Published on Monday, February 6, 2006 by the Huffington Post
Democracy and the Untouchables
by Deepak Chopra
 
A coca farmer has been elected president in Bolivia and a socialist doctor in 
Chile. Hamas 
has won majority power in Palestine and a hard-line anti-Zionist leads Iran. 
These are all 
democratic outcomes, and in the foreseeable future we can expect more of the 
same.

>From the American perspective, it looks like the worst example of getting what 
>you wish 
for. We stand for democracy, and now we have to hold our ground when democracy 
doesn't turn out remotely as we would want it to. Observers point out that the 
last five 
elections in the Middle East have brought in Islamic fundamentalists or close 
to it, while 
almost every election in South America has brought in socialists with an animus 
against 
the U.S., or close to it. 

As the world's leading democracy, it's ironic that we have been so afraid of it 
elsewhere, 
supporting reactionary royal families and dictatorships in country after 
country, although 
capriciously our support of a Noriega, Saddam Hussein, Duvalier, Aristide, 
Assad, 
Musharaf, etc. can suddenly sour. We should welcome democracy for the same 
reason that 
India learned to accept the rise of the untouchables to power. 

Historically, it was unthinkable that the most despised and dispossessed people 
in the 
country should share in its rule. But no horrors have come to pass, and India's 
democracy 
has been strengthened. The factions rising to power in South America and the 
Middle East 
are similarly dispossessed and despised. Much as we dislike the religious 
Shiites who are 
about to rule Iraq, weren't they the same rebels who tried to rise against 
Saddam in 1991 
and were massacred by the thousands when the U.S failed to help them?

Poor, oppressed, ignorant, and rejected people don't behave well; they are 
often angry and 
irrational. Whatever anyone may think of them, the dispossessed will only 
change if they 
are given a share of power. In Palestine the ruling Fatah party squandered and 
outright 
stole billions of dollars in foreign aid, and the leading politicians there 
have amassed 
fortunes in Swiss bank accounts while their people starve. The same is true of 
our favored 
pols in Iraq. They are prepared to steal billions more as the oil wealth of the 
country gets 
divided among the ultra-privileged. In South America a peon class, often made 
up of 
indigenous Indians, exists in hopeless degradation while the richest live like 
colonialists 
from two centuries ago.

These intolerable injustices aren't ours to fix. Each country deserves 
self-determination. 
Billions spent to prop up the Shah of Iran did nothing to prevent the rise of 
democracy 
there, and it won't anywhere else, not in the long run. America's choice is 
either to guide 
this great historical upheaval or be charged with trying to suppress the very 
people who 
might have sailed to the New World when we were struggling to be free.

Deepak Chopra came to the U.S. in 1970 from his native India to practice 
medicine, a 
career that evolved into the field of mind-body medicine. His breakthrough 
book, 
"Quantum Healing," brought him public recognition in 1989. Since then he has 
written 
more than 42 books and travels worldwide as a spiritual speaker who fuses 
Western 
science with Eastern wisdom. He lives in La Jolla with his wife, Rita, and has 
two grown 
children and two grandchildren. Dr. Chopra heads the Chopra Center in Carlsbad, 
California, which specializes in many alternative treatment modalities 
including Ayurveda.

© 2006 The Huffington Post

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