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An unlikely nation

Ramachandra Guha

Published 02 August 2007

Many predicted that the state of India would fail and that its races and religions would surely not hold together when the British left. But 60 years after independence, the country remains united and mostly democratic. Ramachandra Guha kicks off our special report with a look at the factors behind a miraculous success

Speaking in Cambridge in 1880, a high official of the British Raj named Sir John Strachey said that the "first and most essential thing to learn about India" is that "there is not, and there never was an India". Strachey thought it "conceivable that national sympathies may arise in particular Indian countries", but "that they should ever extend to India generally, that men of the Punjab, Bengal, the Northwestern Provinces, and Madras, should ever feel that they belong to one Indian nation, is impossible".

One hundred and twenty-five years after Strachey issued this verdict, I was driving from Patiala to Amritsar, a day's journey during which I traversed almost the whole breadth of the Indian province of Punjab. Early on, my car was held up by a level crossing. A goods train passed by leisurely, and I read the signs on the wagons - SR, NR, SCR, SER, WR - the "R"standing always for "Railway", the other letters for the different regional branches of India's greatest and most genuinely public-service organisation. In the course of their wanderings over the years, the wagons had got all mixed up, so that one which rightfully belonged to the Northern Railway was placed next to one that was the property of the South Central Railway, and so on.

The train passed, and my car started up again. An hour later we came to the town of Khanna. I knew this to be a famous grain mandi, or market, so I sat up and looked at the signs. One especially struck me: "Indian Bank, Khanna Branch. Head Office: Rajaji Salai, Chennai". The Indian Bank was founded in Madras (now Chennai) in the early 20th century by a group of patriotic entrepreneurs. "Rajaji" was the honorific given to C Rajagopalachari, the great Tamil writer and nationalist who became the first Indian to hold the office of governor general.

These two encounters provided an emphatic repudiation of Strachey's verdict. It was typical that the wagons belonging to different regional branches of Indian Railways had got so messed up; but that there was an Indian Railways to which all those branches owed allegiance signalled a unity amidst the diversity. And that a burly, mutton-eating, whisky-guzzling Sikh farmer in the Punjab would bank his savings in a bank headquartered in Chennai, on a road named for an austere, vegetarian Tamil scholar, was charming beyond words.

The patriot in me warmed to these juxtapositions, but the historian recognised how contingent they were. For India was and is an unnatural nation, a nation that was not supposed to exist, a nation that was never expected to survive. Strachey was merely the first in a long line of British commentators who thought that a united and independent political entity could never successfully be imposed on a land so differentiated by caste, religion, language and region. Winston Churchill, for example, predicted that after the British left the subcontinent, "India will fall back quite rapidly through the centuries into the barbarism and privations of the Middle Ages". He also thought it likely that "an army of white janissaries, officered if necessary from Germany, will be hired to secure the armed ascendancy of the Hindu".

Sixty years after independence, India somehow survives, and the German janissaries are still awaited. But it remains an unnatural nation and, what's more, an unlikely democracy. When the first general election was held in 1952, some 85 per cent of the voters were illiterate. In the west, the vote had been granted in stages, first to men of property, then to men of education, then to all men. Women were able to vote only after a bitter and protracted struggle (in a supposedly advanced country such as Switzerland, the right to vote was withheld from women until as late as 1971). So when Jawaharlal Nehru's government chose to introduce the universal adult franchise, there were plenty of sceptics, some of them home-grown. A Madras editor termed the first elections "the biggest gamble in history". The weekly Organiser, the mouthpiece of the radical Hindu organisation Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, warned against "this precipitate dose of democracy", explaining that Nehru "would live to confess the failure of universal adult franchise in India".

The first general election was followed by another in 1957, and then by a third five years later. Now it was claimed that it was only the will and whim of India's long-serving prime minister that kept India democratic. "When Nehru goes," wrote Aldous Huxley, "the government will become a military dictatorship - as in so many of the newly independent states, for the army seems to be the only highly organised centre of power." When Nehru died in May 1964, the army remained in the barracks while a successor, Lal Bahadur Shastri, was chosen democratically. On his death in January 1966, he, too, was followed by a democratically selected successor. This time it was a woman, Indira Gandhi. A year after assuming office, she led her party into a general election. On the eve of these polls, held in the first months of 1967, the Times of London ran a series of articles entitled "India's disintegrating democracy". The paper's Delhi correspondent, Neville Max well, was certain that "the great experiment of developing India within a democratic framework has failed". Indians, he told his readers, would soon vote in the "fourth - and surely last - general election".

