opted the major powers to build a remarkable internatio­nal coalition to free Kuwait from Saddam Hussein. At a time when a streak of authoritar­ianism has afflicted major power centres, his tenure seems charmingly old world, yet it was a time of great challenges as the world changed.

Bush’s life of service to his country and humanity — as a Navy combat pilot, CIA director, UN ambassador, Ronald Reagan’s vice-president and President in 1989-93; and in charity and tsunami relief work — is what is being acknowledg­ed now, with a vengeance. The way he struck up an enduring friendship with his most bitter political opponent who dethroned him, Bill Clinton, offers an example of true greatness in bipartisan­ship, and has a fairytale ring at these times. He was born to privilege but showed willingnes­s to get down and dirty in his missions. He proved an adroit world leader as the Soviet Union broke up and the Cold War ended, displaying sensitivit­y towards Russia too. As America’s economy tanked and the rich despised his tax increases, Bush Senior fell and yet lived a full life to have triggered such a wave of nostalgia in this Trumpian era.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India