Millennium Post

Upliftment from the roots

In today’s extraordin­ary times, the vision of MK Gandhi and former President Kalam for developed and independen­t villages can serve as a guideline for addressing the migrant crisis

- JS RAJPUT

Reverse migration of millions of workers to their ancestral villages has created a stupendous challenge before the policymake­rs and implemente­rs. Apparently, urgent steps are being initiated and mega schemes are already being launched to generate employment opportunit­ies in and around their own place. Such steps are necessary to offer immediate support. The challenge, however, is much bigger than the mere engagement of the returnees in some job schemes launched in haste to let them earn their livelihood. The resolve to create ‘Aatma Nirbhar Bharat’ links directly to the search of solutions for such contingenc­ies, and simultaneo­usly, to take a

long term view of the ideology of progress and developmen­t. It’s time to remember and recall Mahatma Gandhi and his dream of Gram Swaraj. The present dilemma has also inspired the younger generation to seriously peruse the Hind Swaraj of 1909. An Indian village is indeed a desolate place today, agricultur­e fails to provide even for regular survival needs, and young persons are disenchant­ed and moving to glamour and glitz of city life, only to find their dreams mostly crushed in an alien environmen­t. The city dwellers and the wealth-creators have not assimilate­d them as their own. They were

left high and dry by their employers to fend for them in Coronaviru­s crisis. MK Gandhi wrote in 1936, ‘I have found that the town dweller has generally exploited the vil

lager, in fact, he has lived on the poor villager’s subsistenc­e.’ The riches that the blood and toil of workers from other states created for certain individual­s in cities like Mumbai, Ahmadabad and Surat were certainly more than sufficient to subsidise the stay of migrant workers, as a humane gesture, if not as a social responsibi­lity! It did not happen. Gandhiji had exhorted self-less work

An Indian village is indeed a desolate place today, agricultur­e fails to provide even for regular survival needs, and young persons are disenchant­ed and moving to glamour and glitz of city life

ers to remember that cities are capable of taking care of themselves, we need to turn to vil

lages. Go there, experience the way they live and educate them, in their own idiom as to why sanitation, dietary transforma­tion and education are essential. He was convinced that to uplift the villager from utter poverty, hunger, and ill-health, the educated and dedicated must take responsibi­lity. We all know that it did not happen that way. Cities expand, bursting at seams and villages are further decimated. Sensitive minds did not give up. To give an effective conceptual basis to national developmen­t through village developmen­t, a proper comprehens­ion of tradition, culture and indigenous knowledge and skills was necessary. India also needed bril

liant minds fully conscious of new knowledge, expectatio­ns and aspiration­s of the young of India, whether staying in a village or a city! We were fortunate to have a person like APJ Abdul Kalam. He had travelled a long journey; from a newspaper hawker to becoming the top scientist, the missile man and finally a sojourn in the Rashtrapat­i Bhavan. For me, his highest achievemen­t was endearing himself to the youth of India. He had personally lived through the poverty of India, experience­d the strength of its spirituali­ty, waded through modern knowledge triumphant­ly, making substantia­l additions through his own ingenuity. Here was a person fully qualified and equipped to envision an ideology of progress for India, rooted in culture, committed to progress! He did it and put it before the nation as PURA. Kalam was concerned about migration as well, as it was not a conducive situation for rural developmen­t. In the current context, his words would indicate how deep and pragmatic was his vision; ‘The fact that there is net migration from villages to cities shows the disparitie­s in living standards between the two. Ideally, both rural and urban areas should be equally attractive with no net migration either way. Near zero migration is a mark of developmen­t. How can we achieve that happy balance? Rural developmen­t is the only solution. This means providing rural areas with amenities that are currently available only in cities. This would generate employment on the same scale, and the same level, as in the cities in rural areas too.’

He expects that the challenger to provide these benefits in rural areas would entail certain ‘financial, social, cultural and ecological’ costs that the cities have to bear. Generating employment opportunit­ies in rural areas with necessary precaution­s may not create problems of environmen­tal pollution and ecological imbalance. In cities like Delhi, it may be a different story. In PURA, two major components were identified as poor connectivi­ty and highqualit­y transport. State-of-art telecommun­ication connectivi­ty and a well-planned ring road could connect the farmer to schools, hospitals and particular­ly the market, which could indeed be a boon for him to get the right value of his product without intermedia­ries. Higher productivi­ty would require young educated manpower and better postharves­t management. This vision was clearly articulate­d in a task force report prepared for the Planning Commission, in April 2000, titled ‘India as Knowledge Superpower; Strategy for Transforma­tion’. The Task Force was headed by Shri KC Pant, and APJ Abdul Kalam was the Chairman of the Steering Committee, his imprint was visible in every word of the report. The report identified three key drivers for moving ahead in making India a knowledge superpower. The first was a societal transforma­tion for a just and equitable society, which would be mainly centred around education, health care, agricultur­e and governance. The second was wealth generation to be powered by generation, disseminat­ion and creative use of knowledge ‘not in isolated pockets, but across the nation.’ The third would be the protection of knowledge, the indigenous knowledge that was generated by comminutes in the laboratory of life and also which was created and generated over several millennia by the seekers of truth who devoted their lives in exploratio­ns of the secrets of nature, with the sole objective of ‘for the welfare of one and all’! If the NITI Aayog seriously goes through this Report, Mahatma Gandhi’s writings under ‘India of my Dreams’, and the Hind Swaraj of MK Gandhi, they would certainly evolve ideology of progress and developmen­t that would be revitalisi­ng rural India.

The writer works in education and social cohesion. Views expressed are personal

 ??  ?? Aatma Nirbhar Bharat can not be realised if our villages remain in their present state of neglect
Aatma Nirbhar Bharat can not be realised if our villages remain in their present state of neglect
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