This blog is written by a journalist based in Mumbai who writes about cities, the environment, developmental issues, the media, women and many other subjects.The title 'ulti khopdi' is a Hindi phrase referring to someone who likes to look at things from the other side.
Tuesday, August 15, 2017
It’s time for another freedom struggle: A Midnight’s Child looks back on India’s 70-year journey
I am almost Midnight’s Child. I arrived some weeks before
the magic hour. On August 15, 1947, they celebrated by taking a ride in a
Victoria horse carriage on Bombay’s Marine Drive with me, all of three
months old.
As August 15, 2017, India’s 70th Independence Day
approaches, I wonder whether this is the India my parents dreamed of.
Neither is around to answer that question. But I am certain that their
idea of India is very different from the new India that Prime Minister
Narendra Modi has urged people to help build by 2022.
Today, apart
from Independence, the painful memories of the Partition are also being
invoked. Yet far away from the borders that wrenched one country into
two, leading to mass migration on a scale not seen anywhere in the world
and an unprecedented scale of communal killings, I grew up with little
awareness of this cataclysmic event. So did many others like me, I
imagine.
No one from my family went to Pakistan, or came to India
from Pakistan. The only migration in the family was when my parents –
from Mangalore and Mysore – moved to Bombay and then, after their
marriage, to North India.
We grew up in a place that was once
called Begumabad, a village near Meerut in Uttar Pradesh. It was
renamed Modinagar after Seth Gujarmal Modi, an industrialist who set up a
textile mill, a sugar factory, a rubber factory as well as a school, a
college and housing colonies for his employees. Today, most of the
factories have disappeared and Modinagar has been transformed into an
educational hub.
The author with her parents and brother in Modinagar
Cranking it up
In
the 1950s and 1960s, I grew up as a middle-class kid in this company
town, where the houses were identical. Television had not yet arrived
in India but everyone had radios (not transistors though). No one I knew
had a refrigerator but iceboxes did the job. A lucky few had a wind-up
gramophone.
Also, no one had electric hot water geysers. Nor had I
ever seen a shower. Copper samovars did the job of providing hot water;
a steel bucket and a brass lota did the rest.
I cannot
remember my parents buying readymade clothes. The tailor stitched our
clothes, usually a size larger so they would last longer. And woolen
sweaters were always hand knitted.
In these days of short
attention spans, it seems unreal that one could spend long summer
holidays without ever complaining of being bored. We entertained
ourselves either playing chor-police in the colony garden, a
hot favourite where the youngest was assigned the task of being the
jailor; cricket and badminton, the latter without a net and the former
with a rubber ball; or board games like Ludo and Chinese Checkers.
Monopoly and Scrabble came much later.
Temptation to buy anything
was strictly limited to the amount of money you had. If you were middle
class, living in a single income family, there was practically no
surplus. You bought only what you needed. This was not some high moral
principle. It was necessity.
Did it make us miserable, hungry for
more, feeling we were missing out on something? I think not. The
differences between living in a small North Indian town like Modinagar
and Bombay, which we would visit in the holidays, did not seem so stark
as to make us restless.
Was this because India’s restricted
economy flattened everyone to the same level? Or was our lack of
restlessness about material things a hangover of the Independence
struggle that still lingered even two decades later? Perhaps a little
of both. The author and her friends in Modinagar, Uttar Pradesh, in the 1950s.
For the country’s good
I
can remember constantly being lectured in school about how privileged
we were to get a good education and that we must think of what we can do
for “the country”, how we can use our lives to serve people less
advantaged than us. This was not the nationalism of today; it was
perhaps playing on guilt but also appealing to our conscience.
That
message found a resonance in many of us. Despite our parents saving up
to give us the best education possible and hoping we would become
doctors, engineers or join the civil services, at least some Midnight’s
Children let their parents down.