Democracy for the poor

With hindsight it is easy to scoff at these predictions, but at least some of the scepticism was merited. Before India, most nations were constructed on the basis of a shared language, a single religion and a common enemy - or all of the above. This nation, however, had large populations of all the major faiths (it has, for instance, more Christians than Australia and more Muslims than Pakistan), while its citizens spoke many languages, written in different scripts. Also, before India, democracy had never been attempted in a poor and largely illiterate country.

To be sure, Indian unity is not complete. There have been, and still are, major secessionist movements in Kashmir and the north-east. Indian democracy is by no means flawless: while elections are regular, free and fair, there is a great deal of political corruption, and most parties are run like family firms. Deep divisions between rich and poor persist. Yet that it is as united and democratic as it is, is still a minor miracle. Why has it not gone the way of the former Yugoslavia? Or of its neighbour, Pakistan?

Why does a (mostly) united and (somewhat) democratic India survive? Let me offer five reasons, not necessarily in order of importance. The first is the game of cricket, described by the sociologist Ashis Nandy as "an Indian sport accidentally invented by the west". The second is the Hindi film industry, another great popular passion that unites Indians of different languages, faiths and social classes. A third is the territorial bonds imposed by the Himalayas and the oceans, which give the people of the Indian peninsula the sense that they are, on the whole, distinct from the rest of humanity. Fourth, there are some vital unifying legacies of the British, such as the civil service, the army and the English language, which allow goods and people to move more or less peaceably across India, and to traffic with one another.

The fifth, and in my view most crucial, reason why a united and democratic India survives is the constitution. Recognising the distinctiveness of the Indian experiment, this refused to base nationhood on a single religion or language. Nehru, in particular, was insistent that India would not become a "Hindu Pakistan". Likewise, despite the pressure exercised by Hindi zealots, he refused to impose that language on the regions of the south. In later decades, the Indian state has remained committed to secularism, substantially in theory if less surely in practice. The commitment to linguistic pluralism, however, remains substantial in theory as well as in practice.

That unity and pluralism are inseparable in India is graphically expressed in the Indian currency, which has a portrait of Mahatma Gandhi on one side of all banknotes, with the denomination of the note printed in bold in Hindi and English and, in smaller type, in 15 other scripts. Explaining why a single Indian nation was impossible to conceive, Strachey wrote that "you might with as much reason and probability look forward to a time when a single nation will have taken the place of the various nations of Europe". Well, he appears to have been wrong about that, too. For the Republic of India anticipated, by some 50 years, the creation of the European Union as a multilingual political unity with a single currency.

Ramachandra Guha's "India After Gandhi: the History of the World's Largest Democracy" is published by Macmillan (£25)

India timeline 1947-2007

1947 Partition by British into majority Muslim Pakistan and mainly Hindu India

1948 Mahatma Gandhi assassinated by Hindu extremist. First war with Pakistan over disputed territory of Kashmir

1951-52 First general elections won by Congress Party under leadership of Jawaharlal Nehru

1965 Second war over Kashmir

1966 Indira Gandhi becomes India’s first and only female PM

1984 Indira Gandhi assassinated by Sikh bodyguards

1996 Hindu nationalist BJP emerges as largest single party

1998 India carries out nuclear tests, to international condemnation

2003 Kashmir ceasefire

2006 US gives India access to civilian nuclear technology while India agrees to greater scrutiny

2007 Pratibha Patil becomes first woman elected president.

Research by Zain Sardar

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17 comments from readers

stanlee
03 August 2007 at 09:32

As Guha rightly pointed out, the constitution which ensures linguistic and religious pluralism, plays a crucial role in Indian democracy. Contrary to the predictions of many political greats and political scientists, this diverse country survived many internal threats, thanks to the forefathers who emphasized secular values. But, despite all the uniting factors, from cricket to bolliwood movies as Gha argues, this country is still a divided house. Apart from the insurgency in Kashmir and North East, the secular constitution faces a major challenge from the right wing fundamentalists, who could even manage to rule this country through coalition politics. Thanks to the diverse social structure of the Hindu society, the fanatics are still not able to become a very serious threat to the republic. The north-south divide and the linguistic and religious issues still dominate the political and social discourses in this country. Nobody can predict the future of a country that too a miraculous diverse land like India.

