India Today

THE LOVE OF HOME

- Illustrati­on by NILANJAN DAS

GOPALKRISH­NA GANDHI l LT. GEN. D.S. HOODA SWAPAN DASGUPTA l ALOK RAI l SALMAN KHURSHID ARKOTONG LONGKUMER l RAMA BIJAPURKAR l AMISH T.M. KRISHNA l MEGHNA GULZAR l RUCHIR JOSHI PLUS PHOTO FEATURE

WHAT DOES IT REALLY MEAN? A LOVE FOR YOUR

country, your nation, your homeland? At the risk of getting all tukde-tukde about it, we can’t really talk about patriotism without splitting a few hairs. We asked a clutch of eminent citizens the question, and they all had very different answers. Or you could say they all agreed that it depends on who you are: a filmmaker or an author, a teacher or a soldier, a singer or a diplomat. And though we are all Indians, perhaps it matters where you are from too: from the North or the South, from the Capital or the periphery, from Calcutta or Allahabad—Kolkata or Prayagraj. Or Kashmir.

Several of our contributo­rs are at pains to point out that patriotism is something quite distinct from nationalis­m. Something older, subtler and perhaps more authentic. For others, the nation is the ancient, authentic source of our identity. Is there a distinctio­n between the topophilia we feel in our ‘native place’ (or the place we actually live) and the collective allegiance we share for a national abstractio­n? Or is this just a sentimenta­l continuum? Similarly, parochiali­sm, prejudice and xenophobia shadow the love of place and seem to scale up or down from the smallest social unit to a subcontine­nt.

Indian patriotism has survived all these contradict­ions and ironies—sometimes it seems that it thrives on them. Once upon a time we were exhorted to see a singular person, as the manifestat­ion of India herself. It didn’t last long. A billion patriots are unlikely to warm to a single slogan. One more reason to celebrate Independen­ce.

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