Wednesday, January 1, 2014

What does India still need to learn from its history?

We are more often than not referred to as a ‘fractured and frantic species moving down the path of destruction.’ It’s surprising how easily people say that, and what is more surprising is the number of people who would readily agree to such a preposterous proposition. It is like the society is not left with any more flesh at all. It’s is as if the bones that are meant to hold us up are the only things we are left with. And when no hope is left, we turn around and ask a question. A question that bears an almost equal stupidity in terms of what is and what isn’t tangible. “Did we learn something from our past?”.
Aristotle once said, “a man can never cross a river twice, because the river will never be the same, nor will be the man” and though lesser quoted in various places, this is probably one of the most important quotes of the century second only to of course, “we haven’t intertied this planet from our ancestors, we have borrowed it from our children”. The problem that we as a population face change day by day. Our forefathers had the luxury of having a fairly constant scene of quite some years. That made learning easy. You had what was essentially a textbook field. Which is why textbooks were successful in the first place. As time went by and we entered the post modernistic era, we stand in a dynamic world where problems change by the minute and what we read yesterday becomes redundant before the date can change and that is what makes learning form the past mistakes a task that is not only intellectually changeling but also taxing to the society at the same time. Taking lessons from the past would mean vulnerability to circumstances that don’t even exist today. I am not dwelling upon a proposition for completely discarding history but the trouble still remains that a lot of what we experienced yesterday is experience that today is almost useless. This can be substantiated from the fact that a lot of corporations today are complaining about the employability of students once they finish their education. Companies are of the opinion that the students today are only qualified on paper and that the real world problems are too much trouble for their tiny little brains.
These factors hurt us even more when we have a developing country to feed. Not only do we have more frequently changing problems, we are also short of the solutions that others have access to due to a relatively stable economy. This unstable economy is something that cannot be cured overnight and something whose solutions are not referred to in the history that we have lived. Coming back to our point, the introduction might have made it clear that I believe that the solutions to our problems today cannot be directly derived from the happenings in the past. Neither do we have books and epics that can grant an exit in the form of a poetic magnum opus. The learnings that we can derive though are different and I will sought some liberty in terms of defining problems and solutions as and when we progress along this essay. That shouldn’t be much of a pain for conventional wisdom has anyways abandoned us and a different purview is all that we probably need.
Let us first define what ‘country’ we are talking about. This involves not only the Republic of India and all the terrain and exclusive economic zones covered hence but also the countries that we are in relations with. (That’s pretty much the entire world but still a certain set can definitely be defined.) This change in definition becomes essential because several favors rendered by countries to each other today are in some way or the other a form of barter when either now or at a point of time in future we shall be expected to pay them back even if it costs us our integrity. This being said, their problem and shortcoming become our headache as well to quite some extent. Let’s move on to the secondary domain of the problem that we have. This is the domain of the stakeholders. Now the stakeholders in the country are not only the people who reside in it and hold nationality but are also the ones who indulge in any kind of trade relations or other interactions that positively or negatively affects the nation. So we have an almost clear picture about where to look for the problem and centering whom we should deal with. It is most irrelevant in abstract sense as the domain is too large. But let’s look at it from a very objective point of view in the following section.
The world as a whole had changed over time and what has changed it more than anything else is communication. The way that we converse and the speed at which news from all around the world travels to places has changed. This causes a special problem for the target group we have in study here. We have always been relatively backwards in terms of technological or social growth when we look at the last two centuries. Backwards relative to the living standards of the west and the advancements in their social structures. Now this isn’t really a problem until the comparison starts. We have a state where the communication about advancements is so fast the people start expecting great things from everywhere all at once and it is a fact hard accepted in the realm of sociology that not all news is supposed to be taken seriously by a society. We as a nation have started expecting way too much out of our social fabric while the amount of maturity required in the foundation of our social structure has yet not reached a point where it can cope with that change. This leads us to where we are today. The potential as an economic and technological giant that we see in ourselves isn’t exactly flawed but it is to some extent wrongly approached.
