Tuesday, May 10, 2016

The Nitpicker’s Chronicle : Flip side story of Indian national movement

From time immemorial, India has been blessed with personalities who have not only left an indelible mark on its culture but also shaped its character. India is known to the world through the eyes of great pathfinders, and their wisdom in building up the modern nation is unanimously accepted. On the critical analysis of their views, one can find certain divergences, which in true sense, might be logical in the preceding circumstances. Although conflicting, the views are genuine and expressed with great solemnity.


The path of freedom, since the colonial days, encountered successive seismic waves before reaching the final destination in 1947. Controversies prevailed in the national politics during that time, and the nation was put to occasional strains of contradictions. As lines were drawn to delineate political controversies, positions became more polarised. The trailblazers strived to build up more rhetoric ideologies to put forth their rationale. The dichotomy that prevailed at that time can tell how the nation reached its destiny. Nitpickers might quibble that if the great men of yore were so great, why did they fail to build a great nation? How could the evils of religious bigotry occupy an enduring place in the heart of the nation when the great men decided to bisect the country on communal lines only to build India as a secular republic where religiosity would have no place in the statecraft? No wonder the great men fought a tough battle to break the shackles of subservience. They were great thinkers too. Traditionally India is hallowed by great thinkers, known not only for their sagacity but also their relevance in today’s world. The depth and diversity of their thoughts and the spectrum of issues they debated on, earned them a unique distinction worldwide.


About half a century before independence, in the era of nationalism and struggle against the colonial hegemony, Indian politics was flooded with ideas of great visionaries on subjects elucidating what India was and what she could or should be in the days ahead. Some of them were attracted to the Western models, while others relied upon the traditional culture and religion. Few expressed confidence on the British administration. The divergence of opinion owing to political ideologies of the political class was not new, rather expected. India is a land of diversity where lived seven times more people than those in His Majesty’s own country at the turn of the last century. There have been divisions on the grounds of religion, caste, creed, faith, custom, gender, colour and language. There was a time when leaders were indecisive and there were divergences of opinion on democracy, secularism, freedom of speech, solidarity, justice, stand on the princely states and, lastly, the inevitable partition of the country. Directions were many, including swaraj, ahimsa, satyagraha, terrorism, non-cooperation, poorna-swaraj and even declaration of war against the Crown. Despite their dissimilitude, the propounders had the same goal, which was to achieve freedom. But the conflicts of thoughts and egotism did not disappear; in fact, they multiplied, which further led to the fraction of the leading parties like the Indian National Congress and the Muslim League and that too many a time on the verge of attaining freedom. 

(will continue)

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