Was there anyone at the outset of The Great War in 1914 – exactly a hundred years ago — who could reasonably predict that the ensuing hundred years would constitute ‘The Indian Century’?
The idea of an independent India, then under the yoke of British colonialism, may have seemed outrageous and impossible to those handful of people who worried about the impact of long years of British rule. That handful included Britons like Allan Octavian Hume, a civil servant who helped form the Indian National Congress on December 28, 1885; Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi – the Mahatma – wasn’t to take helm of the INC until 1921. When The Great War started, the agitation for a free India was scarcely on the political horizon; the goings-on in the cauldron of Europe were topic du jour, even when viewed from the distance of the Subcontinent.
The movement only gathered steam after Britain and its allies defeated the Germans. Maybe the British were distracted and disheartened despite their victory, or maybe Indians – some of whom had fought bravely in the war on the British side – felt emboldened to take up independence as a national cause in the knowledge that they would be dealing with an enfeebled Britain.
In my view, that cause defined the twentieth century. It inspired scores of territories to eventually gain independence from colonialists such as the British, French and Dutch. But unlike freedom struggles in, say, Africa, India’s revolution was entirely nonviolent, driven as it was by Gandhi’s Ahimsa philosophy. The Indian Century was one of a vast national movement to eject colonial rule, but it also marked a hundred years of ideas that defined nationhood.
Those ideas initially focused on economic development. Jawaharlal Nehru and his associates felt that in a land mired in poverty it was important to build the “commanding heights” of the economy – which meant expediting industrialisation in what was primarily an agrarian society. In his calculus, the “commanding heights” would be controlled by the state, of course. Nehru brought to the Indian scene his special ideas of economic development; these were rooted in the Fabian Socialism of the Bloomsbury Group of London. It’s not that Nehru was against private enterprise, but he believed that the state had the responsibility to drive sustainable economic growth in poor countries like India. Only the state could mobilise the necessary resources. Markets simply weren’t to be trusted.
We know now what such concentration of power did in India and other developing countries: it fostered corruption, it thickened bureaucracies, it spawned a culture of little transparency in governance, and it made government virtually unaccountable.
But that was the price that Indians paid, at least initially, for entrusting the independence of their polity to the men who had fought for it. The Indian Century dragged on. It wasn’t until the early 1990s that the stewards of the economy decided that India would be better off with some liberalisation – even if that meant loosening the grip of the bureaucracy, even if that meant diluting the Licence Raj, even if that meant letting businessmen make decent money.
In doing all this, India – the very same India that had been a beacon for territories seeking independence from the colonialists – was by no means a leader. Far from it. Other former colonial territories like Malaysia and Singapore and even some African states had long abandoned statism. They recognised the value and worth of free markets and, in doing so, they ensured that their economic growth gathered velocity.
Because of India’s sheer demographic size – some 1.2 billion people, and counting – and the bigness of its domestic market, economic liberalisation would prove to be salutary. The country’s middle class was growing, which meant that consumerism was on the rise. The Indian Century would finally liberate everyday Indians from the shackles of socialism.
Many of the shibboleths of contemporary economics did not exist when The Great War started a hundred years ago in 1914. Public policy was the prerogative of the rulers, who were expected to possess some sort of divine powers to determine what was best for their people. But The Indian Century empowered the people themselves – on the predicate that the governed knew best how they should be governed. That meant self-rule, perhaps the single richest gift that India has given in the last one hundred years to the world of the downtrodden
(Pranay Gupte is a veteran foreign correspondent, and author or editor of 14 books. His latest, Healer: Dr Prathap Chandra Reddy and the Transformation of India, has just been published by Penguin)
Mahatma Gandhi's ideals and principles have never ceased to inspire the world. "Be the change that you want to see in the world,” he said and lived by those words. Now, on his birth anniversary, let's go beyond what the world knows about him. When the whole of India celebrated Independence on August 15, 1947, Mahatma Gandhi spent the day fasting in Kolkata, as he was not happy with the partition. Gandhi was once unemployed. When he returned to India from London after completing a law course in 1891, he didn't find a suitable job as a lawyer. Two years later, he went to South Africa, where he got a job on contract by an Indian company. Gandhi was a man of peace, but he never won the Nobel Peace Prize. Despite his nominations in 1937, 1938, 1939 and 1947, he never got it. He was also nominated in 1948, the year he was assassinated by Nathuram Godse. The Nobel committee, which disagreed on awarding him posthumously, didn't bestow it to anyone that year saying there was no suitable candidate.Contrary to his outspoken and courageous demeanor, Gandhi as a kid was shy and introvert. After school, he would run back home as he didn't like to talk to anyone. Gandhi's Civil Disobedience Movement was inspired by the teachings of Henry David Thoreau, an American author, who lived on the shores of a sea like a hermit and refused to pay taxes.Gandhi loved walking and often called it the prince of exercises. As a student in London, he saved money by walking couple of miles every day. Not to forget, during the Dandi March in 1930, he, at 60, walked 241 miles to the sea at Dandi.He was very conscious of his diet. He would live for days just on fruits and goat's milk. Friday is an eventful day. Gandhi was born on Friday. India got its independence on Friday. Gandhi was assassinated on Friday. Gandhi's was a child marriage. He was 13 years old when he married Kasturba, who was 14, in 1883.Everywhere he went, Gandhi carried a set of false teeth in the fold of his loin cloth and would use it only while eating.
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