Russia’s Putin announced the demise of liberalism,
America’s Trump wrote its obituary, and India’s Modi wielded the death as a
political forge that transmuted him into a demigod.
We are, unfortunately, passing
through an era of so-called “strong leaders” like Putin, Trump, and Modi. A
2024 report based on a 2023 Pew survey found that 67% Indians endorsed a
governing system with a “strong leader” who can make decisions without
interference from courts or parliament. This support for autocracy was the
highest among all surveyed nations and has increased consistently after Modi
became the PM. Shockingly, the same 2023 survey found that 72% of Indian
respondents expressed a favourable view of military rule.
Indians don’t want individual
freedom, it seems. We are used to the many gods who incarnated at appropriate
times and destroyed evil (Sambhavami yuge yuge). Modi is our present
divine incarnation. It is the duty of these avatars to conquer evil; hence
individual freedom doesn’t matter.
This new Sambhavami has turned
universities into propaganda labs. The press and other media have become
state-scripted parrots. Citizens are polarised into echo chambers. Religion and
patriotism are weapons dipped deep in hatred.
The new divine avatar told us that
liberalism is a western notion and hence anti-Indian. Never mind that the same
‘strong leader’ who is so anti-west has visited the western countries countless
times. Tradition and history have become nubile nostalgia. Whatever little
ideology still left is the fortress of a nation enfeebled by a ‘strong leader’
rather than a bridge extended by a healthy collective psyche.
s liberalism a western notion? Right from the
Upanishads and the Mahabharata to thinkers like Rabindranath Tagore, India has
a rich history that is rooted in liberalism. As Amartya Sen argued in his book The
Argumentative Indian (2005), India’s liberalism went far beyond Western
Enlightenment by millennia. Dissent was never seen in the country as rebellion,
let alone treason, according to Sen, but as a means of seeking truth. Sen also
warned in that book (written a decade before Modi came to power and fulfilled
Sen’s prophecy) that forgetting the “argumentative heritage” of the country
would lead to narrow
nationalism and intolerance.
Narrow nationalism and intolerance
reign supreme in India today. As a result, freedom has become permission
granted by the powerful. Patriotism is blind obedience. Religion is a set of dogmas
force-fed by the state. National pride is equal to intolerance.
A truly strong nation doesn’t silence
its critics; it listens to them. A ‘strong leader’ does the opposite.
A historical shift like this from
liberalism to petty nationalism didn’t happen overnight. It grew out of
frustration with corruption, elitism, and slow development. But the cure, alas,
has turned out to be worse than the disease. Rahul Gandhi has been showing us
for weeks now how even our electoral process is an utter farce. In the pre-Modi
era, there were some values in practice in spite of all the corruption and
red-tape.
The worst catastrophe is the
saffronisation of education. The school must be the place where children should
be taught critical and creative thinking. Instead, they are being fed with
false history and silly dogmas.
India has to liberate its schools
first from the clutches of petty-minded nationalists. It has to revive the
dignity of dissent. Journalism must be given independence. The rights of the
minorities and the marginalised should be taken care of. Dialogue should
replace monologues such as Mann ki Baat.
Ekam sat vipra bahudha
vadanti”
— Truth is one, the wise call it by many names. That is what Indian civilisation
has always taught. To reclaim that inheritance is not a political act: it is a
moral necessity. For redeeming the nation’s soul.
PS. This post is the last part of Blogchatter Half Marathon 2025

Dissent is the essence of democracy. Fraternity, its life-blood. Pluralism, its life-breath.
ReplyDeleteAmen to that.
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