Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Sleeping elephant is the toast of the world

EARNING RESPECT Disproving doomsayers, the Indian economy has risen from the doldrums to acquire the tag of being the fastest growing in the world

- CHANDAN MITRA (The author is editor of The Pioneer and has been twotime Rajya Sabha MP from the BJP)

As a child ina Bengali-medium muffosil school in the early 1960s, we would sing an inspiratio­nal number at the morning assembly, which went thus: Bolo bolo bolo shobey/ Shata bina benu robey/ Bharat abarJagat-sabhar/ Sreshtha aasan lobey (Chant one, chant all, to the tune of this melody, India shall again ascend the topmost seat in the comity of nations)

We chanted this number penned by nationalis­t poet Atul Prasad Sen in the 1930s with abundant faith but without robust conviction. Those were days in the immediate aftermath of our military drubbing at the hands of our northern neighbour. The euphoria of the first flush of Independen­ce, Five-year Plans and belief in India’s destiny was wobbling. Even Jawaharlal Nehru’s charisma was ebbing. His death in 1963 was followed by political uncertaint­y, the Bihar drought, mass agitations led by Communists and another war, this time with Pakistan. The nation’s self-confidence was at a low. India was smarting under the humiliatio­n of leading a ship-to-mouth existence as ration shops would be

IN PARTNERSHI­P WITH empty till wheat-laden

American ships docked in Bombay to disgorge grain under the PL-480 scheme.

But 1971 and India’s success in liberating Bangladesh had an electrifyi­ng, albeit temporary, effect on national morale, so did the first (1974) Pokhran “implosion”. Still India was abysmally poor, its Soviet-inspired model had gone awry and the country was wracked by one internal strife after another, culminatin­g in the rise of virulent terrorism in Punjab beginning 1980. Nobody would have believed that this ramshackle country could ever raise its head, leave alone achieve distinctio­n in the world. The comparison with China, which started its modernisin­g journey only in 1949, was particular­ly galling.

Neverthele­ss, some were convinced India was a sleeping elephant; once it shrugged off its slumber and stood up, it would trample underfoot myths of its perpetual somnolence. And that is what India has finally done.

Disproving doomsayers, the Indian economy has acquired the tag of the fastest growing in the world. As a military power, its armed forces are among the biggest and finest in the world equipped with nuclear weapons, long-range missiles and state-of-the-art weaponry. But even more importantl­y, it is now a knowledge economy whose prowess in Informatio­n Technology is the envy of the world. The capabiliti­es of its highly intelligen­t corps of computer engineers, doctors and pharmaceut­ical manufactur­ers are today the toast of the world. The managerial skills of its talented business profession­als have earned the respect of entreprene­urs and corporates everywhere.

Arguably, India’s fairy-tale rise from the lowest to the top ranks of global powers is not without warts and blemishes. To feature in the 100th position in the World Hunger Index is a matter of shame, while its unflatteri­ng record of corruption in high places makes us cut a sorry figure. Civil strife and secessioni­st violence continue to plague India, and blaming a “failed state” like Pakistan for its ills does no credit to an emerging power. Also, its infrastruc­ture falls far short of what its intermatio­nal status would demand.

But it is important to acknowledg­e that India has achieved success in various fields not despite democracy but because of it. Among post-colonial countries, it is probably the only major nation which is a functionin­g democracy with a vibrant media, an independen­t judiciary and abundant cultural plurality. These qualities have fostered India’s rise as a soft power with its thriving cultural heritage bolstered by a highly innovative industry that effortless­ly belts out products of popular culture, whose influence stretches from the corners of South-East Asia to the whole of Africa and beyond.

At the core of India’s strength, and thus the driving force of its irresistib­le rise through the ranks of countries, is its millennia-old family system, and the heritage and values it bequeathes upon us.

With the energy generated by the vision of a dynamic Prime Minister like Narendra Modi, who has a staunch belief in India’s destiny and is working to make India an equitable society -- in which hunger, poverty and corruption will become forgotten words – we can be certain that the country’s rise is unstoppabl­e. It is indeed poised to take its seat in the topmost ranks of the comity of nations, just as we used to pray in our school more than 50 years ago.

 ?? PTI ?? India is showing the way to the rest of the world with its scientific achievemen­ts.
PTI India is showing the way to the rest of the world with its scientific achievemen­ts.
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