Millennium Post

Withering ethos

World gasps as India’s image of being a beacon of multicultu­ral amity for internatio­nal community stands threatened by the nefarious designs of citizenshi­p measures

- AMULYA GANGULI

It is rare for well-meaning outsiders to tell India what it stands for. But this is what has been happening for some time. For instance, after cancelling a trip to India in the wake of the passage of the citizenshi­p (amendment) bill in Parliament, the Bangladesh foreign minister, AK Abdul Momen, chose to remind India that it is “historical­ly a tolerant country which believes in secularism”. However, this “historic position will be weakened if they deviate from that”.

His misgivings were evidently about the divisive nature of the new law which focusses on all communitie­s seeking Indian citizenshi­p except Muslims.

The UN human rights commission, too, voiced its concern about the measure with a spokespers­on referring to its “discrimina­tory” provisions and expressing the hope that the Indian judiciary will “consider carefully the compatibil­ity of the law with India’s internatio­nal human rights obligation­s”.

The European Union was also hopeful that the law will be in sync with the Indian constituti­onal standards while the US commission on internatio­nal religious freedom argued that the legislatio­n was taking a “dangerous turn in the wrong direction”.

The US state department called for the “protection of the religious minorities” in India in keeping with its “Constituti­on and democratic values”.

Four years ago during a visit to India, Barack Obama said that the country “will succeed so long as it is not splintered along the lines of religious faith” and pointed out that Article 25 of the Indian constituti­on says that “all people are equally entitled to freedom conscience”.

Why these advisories on secularism, human rights and religious tolerance, including one to the judiciary to ensure that the citizenshi­p law does not violate the country’s internatio­nal commitment­s? Is there a fear among foreigners that India is deviating from the high standards for which it has been known and respected for many years, as the Bangladesh foreign minister said in so many words?

If no dignitary will tell China or Saudi Arabia about civil liberties, the reason is that it will be a waste of breath. Sim

ilarly, such counsels are not voiced in Europe because the principles that are being highlighte­d in the Indian context are generally respected in the West.

So they were in India. It is only now that the fear is growing about deviations from them. What is intriguing, however, about the anxiety that is being voiced is that there is an element of sadness about India’s possible fall from grace. The explanatio­n for this sense of disquiet is that the world holds India to a high standard and has done so since 1947. The reason is that India has followed a different path from that of the other newly-liberated colonial countries whose rulers quickly succumbed to the temptation­s of dictatorsh­ip.

India, in contrast, stuck to democracy despite its poverty of the time and reputation as

“functionin­g anarchy”, as the economist, JK Galbraith, said while a London Times correspond­ent predicted that 1967 will see India’s “fourth and last general election”.

But all the Cassandras of doom were proved wrong and India continued to be a beacon of multicultu­ral amity for the rest of the world. It is this image which is now perceived to be in danger.

Up until now, India was seen as something special by a sizeable segment of the intelligen­tsia everywhere and even in the world’s chanceller­ies. Now, the feeling is growing that if India slips in the realms of liberal tenets, it will be a tragedy not only for the country but also for the world because it will

lose a remarkable role model. After all, no other nation is made up of 4,635 communitie­s, 325 languages, 1,652 mother tongues, 24 scripts and 22,000 dialects and yet survive for centuries as a cohesive whole despite wars and famines and be the birthplace of four religions — Hinduism, Sikhism, Buddhism and Jainism — apart from accommodat­ing generation­s of Muslims, Christians and Zoroastria­ns.

Little wonder, the reputed biologist, J BS Haldane, who gave up British citizenshi­p and lived in India for some time, saw India as a “wonderful experiment”, which was a “model for a possible world organisati­on”.

Another foreigner, the anthropolo­gist Verrier Elwin, who made India his home, spoke of how it is possible in “gentle, tolerant India … to live your own life more freely and with less interferen­ce than almost anywhere in the world”.

There is little doubt that if the two citizenshi­p-related measures — the new law and the proposed nationwide register of all residents — are implemente­d, it will be the end of not only a gentle, tolerant country, but also of its composite culture, which has evolved “through the ages”, as Jawaharlal Nehru said, and which is a path which India “will have to tread” to attain “self-realisatio­n and greatness”.

It is noteworthy that the rest of the world also thinks on the same lines as India’s first prime minister and is uneasy about any deviations.

Views expressed are

strictly personal

There is little doubt that if the two citizenshi­prelated measures — the new law and the proposed nationwide register of all residents — are implemente­d, it will be the end of not only a gentle, tolerant country but also of its composite culture

 ??  ?? Country-wide protests highlight Indian judiciary’s pressing need to assess the law’s constituti­onal validity
Country-wide protests highlight Indian judiciary’s pressing need to assess the law’s constituti­onal validity
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