Our coming of age coincided with a
time of questioning around the world. What contribution could you make
to the country if the structures of oppression had remained in tact
despite the end of colonialism? Was getting degrees and professional
qualifications enough to make you understand what was going on in a
country where the majority was abjectly poor? Could those of us who
lived in cities ever understand the reality of rural India unless we
went and lived there? Should our engineers be building bridges and dams
or going out to see how technology could change the lives of people in
rural India? These and hundreds of other questions infected our minds,
refusing to allow us to slip into complaisance.
Caught in this
churn of questions, many of us made choices that hurt and distressed our
families. But at that time, it seemed the only thing one could do if
you believed that coming from your class and your education, you had to
do something to make a difference.
The point of this narration is
to depict, briefly, the India in which people like me grew up. There was
very little cynicism and a lot of idealism.
The dark period
So when and how did this tryst with idealism get dented?
Before
I, and India could hit 30, the idea of a free and democratic India had
already been shattered when Indira Gandhi declared a state of Emergency
on June 26, 1975. She imposed press censorship, imprisoned the
opposition and suspended fundamental rights. At the stroke of midnight,
free India was un-free. Would it ever come out of this dark period?
Certainly in the days after the declaration of Emergency, and the months
that followed, there seemed no end in sight.
Yet, it did end,
spectacularly and unexpectedly in 1977 when Indira Gandhi called an
election and was defeated. We were a free country again. Or were we?
For many of us, the principal lesson from the Emergency was how easy it
is to erode democratic values and why the very concept of freedom has to
be re-examined within the context of the gross inequalities in our
society.
As India completes 70, that reality has not changed. If
anything, it has become starker. What is also evident today is that the
Partition of 1947 is now a reality at so many other levels in India, in
the deepening divisions between class, caste and creed.
Yet Modi
speaks of his new India being free of communalism. How extraordinary
that a man who heads a party that has built its political fortunes on
communal poison can proclaim this without a moment of embarrassment.
The
old India in which I grew up also had communal schisms, between Hindus
and Muslims, between upper and lower castes. But even though difference
was acknowledged, it was not emphasised or demonised. Many of us grew
up not knowing where we belonged – South India, North India, just India?
I had coined the term “emotionally integrated Indian” to describe
myself. Today, on the other hand, you are branded with your identity, in
terms of region, religion and caste.
There is little in this new
India that we are being promised that can keep alive the flame of
idealism. Yet, I believe we can refuse to despair even though at times
it appears that the unrelenting push towards changing the core of India
is unstoppable; that the forces of the Hindutva will succeed in turning
this country into a Hindu Rashtra where anyone who does not subscribe to
their ideology will be rendered a second-class citizen if not a
non-citizen.
What is more worrying is that this is happening so
insidiously and at so many levels that it seems to have dulled our sense
of outrage. Or perhaps there is too much to be outraged about. So one
watches with despair and hopes that miraculously things will change.
If
there is anything we can learn from these past 70 years it is that
change only comes when people decide that they will not sit back and
tolerate the intolerable. The sad reality is that even the Emergency
would have continued if Indira Gandhi had not called an election. The
silent majority were angry but were scattered and intimidated while the
minority, who endorsed her actions, ruled with confidence. The
author and other members of the staff of 'Himmat', the magazine that
distinguished itself by courageously criticising the Emergency.
Another midnight hour
Today,
we cannot say for sure that the majority is angry. Many people are
upset and disillusioned. But will they find a way to express this, or
have they accepted that nothing can be done to change the direction in
which this country is being taken?
We are approaching a midnight
hour of another kind, not one that will lead this country into freedom,
but “where the clear stream of reason has lost its way” as Rabindranath
Tagore wrote. An hour when partitions at every level are becoming the
norm and where based on this divided and hate-filled nation, the
votaries of a Hindu Rashtra could succeed in raising their bhagwa jhanda.
There
is not much point in harking back to the old India that has
disappeared. But there is every reason to oppose the vision of a new
India that is being thrust down our throats, that has nothing new about
it as it goes about keeping alive outdated and old divisions and
hatreds. Nothing new and lasting can be built on such poisonous
foundations. Midnight’s Children and their progeny will have to get
ready for another freedom struggle.
Kalpana Sharma is a consulting editor at the Economic and Political Weekly.
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