Thursday, January 24, 2013

I blame the English for India's backwardness

Philip Collins From: The Times January 05, 2013 12:00AM
http://www.thetimes.co.uk/tto/opinion/columnists/philipcollins/article3647507.ece

WHILE he was in custody in Ahmednagar Fort in 1944, at the pleasure of the British, Jawaharlal Nehru wrote The Discovery of India, one of the great prison notebooks. Disguised as a history of the nation, it is a manifesto for a modern India.

"It is obvious," says Nehru, that "she (India) has to come out of her shell and take full part in the life and activities of the modern age."

The designation of the nation as female has never been more grimly appropriate in the wake of the funeral of a 23-year-old medical student, now known as "India's Daughter", who was gang-raped on a night bus in Delhi on December 16.

This is a democratic country that, for five years up to last July, had a woman president. It is also a nation in which child marriage, female infanticide, sex trafficking and domestic violence are problems so serious that the only country in South Asia with a worse UN ranking for gender inequality is Afghanistan. It is not without cause that a throng of angry women marched on Wednesday in Delhi to demand changes to the law.




The six men accused of raping India's daughter will be subject to that law, although it is to be hoped that neither summary justice nor the death penalty is meted out to them. But the central point of Nehru's history is that the culture has to adapt, too, and the continued mistreatment of women is just one index among many to show that so much in Nehru's demand for modernisation remains unfulfilled.

No visitor to India, however gilded, ever leaves without an impression of poverty that lingers forever: a withered hand in the window at the traffic lights or a terrible physical deformity displayed on the pavement for the alms of passers-by. According to the UN Development Program, 37 per cent of Indians live below the poverty line. There are more poor people in the eight poorest Indian states than in all of the 26 poorest African countries combined. Incredibly, when its growth rate took off between 1996 and 2011, India was one of only three developed countries in which levels of hunger actually rose.

A UNICEF report last year showed that one in three of all malnourished children in the world is Indian. An extraordinary 58 per cent of children under five show stunted growth because their mothers were underfed during pregnancy.

All across India, failures of public policy hold the country back. Four in 10 adults cannot read, and only one in 10 Indians uses the internet, a lower rate than Tanzania, Uganda and Zimbabwe.

The conventional explanation for the tolerance of destitution is that Hinduism offers both consolation in another world and a divine alibi for the caste system. The distance between the political class and the electorate, in age, outlook and behaviour, is larger in India than in any democracy.

Corruption is the most serious manifestation of this gap.

For all that, I still blame the English for the slow modernisation of India. Not the usual English villains who went to India, but the ones who stayed at home. The London School of Economics did as much damage to the Indian economy as the sort of hapless regional officials lampooned in George Orwell's first novel, Burmese Days. This is because the main intellectual influence on Nehru, that brilliant and flawed architect of democratic India, was a kind of Fabian socialism left out too long in the sun.

From Harrow, Cambridge and London, Nehru took a belief in a planned economy with him back to India. The economy of the newly independent India after 1947 duly became known as "the licence raj". That was because a licence was needed for the business equivalent of breathing. Foreign trade and investment were discouraged and every transaction subjected to a bewildering variety of pettifogging regulations.

The history of the British Labour Party can be written as a slow lesson that trying to control a complex economy is damaging. Unfortunately, its sister party, Congress in India, took the Fabian theorists at their word.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh repealed some of this when he was finance minister in the early 1990s, but the legacy of planning still distorts the Indian economy. Mumbai, for example, has the potential to be a great world city. Its recent promise has attracted the former farm hands of Maharashtra in their thousands. Unfortunately, they arrive to find feces in open sewers, filthy water, traffic-choked roads and trains bursting to the point of danger.

This all goes back to the fact that, in 1964, Mumbai authorities set strict limits on the height of buildings, citing English urban design. Instead of going up, Mumbai spread out. The result? Space in central Mumbai is more expensive than it is in Singapore. The transport network is crumbling under the weight of commuters travelling from illegal slums on the edge of the city. Across India, 93 million people live in urban slums and buildings under construction or on the pavement.

The world will be safer and better if a democracy such as India is a major player than if global power is left to China or Russia. The film of Salman Rushdie's Midnight's Children captures the excitement and the fragility of the moment in August 1947 that India gained its freedom. From its birth, India was beset by fears its democracy could not survive, but for 65 years, with a brief hiatus under Indira Gandhi's state of emergency between 1975 and 1977, it has thrived.

