Nehru’s Secularism


Jawaharlal Nehru, India’s first Prime Minister, and Narendra Modi, the present one, are diametrically opposite to each other. Take any parameter, from boorishness to sophistication or religious views, and these two men would remain poles apart. Is it Nehru’s towering presence in history that intimidates Modi into hurling ceaseless allegations against him?

Today, 14 Nov, is Nehru’s birth anniversary and Modi’s tweet was uncharacteristically terse. It said, “Tributes to former Prime Minister, Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru Ji on the occasion of his birth anniversary.” Somebody posted a trenchant cartoon in the comments section. 


Nehru had his flaws, no doubt. He was as human as Modi. But what made him a giant while Modi remains a dwarf – as in the cartoon above – is the way they viewed human beings. For Nehru, all human beings mattered, irrespective of their caste, creed, language, etc. His concept of secularism stands a billion notches above Modi’s Hindutva-nationalism.

Nehru’s idea of secularism was distinctive and central to the Indian Republic he helped shape. It differed from Western notions of religion-state separation. Nehru’s secularism advocated equal respect for all religions, Sarva Dharma Sambhava. His secularism was not anti-religious as in the West. It was non-religious in its functioning while it gave total liberty to every Indian to practise as well as propagate the religion of their choice. Nehru was a non-believer himself.

A crucial component of Nehru’s secularism was rational thinking. He believed India needed a scientific temper to overcome superstition, communal hatred, and irrational traditions. For him, secularism was a way to modernise India, encouraging citizens to think beyond religious identity.

Nehru’s secularism was also a shield for minorities. This is something that irked the right-wingers of India all the time, even today, six decades after Nehru’s death. I think the chief reason why Nehru’s ghost haunts Modi’s psyche is precisely this: the concern for the minority communities in India. While secularism meant pluralism and inclusion for Nehru, his present rival upholds uniformity and exclusion.

Nehru thought of religion as a regressive force, unlike Mahatma Gandhi who believed in deriving values from religion. Nehru wanted social reforms to come not from or through religion but based on rational principles. The present PM of India has taken the country in a direction that is just opposite to what Nehru envisaged. This is the greatest tragedy of today’s India. The country has been taken backward by centuries as far as thinking is concerned.

“Modi has drawn out the very worst in many Indians,” as K S Komireddi puts it in his book, Malevolent Republic. Komireddi’s book ends with a forthright condemnation of Modi’s legacy so far which “has dragged India, already heavy with the vices of yesteryear, to depths from which recovery may take generations.”

In spite of all his drawbacks which are being highlighted today, Nehru was a visionary who had love for his people. That love makes all the difference. Not religion, not at all.

Comments

  1. Love Respect and Scientific Temper make Nehru, stand tall.. Above the Dwarfs, guided by Obscurantism and blind Religious Nationalism. Modi has dragged Into a Quagmire of superstition.

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  2. Replies
    1. Let greatness return to eminent positions in Indian politics.

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  3. I appreciate your writing habits although that doesn't mean that I agree with your POV - actually I don't have to in order to appreciate the regularity with which you blog since I began blogging in 2008.
    For me I do not bring my religious or political views in to public or my dealing with others as I consider those very personal. I don't expect others to do or say things that are aligned to my views and that helps me remain at peace with the world.

    But if there is one thing that age has taught me is that there is no absolute right or wrong in this world and it all depends on the lens that we hold in our mind.

    We have the choice to remain positive by seeing the good in the other person or we can ignore all the goods and look for the bad qualities.
    No-one in this world can make the other person all the time and that is true in parent children relationship too.
    As I move closer to my retirement, I seek positivity and remain un-judgemental in my views about others.
    Happy blogging and thanks for your visit and keep dropping by whenever you can.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I guess I'm expected to be grateful for your condescension.

      We have a classical poem in Malayalam. It's the story of a low caste crofter, euphemistically called Dalit now, who plants a banana shoot in front of his little cottage. The Dalit and his entire family look after the banana plant like a treasure because they have never eaten bananas so far. The poem was written in 1937, the heyday of Brahminism in Kerala. The banana plant grows up with all the love and care it gets from the crofter's children who are waiting eagerly to taste the fruits. When the fruits ripen, the Brahmin landlord comes and orders the whole bunch to be presented to him as a tribute. The Brahmin landlord's prerogative.

      The crofter who is a mere tenant has no voice. He cannot speak.

      But I'm no crofter, no tenant. So I speak.

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  4. Hari OM
    An excellent acknowledgement of Nehru - oh for another such to rise... YAM xx

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    Replies
    1. I see no sign of such a rise, dear Yam. A very sobering situation.

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  5. That is very much the distinction between the perspectives. One wants everyone to thrive. The other only wants people like themselves to.

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    Replies
    1. Exactly. Even the projected nationalism of the one is self-aggrandicement in disguise.

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  6. Yes, the message is clear love for people should always be more than love for religion. A very articulated piece !

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