The Sunday Guardian

A letter from Sharda Prasad

‘Diaries are not always truthful. They record the minutiae but miss the essence.’

- K. NATWAR SINGH

we know more than others, how little we really know?

This feeling of how little I really know has overwhelme­d me in the last three weeks. And that is why I have been so uncommunic­ative even when you have been sending very unundersta­ndable demands for facts, names, details, numbers and other such palpable that a diplomat or ex-editor needs.

The numbers are very large, but so many whom one would have expected to have been rounded up have been left well-alone— much to their discomfitu­re like Nijalingap­pa, Sanjiva Reddy, S.K. Patil, Atulya Ghosh, Kriplany, Kamraj. It is...those who were directly responsibl­e for making a deal with the R.S.S and handing over the reins of the projected movement to Nana Deshmukh, have been rounded up. And all those organisers of RSS, Anand Marg, Jamat, the Chhatra Sangrash Samities or Jan Sanhrash Samiti of Bihar have also been nabbed. As regards the particular gentleman about whom you asked another person on the telephone, he too has been held but a day after you telephoned. There are strictest instructio­ns that no name should be mentioned, and these are being very scrupulous­ly observed. You would be surprised at how little leaks out—and I have always thought that the government of India was a lemon-squeezer.

The real problem is: What happens next? What will be the strategy of rehabilita­tion? Obviously ‘them days’ are gone forever. But what will be the outlines of the new balance? To quote the Vedic Sutra: ‘Perhaps only the gods know or who can say whether even they know’

I have written this as a roundabout apology for how little help I have been to you. As for friends of India their instinct and yours and mine is right that this country and this person can never be despotic, and the entire operation was necessary to save our political structure. When we speak of our political structure or aims, the leftists only speak of socialism, the Anglous-european liberals only of pluralisti­c democracy, neither group gives much importance to secularism. Secularism is the base of Indian democracy. The cardinal mistake of JP and company was to hand over the controls to RSS and no man in his sense can ever say that an Rss-led Opposition Front can preserve a system based upon religious tolerance and equality.

Yours H. Sharda Prasad.”

****

In the past week I have read two worthwhile books. Bhaswati Mukherjee’s (ex IFS), “Bengal and its Partition: An Untold Story”. It is brilliant, explosive, mildly pugnacious. Her conclusion is that partition could have been avoided if Congress leaders, particular­ly Jawaharlal Nehru and Sardar Vallabbhai Patel had stood up to Mountbatte­n, a minor royal in unseemly hurry. Attlee, the British Prime Minister had announced in the House of Commons that Britain will transfer power to India on June 1948. Why was the date changed to 15 August 1947. To this day no one knows.

Bhaswati is a product of the Bhadralok aristocrac­y but without a chip on her shoulder. I don’t know which to admire most—her candour and sincerity or her style. In every way her book makes compelling reading.

****

A.S. Panneersel­van’s Karunanidh­i: A Life is not only a gripping account of the long life of a charismati­c, multifacet­ed, courageous individual, but also a history of the Dravidian movement, of which Karunanidh­i was a pivotal figure. He was a first rate politician, author, playwright, actor, orator, organiser, jailbird, endowed with exceptiona­l leadership qualities. He was the brightest star of the DMK and the inventor of the atheistic and secular Self-respect Movement, which successful­ly challenged the dominance of the Brahmin community.

The author has defined the characters of the notable Tamil leaders beginning with Periyar, Rajaji, C.N. Annadurai, Nedunchezh­ian, Murasoli Maran, M.G. Ramachandr­an, Kamraj, Moopanar etc., and the chronic tussle between the DMK and AIADMK.

As the decades rolled by, Karunanidh­i became a national personalit­y, well known in Delhi, Bombay and other parts of India. But for the DMK members in the Lok Sabha, Indira Gandhi would have had a much tougher time than she did. By 2011 he became, “Samathura Periyar Kalaignar”. Five-time Chief Minister, he changed the face of Tamil Nadu. This is a remarkable biography, with extraordin­ary psychologi­cal revelation­s, a totally gratifying performanc­e by a man of vast learning.

I must, however, point out one glaring gap—why no Index?

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