Khaleej Times

Freedom is a responsibi­lity, not just pride

- Kiran Kumbhar Kiran Kumbhar is a physician and health policy graduate

Am I proud to be an Indian? The fact is that neither I nor any other Indian can take personal credit for having been born here. After all, nationalit­y is essentiall­y accidental. Neverthele­ss, as we grew up we were instructed to feel proud to be Indians. We were also told to feel proud of India, the civilisati­on which ‘gifted’ complex mathematic­s to the world and knew plastic surgery even before the world knew plastic. But do we have any right to feel proud for what our ancestors did centuries back when we have squandered our inheritanc­e?

When I went to the United States for higher studies, I wasn’t sure what effect the crossover would have on my outlook towards India, especially since the national pride I had passively absorbed since childhood had been tempered by the maturity of my mid-20s. But I was aware that for many in the Indian diaspora, living outside India reinforces such pride. Some begin sprinkling random ‘facts’ about the ‘greatness’ of India in conversati­ons with non-Indians. Some even start looking down upon the culture and people of the nation where they were welcomed. But though I was uncertain what effect America would have on my Indianness, I knew I was eager to just talk about ‘my country’ with anyone curious.

During such conversati­ons with non-Indian students, I became aware of how national pride makes one almost blind to the deficienci­es of the nation, and makes one almost always exaggerate its strengths. For example, many Americans ask their Indian friends about ‘the caste system’, and I realised I could either give the stock ‘proud Indian’ response of ‘there is no caste in “modern” India’, or could honestly convey how caste remains a strong

When one feels responsibl­e as an Indian, one tends to be more inclusive and tolerant

social and political phenomenon in much of India despite some partly successful efforts to make it less relevant.

I feel happy to report I went with the latter option. In other words, as I let go of national pride, its place came to be filled by a sense of responsibi­lity. I realised that the accident of being born in India has conferred on me a crucial responsibi­lity, that of being an inheritor of everything the idea of India encompasse­s, and of being an honest transmitte­r of that idea. I began feeling responsibl­e, rather than proud, as an Indian. And responsibi­lity meant a willingnes­s to acknowledg­e the negative aspects of my history and culture.

The other day a friend who works abroad told me he felt sympatheti­c to demands for banning beef in India since “we Indians consider cows as gods”. I told him that there are many Muslims, Christians, adivasis and Hindus too who do not in fact believe the cow to be divine and who consume beef. I asked him why he was not including those millions of Indians in his definition of India and Indians. It is not a coincidenc­e that “proud” Indians tend to have a very narrow understand­ing of India, one that is restricted to the small part of India that they grew up seeing and feeling attached to. But when one feels responsibl­e as an Indian, one tends to be more inclusive and tolerant of the country’s multiple cultures and peoples.

Let us teach our kids to feel responsibl­e, not proud, as Indians. Let us kindle within young Indians a strong desire to work for a better present and future. — The Wire

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