Sixty yrs of democracy in India, The Nation (Thailand) August 16, 2007
By Shashi Tharoor,
former under secretary-general of the United Nations.
Copyright: Project
Syndicate 2007
Independent India came into being as
flames blazed across the land, corpse-laden trains crossed the new frontier
with Pakistan,
& weary refugees abandoned everything to seek a new life. A less propitious
start for a fledgling nation could scarcely be imagined.
Yet, six decades later, the India that emerged from
the wreckage of the British Raj is the world's largest democracy, poised after yrs of
rapid economic growth to take its place as one of the giants of the 21st
century. A country whose very survival seemed in doubt at its founding offers
striking lessons in constructing, against all odds, a working democracy. No other
country embraces such an extraordinary profusion of ethnic groups, mutually
incomprehensible languages, religions, & cultural practices, as well as
variations of topography, climate, & levels of economic development.
In 1947, India's leaders faced a
country with a million dead, 13 million displaced, billions of rupees worth of
property damage, & the wounds of sectarian violence still bleeding. Given
this, & the challenges of administering a new country, integrating the
"princely states" into the Indian Union, & reorganising the
divided armed forces, they could have been forgiven for demanding dictatorial
powers.
But India made a strength out
of its major weakness. To the American motto, "E Pluribus Unum", India could only counter,
"E Pluribus Pluribum". Instead of suppressing its diversity in the
name of national unity, India acknowledged its
pluralism in its institutional arrangements: all groups, faiths, tastes, &
ideologies survive & contend for their place in the sun.
This wasn't always easy. India suffered caste
conflicts, clashes over the rights of different linguistic groups, religious
riots (mainly between Hindus & Muslims), & separatist threats. Despite
many stresses & strains, India has remained a freewheeling
multi-party democracy - corrupt & inefficient,
perhaps, but nonetheless flourishing.
It helped that India's founding fathers,
from Mahatma Gandhi on, were convinced democrats. India's first &
longest-serving prime minister (PM), Jawaharlal Nehru, spent his political
career instilling in his people the habits of democracy: disdain for
dictators, respect for parliamentary procedures, & abiding faith in the
constitutional system.
As PM, Nehru carefully nurtured the
country's infant democratic institutions by showing them respect, even
deference. For example, on the one occasion that he publicly criticised a
judge, he apologised the next day & wrote an abject letter to India's chief justice.
Though there was no serious challenger to his authority, Nehru never forgot
that he derived his power from India's people, to whom he
remained astonishingly accessible.
By his personal example, democratic
values became so entrenched that when his own daughter, Indira Gandhi,
suspended India's freedoms in 1975
with a 21-month state of emergency, she felt compelled to return to the Indian
people for vindication. Having imbibed the most important of her father's
values, she held a free election, which she overwhelmingly lost.
Though Indian politics is hardly
immune to the appeal of sectarianism, its people have come to accept the idea
of India as one land
embracing many differences of caste, creed, colour, culture, cuisine,
conviction, costume, & custom, yet still rallying around a democratic
consensus. The heart of that consensus is the simple principle that you don't
need to agree all the time - except on the ground rules about how you can
disagree.
India has survived all the
challenges that have beset it for 60 yrs because it has maintained a consensus
on how to manage without consensus.
For example, India permits all
religions to flourish while ensuring that none is privileged by the state. This
includes the granting of group rights, under which Muslims are governed by
their own personal law, distinct from the common civil code. If America is a melting-pot, then India is a thali, a
selection of sumptuous dishes in different bowls. Each tastes different, &
does not necessarily mix with the next, but all belong on the same plate.
No one speaks seriously any more of
the danger of disintegration. Separatist movements in far-flung places like
Tamil Nadu & Mizoram have been quietly defused by a simple formula:
yesterday's secessionists become today's chief ministers (the equivalent of
provincial or state governors) & tomorrow's opposition leaders.
Moreover, democracy in India is not an elite
preoccupation, but matters most to the underprivileged masses. Whereas in the US, a majority of the poor do not vote, turnout
in Harlem was 23% in the last presidential election - in India the poor turn out in
great numbers.
As a result, the explosive potential
of caste division also has been channelled through the ballot box, with the
lowest of the low attaining high office. Mayawati, an "untouchable"
woman, has ruled India's most populous state,
Uttar Pradesh, as chief minister three times, & now enjoys a secure
majority.
More generally, the logic of the
electoral marketplace means that no single communal identity can dominate
others. 3 yrs ago, India, a country that is 81%
Hindu, saw a Catholic political leader (Sonia Gandhi) make way for a Sikh
(Manmohan Singh), who was sworn in by a Muslim (President Abdul Kalam). By
contrast, the world's oldest democracy, the US,
has yet to elect a president who is not white, male, & Christian.
Democracy has sustained an India that safeguards the
common space available to each identity. That idea has knit together a country
that many thought would not survive, & whose 60th birthday, yesterday, is
therefore well worth celebrating.