chandrap99
03 August 2007 at 22:10

To tell about India it have Italian cobbler as the ruler of the country and puppet , corrupt and incompetent lady as president of the country. It is women’s century but not such bad and incompetent women can rule a country like India. There are so many millions of poor people. most corrupt people, politicians, bureaucrats and engineers. This is real India.

chandrap99
03 August 2007 at 22:16

To tell about India it has Italian cobbler as the ruler of the country and puppet , corrupt and incompetent lady as president of the country. It is women’s century but not such bad and incompetent women can rule a country like India. There are so many millions of poor people. most corrupt people, politicians, bureaucrats and engineers. This is real India.

Average Hindu
04 August 2007 at 14:41

I see how author doesn't mention that Hinduism plays an important factor in the countries unity but then its not suprising with the hatered against Hinduism these days.

kalyan
05 August 2007 at 03:38

It is not as though Nehru put India together. Why do we not concede the fact that the Hindu religion is what holds this together as one nation? Our brand of secularism is odd indeed!

JakeMilton
07 August 2007 at 06:53

As Indian ruling class become pro-American by making their country a client state to big capital, the media starts to paint a rosy picture about India. From New Scientist to New Statesman, the print media is serving their masters by making their readers believe that some miracle is unfolding in the sub continent due to the pro market policies followed by the present rulers. All these stories are very far from reality. With unashamedly corrupt beuracracy and judiciary, India looks more like a prison of nationalities and a brutal police state than a functioning Third World democracy.

Harish Vidya
07 August 2007 at 08:47

MR JAKE MILTON surely you do not really believe that The New Statesman is a part of the American establishment. Now that is really news to us all. Mr Milton there is nothing like the rage and fury of a dissappointed humanity. Grow up man and start accepting reality. India this time is really on the move and for us Indians the sky is the limit and if you cannot accept this then you are free to live in your little world of bigotry and prejudice. Police state did you say? Do you even know the meaning of it. Your types might still want us wogs to live in poverty and dispair so that you can jeer and sneer at us but I can assure you my dear chap that we are in no mood to oblige you. Yes India has its problems and many of them and all developing and transitional societies go through these problems but there is a determination to overcome these. Were Western societies all straightaway born into enlightenment Mr Milton? Did your forefothers not go through the process of transition and reformation?

Good luck Mr Milton and you may wish otherwise but I can assure you that we Indians are here to stay and take our rightful place in the world,which is amongst the top nations of the world.

shouvikdatta
07 August 2007 at 22:13

The India timeline (1947-2007) is selective. It misses out the 1970s, a crucial period in Indian democracy.

In June 1975, the Allahabad High Court declared Indira Gandhi's election to her own seat to have been illegal because of irregularities in election financing. Indira Gandhi's response to the court ruling, was to declare a state of emergency. She could and did arrest members of India's lower house (Lok Sabha) without giving grounds for doing so under the terms of India's Maintenance of Internal Security Act.

The government imposed censorship on the press, Indian and global. The Times correspondent was expelled from India (July 1975) for refusing to abide by emergency regulations, along with the correspondents for the Daily Telegraph and Newsweek.

Indira Gandhi's government proceeded to implement a sterilization programme aimed at India's poor in the name of population control which proved to be unpopular. This continued until 1977, when she held an election, and Congress (I) (for Indira) was voted out of power.

Th Emergency period shows that dictatorship is by no means inconceivable in what has been for most of its independence, a normally democratic country.

JakeMilton
08 August 2007 at 01:22

Harish Vidya!

Your comment is so emotional like a Bollywood movie! I simply don't understand if your country is really on the move, why every middle class Indian is trying head over heels to grab a chance to get out of the country to greener pastures. I wonder every Indian on the streets would agree with your comments about their motherland. India survives just because of the patience of the average Indian and not because of the boundless greed of its middle class.

Thanks for telling me about New Statesman!

avtarjeet
08 August 2007 at 16:08

Thanks to New Statesman for commissioning special features for the issue. India has many problems, just name the few: 1. Over population, that creates over-consumption of all the resources and opportunities, and creates corruption. 2. Education, its not only the lack of it, but those who can afford to get it, it gives them just enough to get a job, if one is lucky, but doesn't make them good citizens. This is the kind of education was created by the British, and no government has taken to challenge to change it. There is NO 'Social & Personal Education'; that would make them good citizens. I am not surprized that should the borders open to migrate to the West, I think half the population will leave India.

