Saturday, August 20, 2005

One Day Mataram

The hair-raising patriotic rhapsody sung in the immortal voice of Mahendra Kapoor goes “Mere desh ki dharti sona ugle, ugle heere moti.” Translated strictly, it means, “My country’s land produces gold, diamonds and pearls.” This song always fills me with a sense of pride for being born an Indian. My chest spreads twice as much; fists clench themselves and I get restless with almost an insuppressible urgency to do something worthwhile for my ‘great’ nation. The song gets over and the goose bumps settle back to slumber. Suddenly my ear starts itching. So I pick up a ear bud, use it and throw it out of the window only to hear an uproarious expletive from an unintended victim of my can’t-care-less attitude. With the bud, I also threw my wish to do something for my nation “out of the window.” My Patriotism existed for the duration of the song. Once the song got over, my sense of urgency evaporated into thin air. Forget about doing something for the nation, I changed things in my immediate neighborhood for worse.

Every year, we Indians celebrate 15th of August as our Independence Day. People show their love for India in various ways on this day. Government offices, schools proudly unfurl the tricolour on their buildings. Individuals stick the flag on their vehicles. People wear ‘Patriotism’ on their hearts and sleeves. The national flag becomes so valuable a commodity this day that it sells like hot cakes. The day gets over and by evening all the excitement gets petered out. By the next day, you can find flags wallowing in dirt like waifs and on manholes, being overrun by the same vehicles that still proudly bear the flag on their embodiment. The previous day’s pride becomes the very next day’s burden. Three cheers to our “One Day Patriotism.”

Our whole idea of Patriotism needs some revamping. Is it actually enough to stick the tricolour on our peripheries and sing the national anthem with gusto while standing in attention? Even here, there are so many prejudices playing their hidden roles. Those who stand in attention while singing the anthem deride those who don’t. But the former are blissfully unaware of the fact that by doing so they’re actually approving the very act that they choose to disapprove. Independence Day, then, stood for freedom. Freedom, not just from the British rule, but also from our pique of being ruled by ‘others’; freedom from everything that was ‘phoren’, be it product or system, to things that were more Indian. Standing up in attention, as a mark of respect, is a British relic we’re unable to throw out of our psyche even today. Eastern culture, be it Hindu or Muslim, doesn’t decree the same. Unlike the western culture, it allows us to stay seated while praying. Reciting an anthem being an act of professing your allegiance could hence be done staying seated. Ironically, the British left India long back, but they still rule our psyche. This knowledge does nothing other than further deepen our prejudice against the British. While that is one aspect of patriotism, elucidating that is not the purpose of this write-up.

Why have patriotism at all when all it does is divide humanity into superior, loveable, smarter ‘us’ and inferior, hate-worthy, uncivilized ‘others’? Why should one man’s fight-for-freedom be another man’s terrorism? Technology, especially Internet, is erasing the borders. Politics needs to open-up to embrace this development. The world is at a crossroad now. Terrorism has never been more powerful and is threatening to engulf most of the world. It knows no boundaries of nations and is bent on destroying the same. Technology is also doing the same but is the obverse side of the same coin. The solution doesn’t lie in guarding our borders even more zealously. The solution lies in melting our borders and making ourselves more inclusive of the ‘others’ than we’re now. We need to wisely use technology to send across the message that we care to the nations that feel relegated. Foreign policies of nations need to be more ‘foreign’ sensitive from now on. The Independence Day should now symbolize freedom from ‘Patriotism’. Pablo Casals put in succinctly, “The love of one’s country is a splendid thing. But why should love stop at the border?” Let us aspire for a world order where patriotism is not haute. I won’t be very comfortable when my kids would ask, “Who draws lines around the countries?”

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

Amazing stuff dude………u got am awesome flair for writing man…

Anonymous said...

I used to think abt such things long ago...

especially when there is used 2 b this huge sales of Indian flags n patriotic things... n later next day... ppl used to throw it away...

just as much like we throw the fulhaar after dasera day from the front door of our house...

I mean it was so much a fad... when I was a kid .. I used to ask my parents to buy me 1 flag like every1 did...

now they r so many new items being marketed in the name of our own independence... this is the advancement in marketing...

whts the point... I mean.. a flag which was used to market our freedom from British rule, during those independence days.. and was so well respected and considered to represent the formation of our nation....

It is today being marketed to just make retail sales!! and common man has just forgotten the respect it was given by their ancestors...to just make some money out of their ancestors' struggle and blood!!

its just too sad!!

Anonymous said...

Kamlesh, excellent one.
I agree with your notion of "One Day Mataram". And certainly we need freedom from pessimism and feeling of being downtrodden lot. Yes, education brought enlightenment but it was only one side of the coin. We, as Indian, were great, are great and so shall we be.
Though you may disagree with me, but still these occasions let people realise that they are part of India and are Indian though drenched in some culture alien to original India. And on bright side, atleast they celebrate for being Indian.
Kamlesh, I agree only celebration don't serve the purpose. But, these are now first steps in right direction, the only worry is whether the direction remains what is intended.
Happy Republic Day!
"Where the mind is without fear
and the head is held high...
Into that heaven of freedom, my father,
let my country awake."
- Rabindranath Tagore

Unknown said...

Kamlesh,
Really nice article. And personally I think these points should be thought in our schools also. So that at least coming generation should not follow same, which currently is followed.
Apart from above I would like to say that patriotism has got the meaning (of nationalism or love to they nation) in recent centuries.
In past among the ancient Greeks, patriotism consisted of notions concerning language, religious traditions, ethics, law and devotion to the common good, rather than pure identification with a nation-state. Even Greek philosopher Socrates has said, "patriotism does not require one to agree with everything that his country does and would actually promote analytical questioning in a quest to make the country the best it possibly can be."

Pradeep said...

just a pale, jaded symbolism that serves no good but one day jingoism. So much for patriotic fervour when we have no pride in anything as a nation. The irony is that we still toe the line of the brand india sold by crafty ad men.

Gargi said...

Its sad but ur right Patriotism has now been commercialised too.