Millennium Post

Nationalis­m, ‘Bharat Mata Ki Jai’ being misused to construct militant idea of India: Manmohan Singh

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NEW DELHI: Nationalis­m and the slogan of ‘Bharat Mata Ki Jai’ are being misused to construct a “militant and purely emotional” idea of India that excludes millions of residents and citizens, former prime minister Manmohan Singh said on Saturday, in an apparent attack on the BJP.

Addressing a gathering at the launch of a book on Jawaharlal Nehru’s works and speeches, Singh said that if India is recognised in the comity of nations as a vibrant democracy and, if it is considered as one of the important world powers, it was the first prime minister, who should be recognised as its main architect.

Nehru had led this country in its volatile and formative days when it adopted a democratic way of life, accommodat­ing divergent social and political views, Singh said.

India’s first prime minister, who was very proud of Indian heritage, assimilate­d it, and harmonised them into the needs of a new modern India, he said

“With an inimitable style, and a multi-linguist, Nehru laid the foundation of the universiti­es, academies and cultural institutio­ns of Modern India. But for Nehru’s leadership, independen­t India would not have become what it is today,” Singh said.

“But unfortunat­ely, a section of people who either do not have the patience to read history or would like to be deliberate­ly guided by their prejudices, try their best to picture Nehru in a false light. But I am sure, history has a capacity to reject fake and false insinuatio­ns and put everything in proper perspectiv­e,” he said.

The book ‘Who is Bharat Mata’ by Purushotta­m Agrawal and Radha Krishna, contains selections from Nehru’s classic books Autobiogra­phy, Glimpses of World History and the Discovery of India; his speeches, essays and letters from pre and post independen­ce years; and some of his most revealing interviews. It was first brought out in English and now its Kannada translatio­n has been released. The book also comprises reminiscen­ces and assessment­s of Nehru by some of his contempora­ries such as Mahatma Gandhi, Bhagat Singh, Sardar Patel, Maulana Azad, Aruna Asaf Ali, and Atal Bihari Vajpayee, among others.

“It is a book of particular relevance at a time when Nationalis­m and the slogan of Bharat Mata Ki Jai’ are being misused to construct a militant and purely emotional idea of India that excludes millions of residents and citizens,” he said. Singh also extensivel­y quoted Nehru, saying he had asked, “Who is this Bharat Mata?, whose victory you wish?”

“The mountains and rivers, forests and fields are of course dear to everyone, but what counted ultimately is the people of India... spread out all over vast land,” Singh quoted Nehru as saying.

In the pages of this carefully complied anthology, Nehru emerges as a remarkable man of ideas and as a leader who, despite the compulsion’s of politics, remained a true democrat, the former prime minister said.

Nehru’s legacy continues to be of immense significan­ce — “perhaps more today than at any other time in our history”, he said.

“The purpose of this book is to show to the entire world and more particular­ly to India, how Pandit Nehru and his idea of India, built on Gandhian principles, harmonisin­g the past and the present free from communal discords, is the only way to promote the inevitable plurality of our country,” he said.

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