On the other those who have already settled abroad, still long to be in India. Surely there is something India offers that can't be replaced by economic prosperity the West offers. It is not the cricket, not the English language, not the Hindi films, as Ramachanran Guha has counted, but deeper understanding of life that un-written Indian philosophy, culture that is part of everyday life, just the smell of the soil that connects us to the land where one is born, that is what holds India together and will continue to do. When I say half the population will migrate abroad, given the chance, but they will soon find out that what economic prosperity West offers is a price, what money won't buy it.

Avtarjeet Dhanjal (more at www.haraf.com)

Harish Vidya
08 August 2007 at 21:28

Dear Jake Milton,

I think your mindset is typical of a racist leftist envious little bigot. There is a very thin line between an extreme frustrated leftist and a extreme rightist,deep hatred for wogs like me being the common bonding. A wog doing well in life! now that is unacceptable for your types. For your information according to opinion polls in India most middle class Indians prefer to live in India and not migrate elsewhere. Many Indians settled abroad are now returning back to India. Get your facts right. You seem to be a very frustrated little mind who has perhaps achived very little in life and now deeply resent the wogs doing well in life. Even Bollywood villians are better that your types.

JakeMilton
09 August 2007 at 13:07

HV

I don't know where did you get the report saying that every Indian is returning India. The truth is, when one Indian returning home, ten want to get out ( as techno- coolies). If they are really doing as you boast, thank God the streets in the other countries become cleaner.

GideonPolya
12 August 2007 at 04:57

The bottom-line measure of the success or otherwise of any public policy is avoidable death (avoidable mortality, excess death, deaths that should not have happened) (see: http://globalavoidablemortality.blogspot.com/ ). In 1947 the annual death rate in India under the British was a genocidal 3.5% but over 6 decades of post-Independence this has shrunk to a current 0.85% - still well above the roughly 0.4% it should be for a high birth rate society but a VAST improvement over the awful British Raj conditions (see “Body Count. Global avoidable mortality since 1990”, G.M. Polya, Melbourne, 2007 (copies in the British Library and other major libraries): http://globalbodycount.blogspot.com/ ).

Nevertheless India has not done nearly as well in removing endemic poverty as China: 1950-2005 Indian excess mortality was 352 million (2005 population 1097 million) as compared to 156 million for China (2005 population 1322 million). It can be estimated that avoidable deaths under 2 centuries of brutal British rule totaled 1.5 billion (see: http://mwcnews.net/content/view/5668/26/ ).

The current (2003 figures) annual excess deaths in India total 3.7 million as compared to zero for China (this arising from a combination of lack of democratic will, Russian Communist-derived economic inefficiencies, inherited British class-based unresponsiveness and caste-based unresponsiveness in India versus an ideological commitment of the Chinese authorities to abolish endemic poverty).

India has done very well post-Independence but could do much better when compared to China. Indian media and politicians inherited the same stultifying dishonesty of mainstream Western media and political Establishments. Just as the British continue to ignore the horrendous reality of the WW2 Bengal Famine (4 million victims, horrendous military and civilian sexual violation of starving women and girls; a 1940s demographic deficit in Bengal of 10 million; possibly due to a deliberate “scorched earth policy by Britain to stop Japanese invasion; and deliberately rubbed out of history by several generations of lying, racist, British historians, writers and politicians) (see “Jane Austen and the Black Hole of British History”, G.M. Polya, Melbourne, 1998 (copies in the British Library and other major libraries) : http://janeaustenand.blogspot.com/ and Colin Mason, “A Short History of Asia”, Macmillan, London, 2000), so India continues to effectively ignore endemic poverty.

