Cleansing Gandhi of radicalism

Suhas Palshikar

http://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/cleansing-gandhi-of-radicalism/99/

By re-discovering Gandhi as only an icon of cleanliness, government has
taken the first step towards dismantling his legacy.

As the new regime settles into office, efforts seem to have begun to shape
a new thinking process and redefine our national heritage and the idea of
our collective being. While the elements associated with the ruling party,
but operating outside the government, have enthusiastically and somewhat
aggressively started underscoring the change, the government too seems to
have taken seriously the mandate that it has to change the face of India's
intellectual personality. At least initially, these efforts seem to have
adopted a non-controversial and seemingly consensual tone that can easily
keep convincing the pro-development lobby that Narendra Modi assiduously
cultivated during the campaign. The prime minister's televised speech on
Teachers' Day fitted with this approach. The "Clean India" drive too
appears to have evoked equally enthusiastic and consensual reactions. And
yet, the Gandhi Jayanti programme was a clear indication of the change that
is coming.

The crucial question is about symbolism. In the rhetoric that emanated from
the prime minister, there was no hint of any of the radical moves Gandhi
made. His penchant for toilet-cleaning had far too radical social
implications.

To understand this change, we need to unravel the puzzle as to how Gandhi,
with whom the Hindu nationalists always remained in an adversarial
conversation even after his death, suddenly becomes an official icon of the
regime based on that same Hindu nationalist ideology. This could happen
only by redefining Gandhi. The government has now initiated that process.
Only by taking Gandhism away from Gandhi, can "Gandhi" be converted into an
icon whose words can be used as official catechism (or, as the "brand
ambassador" of a new clean India!). The aggressive cleanliness drive
launched by the government on Gandhi Jayanti and the marketing of the new
Gandhi need to be seen in this perspective.


Planning ahead for the 150th birth anniversary of Gandhi, this drive
promises to denude Gandhi of the substantive ideas he was associated with.
If this effort goes on for five years, the next generation would remember
Gandhi for cleanliness (only). Already, there are many, even today, who are
convinced that Gandhi (only) meant cleanliness. That is why, from
corporates to spiritual gurus, so many have supported the drive. Suddenly,
our corporate giants have learnt from the prime minister that India needs
toilets and they are coming forward dutifully to fund the drive. As Modi
mentioned in his address to adoring audiences of NRIs at the Madison Square
Garden, we need to build an India that "they" (Indians staying/ working in
the US) dream of. In direct contrast to Gandhi, who always reminded us that
public life and politics need to be anchored to the dreams and expectations
of the "last man", we are striving to make an India that would be liveable
for the upper classes, lest they run away to cleaner environs!

But was "Clean India" Gandhi's dream? Gandhi surely encouraged and insisted
on toilet-cleaning by (particularly upper-caste) residents of the Ashram.
That had symbolism much beyond cleaning the South Block by venerable
officialdom. What was Gandhi's dream? As Gandhi was wont to make somewhat
complex arguments -- often through his actions -- this one, too, had multiple
layers. At the most direct level, the "cleanliness" drive of Gandhi aimed
at making sweepers out of the upper castes. This Gandhian expectation
related to the supposed division of (clean and unclean) labour between the
caste Hindus and the "depressed classes". So, he was not merely aiming at a
"clean India", but an India where the act of cleaning would not be
stigmatised.

The other symbolism associated with Gandhi's shramdaan (voluntary labour)
was related to the dignity of labour and the deeper claim that all labour
is equally socially necessary. If the first claim sought to undercut the
caste hierarchy, the second cut at the roots of the capitalist logic of
demeaning productive work and keeping it underpaid. Therefore, a symbolic
and media-centred activity of celebrities and power-holders on one day
surely does not represent the Gandhian dream. Gandhi was not arguing for
shramdaan, but the ethic of doing labour and according dignity to all work.
The economy that puts a premium on non-manual work is not at all likely to
bring about that dignity. And a society that tends to ensure the
concentration of certain communities in low-paid and low-dignity jobs
cannot ensure that dignity by an hour's work, one day, by the privileged
and the white collared. Moreover, it was not cleanliness but a social order
based on equal status that Gandhi was arguing for. A drive to ensure that
rural India became free of atrocities against Dalits could have been a far
better candidate on the occasion.

But the larger question is not really about the swachhata abhiyan. If the
drive succeeds even partially, the lives of women and of the poor would
certainly be somewhat better. The crucial question is about symbolism. On
October 2, 2014, the nation suddenly, willingly, suspended reason and
history to demote the Father of the Nation. In the entire rhetoric that
emanated from the prime minister, his other ministers, the media and the
obliging intellectuals (artistes included!), there was no hint of any of
the radical moves that Gandhi made. His penchant for toilet-cleaning had
far too radical social implications. The Gandhi that one comes across in
the "Clean India" drive is thoroughly de-radicalised.

And even then, Gandhi was not only about toilet-cleaning. On October 2, our
collective consciousness seems to have willingly chosen to ignore the other
equally radical ideas and practices of Gandhi. Religious harmony, equality
of all religious communities and acceptance of diversity as the basis of
our nationhood were integral to Gandhi's way of approaching collective
identity. A hundred years ago, Gandhi began to move Indian society in the
direction of a nationhood that was non-competitive, non-combative and
non-exclusionary. Nowhere in the world was there a precedent for such
nationhood. Europe was then deeply immersed in linguistic or ethnicised
nationhood and could think of democracy only within the context of an
exclusionary nationalism. It was at that point that Gandhi (and one cannot
help but mention Nehru) conceptualised and shaped a very different
nationhood. It is that nationhood that forms the central pillar of India's
present.

However much the ruling party may want, on the central issue of handling
India's diverse social heritage and the complications of competitive
communalism that are bound to arise in a democracy, Gandhi had a radical
approach that Nehru too shared. Cleansing Gandhi of that radicalism seems
to be the net intended effect of the abhiyaan to equate Gandhi with
cleanliness. By addressing school kids, Modi sought to replace Chacha
Nehru; and now, limiting Gandhi to cleanliness seems to be the next move in
breaking the Gandhi-Nehru legacy.

Clearly, going much beyond the good governance pledge and the development
promise, the new regime seems set to open a battlefront on ideas. By
rediscovering  a far too docile and clean Gandhi, the first step of
appropriating Gandhi has been taken. We need to watch now how the new
regime proceeds to dismantle the Gandhi-Nehru legacy.

The writer teaches political science at Savitribai Phule Pune University


-- 
Peace Is Doable

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send an email to [email protected].
Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to