Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Reorient liberalism to its communitar­ian roots

India is well placed to lead this change since its societal ethos puts the collective over the individual

- ARGHYA SENGUPTA

Liberalism is in crisis in the world today. The wave of populist politics sweeping across continents is the most visible manifestat­ion of widespread disenchant­ment with liberal establishm­ents. The expression of this disenchant­ment is not pretty — vile abuse and name calling of liberals is routine. However, cut through the trolling and a genuine fault line in liberal thought emerges as a real reason for the crisis — the continued desertion by liberals themselves of the common good in favour of a dogmatic assertion of individual rights.

Helena Rosenblatt, in her new book, The Lost History of Liberalism, tells us that this was not always the case. Liberals, from Cicero to Dewey, understood their creed as articulati­ng a theory of the common good, promoting generosity, equality and a sense of collective belonging. They were moralists stressing on duties and rights, both of which were instrument­al in this enterprise.

It was only after the Second World War that liberalism took an individual­istic, rights-centric, American turn. The big states of Germany and Italy had produced fascism. Liberalism, “the dreaded L-word” in Ronald Reagan’s view, was held responsibl­e for making such fascism possible. Under attack from American conservati­ves, the best way of reclaiming liberalism as an antitotali­tarian philosophy entailed reorientin­g the focus away from the collective to the individual. John Locke and John Stuart Mill, with their emphasis on freedoms, became poster boys. Significan­t in such reorientat­ion were battles over right to abort, right to use contracept­ion and the right of a homosexual person to choose a partner of the same sex. Liberalism became, at its core, as Rosenblatt writes, “an individual­ist, if not selfish, philosophy”.

This new, post-war Americanis­ed liberal- ism with its marquee issues, had no intellectu­al or traditiona­l roots in India. The issues themselves were alien in an Indian context. Abortion and contracept­ion were free from doctrinair­e Catholic prejudice. Homosexual­ity was recognised, before the onset of Victorian morality, as ordinary. Yet, the philosophy of individual rights that underpinne­d such issues in America wormed its way into independen­t India through its Englishspe­aking intelligen­tsia, and persists in large sections of the Indian liberal establishm­ent today. Take the flashpoint in Sabarimala. Upholding an individual’s right to pray in a religious place of her choice is neither sanctioned by the Constituti­on nor the rulebook of most religious institutio­ns. Such a view fails to grapple with autonomy for communitie­s. It is also cavalier about the need for societal harmony.

Again, take the criticism of Aadhaar based on the right to privacy. While the values privacy protects — autonomy, liberty and dignity — are undoubtedl­y fundamenta­l for the common good, the single-minded incantatio­n of privacy overlooks the practical need for hassle-free living. Individual­s want privacy, but they also want to prevent pilferage of their ration entitlemen­ts, seamless services and be spared from bribing middlemen. Aadhaar, as the apex court recognised, makes all these more possible than other existing methods of identifica­tion.

Factoring in all these voices from the ground ought to have been core to any authentic understand­ing of liberalism. But borrowing a foreign understand­ing appears to have won the day. This might be an observatio­n that applies as much to the liberal establishm­ent today as it does to the one that conceptual­ised the Constituti­on of India. After all, the Constituti­on is a smart mixand-match of global best practices force-fitted into perceived Indian realities.

It was around the time of the drafting of the Indian Constituti­on that liberalism took this American turn. The pressures that forced this turn were not solely external, but also an internal recognitio­n that liberalism was, in Hannah Arendt’s words, the “spawn from hell” that had given rise to Nazism. The turn has now run its course. Liberalism is yet again a spawn from hell, this time, unwittingl­y giving rise to destructiv­e populism and an uncivil public sphere.

This provides an ideal juncture to reorient liberalism to its communitar­ian roots. India, with a societal ethos that stresses duties over rights, the collective over the individual, and with a deep understand­ing of the self that transcends materialit­y, would be well placed to lead this reorientat­ion. understand love as we, the humans do. And if nature has given us a human form, let us respect its most precious gift and revel in its soulful, intoxicati­ng music.

Sacrificin­g love at the altar of fake notions and deep rooted, meaningles­s conditioni­ng is nothing short of a sin. Let us become the joyous recipients of love and thank Him for His limitless Grace!

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