India needs to read Nehru's diagnosis again. He asks the right question, just so long as they don't also let him supply the answer.

THE TIMES


http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/world/indias-woes-over-lack-of-womens-rights-began-in-britain/story-fnb64oi6-1226547820737

Sunday, January 13, 2013

RE-post from Times of Inda : Yann Martel

Children are like wonderful Russian novels that go on forever.

Yann Martel on his thrilling Indian experience
Haimanti Mukherjee, TNN Oct 23, 2012, 12.00AM IST

Man Booker Prize winner and the writer of Life of Pi, Yann Martel, tells us why religion matters even in a schismatic world like ours, and about the "wonderful, horrible" place called India

Canadian novelist Yann Martel talks exclusively to Bombay Times ahead of the release of the film Life of Pi, adapted from his 2002 Man Booker Prize-winning book of the same name. He tells us how a couple of backpacking trips to India changed his life forever.


Excerpts...

US President Barack Obama wrote a hand-written letter to you saying "Life of Pi is an elegant proof of God and the power of storytelling"...
That was a thrill. I send a 101 books to my (Canadian) Prime Minister and he ( Stephen Harper) never wrote back to me. He never wrote me an individual letter. And here, I have the President of the United States, and I'm not even American. I was thrilled, I was delighted.

Why do you keep on sending books to your PM?
I think a world leader who does not read, or want to know about the other — by which I mean an experience or a life very different from his — would have a blinkered vision. Fiction is the best way to explore the other.

Considering you've known India for some time, what book would you ask Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to read?
The Death of Ivan Ilyich, by Leo Tolstoy. It's the story of an ordinary man. And those stories are always most powerful. The protagonist, Ivan Ilyich, gets sick and slowly starts to die. The book's on how he reacts to his death, the reaction of people around him. It's funny, entertaining, deep, sad, and you totally believe it. I would send out that
for Mr Singh.

What has India taught you?
Oh God! India has taught me so many things; it is a wild, crazy, horrible, wonderful place. It's given the world Mahatma Gandhi, ashrams, the idea of a guru, it's given us wonderful food, beautiful way of dressing, extraordinary geography, stunning architecture, a diversity of language, I am idealising Hinduism here but there is something amazingly tolerant about it. Because of Hinduism, there are so many millions of Gods, and the Gods do not bother anyone. That's why so many religions thrive there. So many religions don't thrive in Europe because they are much more intolerant. Christianity is much more exclusive. Also, it's the largest functional democracy in the world. And at the same time, it's also a horrible place — it's got poverty, it's corrupt. But you know, India lies in one place at one moment, that's what I love about the country.

You've talked about always wanting children...
If you ask me, those are the best books I've ever written — my children. Lola is 16 months old and Theo is three years old and we (he and his wife Alice Kuipers) have another baby due in April. Children are like wonderful Russian novels that go on forever.

The Western world has a way of making people too rational and mechanical. Did your trip to India made you believe in religion, the mystical?
I studied philosophy in the University, which in the West, is guaranteed to make you an agnostic. The first thing you do when you study philosophy is fake half truths about God, and these truths don't work. It's very hard to be a believer in the study of western philosophy. I was very much a secular, materialist Westerner when I got to India in my mid-30s, for the second time. In Canada, religion is marginalised, it's only at the edge of things. In India, for better or for worse, religion is still a part of the mainstream. You see temples, mosques, and churches.... You see symbols of religion, you see religious behaviour. Intellectually, I started asking myself open-minded questions, like what does it mean to have faith in visions? That was sort of a bidding process of writing Life of Pi.

Did you ever think Life of Pi could be turned into a movie?
Well, it was a very difficult story to film. It's a complex book, but they had a wonderful director behind it ( Ang Lee), a great studio, who had the money and the means to pull the most difficult and bizarre scenes off. The film is very faithful to the book and it's visually sumptuous.

Why did you choose the name Pi Patel?
In mathematics, Pi is an irrational number which means it's a number that goes on forever. Yet it's constant in science, so we use this irrational number to get to the rational understanding. It's that contradiction that I liked. To me, religion is like that — an irrational number, it doesn't make sense on its own, but it helps make sense of the worl