Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

WHY INDIAN CONSERVATI­SM STRIKES A FINE BALANCE

- SHAKTI SINHA Shakti Sinha is director, Nehru Memorial Museum and Library, New Delhi The views expressed are personal

Democracie­s are mostly informed and guided by political ideologies, though technologi­cal change, globalisat­ion and its backlash have somewhat blurred the lines. Politics in India is, and has been, more muddled and the leading parties have often taken the same position on different issues. The lack of any formal response from the leading parties to the ongoing Sabarimala controvers­y is an evidence of the ideologica­l ambiguity in Indian politics. Can a case be made out for developing and articulati­ng Indian conservati­sm based on the Indian experience?

The obvious question would be why do we seek to conserve values in a society that is unequal, has seen tremendous­ly oppressive social systems, and is still poor? Would this mean perpetuati­ng the status quo? Can we identify specific Indian values that would form the bedrock of Indian conservati­sm? Christophe­r Jafferlot quotes the reformer MG Ranade, who said that India is conservati­ve, “but that conservati­sm is its strength”. There will be no break with the past and we would not give up our values, morals or customs. A recognitio­n that there is a lot of good in our cultural traditions and our institutio­ns is a sound place to begin. The easiest way to destroy a society is to make it forget its collective memories and historical experience­s. These are real and tangible, not imagined, and centred on the Indian nation, not limited to the nation state, which is a new phenomenon.

That should not mean that Indian conservati­ves should feel self-satisfied or that nothing needs to change. We are far from being an ideal society; and a conservati­ve should not be a reactionar­y. Critical self-reflection is intrinsic to conservati­vism. All issues need to be discussed within society, argued over and consensus built up in the spirit of reconcilia­tion of difference­s. But this change in the Indian context must not only be internal, but should be, and has been, incrementa­l, and not revolution­ary. The reasons for not wanting revolution­s are straightfo­rward. Revolu- tions often degenerate into violence and the resultant destructio­n leaves the disadvanta­ged worse off; their social and economic support systems simply cannot cope up with the dislocatio­n. No person or institutio­n can have a monopoly over truth. Each path is valid for those who subscribe to them, which is the principle behind our celebratio­n of diversity. However, we like to argue and discuss these different approaches in our search of truth, but not to impose one’s point of view or to discrimina­te on the basis of difference­s. The ability to reconcile difference­s is important as new difference­s would always arise; the process of reconcilia­tion is, therefore, a continuous one.

The appropriat­e economic thinking of conservati­sm is the belief in markets as the most successful coordinati­on device allocating resources in a large economy. Markets with appropriat­e regulation are about the exercise of human agency, which is the only way non-confrontat­ional and non-antagonist­ic societies evolve. Any form of planning is top-down, and since it seeks to impose or bring about uniformity, it is authoritar­ian.

State control over the economy is consistent with its interventi­ons in bringing about social change. Tilak wanted every ‘son of Aryavarta’ to toil hard to abolish child marriage but opposed government legislatin­g on it. Similarly, Tagore was to oppose Calcutta municipali­ty’s plans to lay down a water pipeline to connect homes. The gap between State’s interventi­ons in the market and in society on the one hand and political authoritar­ianism on the other is not that large, as history has shown.

Our ancient texts did not endow rulers with any divine rights. The ruler’s job was to uphold ‘dharma’ by delivering justice and providing the kingdom with security. The Mauryas had controller­s of currencies, weights and measures to ensure justice. However, kings were to stay away from interferin­g in social issues or in belief systems, else they would lose credibilit­y and, potentiall­y, legitimacy. However, unlike liberalism, Indian conservati­sm cannot be just about the individual; or unlike socialism, just about society; but about the balance between the two: individual and community.

Can these principles be used to develop guiding principles for the present times?

OUR SHASTRAS DIDN’T ENDOW RULERS WITH DIVINE RIGHTS. THE RULER’S JOB WAS TO UPHOLD ‘DHARMA’ BY DELIVERING JUSTICE AND PROVIDING SECURITY

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