My heroine Arundhati Roy has explained this sustained media and politician LYING by omission thus: “the ultimate privilege of the élite is not just their deluxe lifestyles, but deluxe lifestyles with a clear conscience.”(Arundhati Roy in “The Chequebook and the Cruise Missile”, Harper Perennial, London, 2004). India can and must do better but South Asia is now facing the horrendous prospect of climate genocide from Western climate criminals (notably the huge greenhouse gas polluters and Kyoto non-signatories the US and Australia (see “War on Terra, Climate Criminals, “Terra” Painting”: http://mwcnews.net/content/view/15671/42/ ).

rkval
14 August 2007 at 03:10

H.V

You should grow up and take real view of the world. I'm living in the US for the last 9 yrs. Attended school and working now. Media portrays a pretty picture once a while. Both in India and US. Media portrayal is synchronous sometimes which is very unusual. You would know if you lived outside India. US portrays a real bad picture of India. A year back for instance they scared everybody saying India has more number of AIDS patients than Africa and thats only tip of iceberg. Now they seem to have some contracts in sight for technology transfer. Basically Big money from India into American Coffers. Surprisingly now the new reports show AIDS is far below what is predicted before. Americans know how to exploit India and Indians. Cheap labor in technology? .. yes thats true but its peanuts compared to the money they make and services they get.

Jake grow up. You do not have to act immature just because someone does not get your point. American streets are decent because of us. We do not rape women like the soldiers that are sent abroad. I will stop at that and not mention which soldiers. I agree you are correct. Its hard to make some Indians understand the reality. Indians go ot of the country to work. But its the economics and finance that prevents most people from going back. Most immigrants like myself are at crossroads in life. In financial crisis. Job crisis. And immigration Dept makes matters worse by holding people by their balls literally without offering permament residency easily.

clas1981
14 August 2007 at 06:59

As an Indian, i am happy this "so called" incompetent democracy is still rolling. But, i wont go overboard telling that "present India" is an emerging tiger or tigress, as they always refer to. There are so many problems to address, every other month there are thousands of farmers dying, there is internal migration happening in our land in an unprecedent way. Villages, which were supposed to be the livewire of India is slowly disintegrating - Agriculture is not anymore a livelyhood or can i call it something like "suicidehood"?? The onslaught of liberalisation has obviously brought in some money for a section, but as stiglitz say, trickle down economics rarely work. Indian national Congress, the biggest Indian party has lost its Ideology, the new leaders cavort the unprecedent growth while knowigly hiding the disparity. Yes, Guha is correct, withstanding the Inherent challenges this democracy has thrived. It is not a police state which strip everyother citizen with their CCTV's. we have not reached there, but it can happen soon, if we side with the Paranoic west and complying to there standards.

minunepal
19 August 2007 at 16:38

I really hope that the economic growth continues in India. India and China are spectacular countries, and were great civilizations. The potential for them to rise again and obtain their rightful share in the world economy is there and bound to happen. What is a century in nations that are thousands of years old?As for India, despite the problems, it is the most tolerant nation, too tolerant I would say-even muslims there do not want to go to Pakistan because they are better off there economically and enjoy better freedoms. It is the old Hindu way of tolerance that absorbed and tolerated all religions that came there-with the exception of Islam which came by force as it did in all nations in which it was imposed. There are problems with caste--but that is going to take care of itself with more economic prosperity--you cannot expect such old institutions to change overnight. It took the West several hundred years for democracy to take root. Considering the multitude of races and ethnic groups living together in India-clearly it is and has been a melting pot--before America ever was. What will hold India together is the old Hindu tolerance and way of life. All I can hope is that these countries develop in a less destructive fashion than the West, with respect for life and the environment-that it will take the good things from the West and combine the ceaseless activity of the West with the Hindu and Buddhist contemplative attitude towards life.

arunakhya_roy
02 March 2008 at 23:29

Mr Milton,

There is a saying " Little Knowledge is a dangerous thing". During the middle of the 18th century the GDP of India was the largest in the world. India was always at the forefront of civilisation it was only in the last 300 hundred years that she lost her way. However most people in the west in their prejudice does not recognise this instead they promote a myopic version of history that does not go back more that 300 years as an accurate discription of a civilisation that is 5000 years old and if new evidence have to be believed then Indian civilisation dates back 10000 years before any known settlement in the world. In other words we invented civilised life. However your prejudiced opinion that is only based over western achievements of 300-400 years old will make you believe, and look at India as an impoverished third world country. We had the largest GDP in the world 300 years back and in a 30 more years from now will probably have the largest GDP in the world again. However I am not quite sure that low IQ men like you will ever be able to live without the intellectual straight jacket that makes you prejudiced and incapable of a rational thought process. By the way even Jesus learnt of enlightenment from India.

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