This is where learnings from the past come into play. Let’s start by talking about the trend of development in the world vis-à-vis the national growth. The world got automobiles somewhere back in the 19th century. India on the other hand had the first locomotive place somewhere in the late 19th century. The world saw its first flight in 1903 by the Wright Brothers. India on the other hand still extensively used bullock carts till the first quarter of the 20th century. Automobiles did make an advent and with a lot of panache but they were what 100 acre mansions today are for a common man. It’s not really the question of how fast the world moved than it is about how fast we coped up. As we move to the post-independence era, we saw the slow growth of most industries under strict governmental control while the rest of the world had already hit full scale industrial revolution, and that too privatized in the early 20th century. This was also one of the reasons why the first and the second world wars were able to move to such a large scales.
Now move to the very recent history where in less than a year of the launch of the curiosity rover, we have launched the world most cost efficient mars mission. We still haven’t been able to land on the planet but nevertheless the leap was large and gained appreciation from all over the world. We are catching up, but we are doing so in a very polarized manner. Our advancements in all the fields are fast and promising but they aren’t exactly ours. It is like taking pills for power because the body can’t generate anymore of itself.
What we need to learn from the past is to slow down a little and rethink where we are going. Where we as a country need to be and what we want ourselves to be in the next 50 years. Being caught up in the global turmoil is not going to cause us any good. It will instead make a scapegoat out of the country for its resources and push us further into the past. That is a very caustic statement to make but it will most probably be the violent result of the actions that we decide upon today. When we look at brain drain as a socio-economic problem for the slowdown of the nation’s growth, we must also realize that the motivating factors for emigration are not only individual selfishness based but have a greater social grounding. The dent in drapes of delusional reality hit upon us when we take a closer look at the emigration trends over the last few decades. But let us not delve into those numbers as they will not provide much insight into where we want our learnings to come from. Rather, let’s have a look at the way we have changed the way we look at things. Consumer goods today have a very polarized trend in our country. They are mainly marketed on the basis of two properties. First is the fact that they have been developed in or R&D in insert-developed-country-name-here or second, that they have been made from insert-name-of-indigenous-never-heard-about-jungle-here. Nowhere else do we find the distinction based upon made in your country vs. not made in your country. And the surprising thing is that both of them equally sell well. Figures of the same are out of the scope of this essay but are readily available in the public domain. And the selling trends for both have seen a divide in the class of people who buy them and this has a direct relation with the availability of the products. When FMCG goods of non-indigenous making were not readily available, their commercials featured scenes that would appeal to the elite while today the exact opposite has happened and a trend of the more ‘so called knowledgeable’ people is to go for goods made with as little machine intervention as possible. Funny as it may sound, the Mughal and British rule has superimposed a sense of ‘elite in rarity’ than in ‘quality’ amongst us. We need to rewind to times that we have forgotten already and peek to where we had a perception that was truly rational. Times when we were intelligent enough to make paths from dense forests than to follow on the paths already laid by narcissists and nitwits of a totally different level. We need to look at what wrong this form of government has done to us and to our thinking in the name of democracy. We need to put the right people in the right places and put or money where our heart is. This is not only a talk about idealistic restructuring. It is more about reorienting what we as a nation want. Incentives have been our sole drivers as we have been oppressed for several centuries altogether now. We need to remove that tarnish and find the true spirit that lies beneath.
And how do we do it? Glorify the government. Make defenses more desirable as a profession, put governmental autonomy into the right hands and have the judiciary run on interpretive-constitution and not on bull-heading into notions. What we need more than anything today, in times of a crisis where we as a nation might lose our identity, is to make sure that we know who we are and what we can do if we look at the right places within and around us. As I said before, being in a world where things change by the minute, it is simply not possible to adopt a game plan right from the past and throw it over the present. But what we can derive out of the times past is the motivation that brought us here and that which can lead us forward.
As a note of conclusion, all that I would like to say is, we don’t need to follow developments that happen around us but we need to rise above them and particularly avoid disrupting elements. Kill anything that comes in way and use the corpse to cross the mud. Extremism is not quite advisable for a democracy, but sometimes, we have to do what is necessary. As Dante rightly said in his works, “the darkest places in hell are reserved for those who maintain their neutrality in times of a moral crisis”. We are at the cross roads of that crisis. What we do from here onwards will matter not only to us but to all the generations yet to come. So let’s look back, correct and move on.


Parth Trivedi