INTELLECTUALS, THE SOCIETY AND THE STATE
DR. MULK RAJ ANAND
There
is a phrase of Percy Bysshe Shelley, which has almost become a cliche in our
time, describing the poet as “the un-acknowledged legislator of mankind.”
The
fact that Shelley felt constrained to define the writer’s position in this
manner was due to his apperception of the rights of a sensitive private
individual against the contempt of society and the then growing encroachment of
the State on the freedom of the individual. As everyone knows, Shelley himself
had been expelled from Oxford and was so much despised for his dangerous
thoughts in 19th century England that he spent the best part of his life on the
continent of Europe.
His
poem “The Revolt of Islam” sums up fairly clearly the position of a free spirit
of the period of the industrial revolution, when the English middle class achieved
supreme power in the home country and a good deal of influence abroad through
the expansion of the British Empire.
The
essence of Shelley’s gospel is that, though the writer serves as the conscience
of humanity, precisely because he utters the deepest truths on its behalf, and
thus appeals to the hearts and minds of men, the State, as the expression of
organised society, always tends to inhibit the poet’s felt realisations, to
choke his voice in the name of the establishment and a conformist orthodoxy,
and to suppress criticism, because, it says: “Those who are not with us are
against us.”
The
poignancy of Shelley’s struggle lies in the fact that he was an intellectual,
who grew up in the midst of a comparatively free, liberal, middle class and not
under a dictatorship.
So it is clear that if the conflict between the State and writer arises even in the so-called
democratic States, it is inevitable under the dictatorships. There are quite a few obvious reasons for the natural emergence of this conflict in almost
all known societies.
First of all, the laws of society
are made by ordinary men for ordinary men. And the poet, generally being the
more sensitive and weaker, but extraordinary creature, who plumbs into the
wells of loneliness and brings up unsuspected truths, is not despised and
feared. He will say the most outrageous things, in words which describe
feelings, emotions and thoughts felt by him as well as by other people but
which he alone has the courage to say openly. In so far as he thus shows up the
hypocrisies of other people, he is not a very pleasant fellow to contend with.
And, furthermore, because he reiterates his faith in the real life as against
the shame, subterfuges and shibboleths of the existing order, against rigid
dogmas, pompous of stuffed up hardened ‘strong’ individuals, from the point of
view of the tentative, the weak and humble folk, his priggish insistence is
unwelcome to those who would rather not face the truth not known to them, the
complex inner truth of literature which even the poet himself may not be able
to explain because it comes from the deeps inside him.
In the second place, it is true of
all organised States which have so far been known in history, that “power
corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely”, and that all
governments are, at their best, bad governments, from the very
nature of their control, by politicians who must maintain themselves in power
somehow or the other. In this context, the law-givers, from the author of the Arthasastra to Machiavelli, left no doubt
whatever about what feudal princely regimes ought to do to keep the people
down. The whole tradition of Roman Law, on which are based most of the modern
systems of jurisprudence, rests on the foundations of the principle of “rendering
unto Caesar the things that are Caesar’s”, without showing much obligation on
the part of Caesar to render unto people the things that are the people’s. And,
in the development of the modern capitalist State, into Fascism on the one hand
and Stalinist tyranny on the other, whatever pretences may be made in the name
of the people, the power State has grown more and more omnivorous and
comprehensive in its control of thoughts, and thus of the thinker, who is, from
the very nature of his being, different from others, perverse, if you like, but certainly relentless in
the pursuit of reality.
Thirdly, in the present tensions,
produced by all those complex factors, and generated by the various cold and
hot wars, the long arm of the state has tightened control on the press, and
publishing everywhere (through both indirect and direct means),
and, with the help of commercialism,
dammed up the distribution and flow of new and genuine creative
works between nations and nations. Thus truthful utterance finds difficulty in being expressed. And the
men of truth are either brought up by privilege and money, or by those who own the means of mass
communication, so that they speak half-truths, or quarter-truths, or are put on
the shelf as safe men and women, knights or prize-winners or members of the
upper houses of the State.
The “crisis of conscience” which we see before us resides, then,
mainly, in the situation about, the treatment of almost all original thought as
“dangerous thought.” All opposite opinion is supposed to belong to the enemy
camp, in the intolerance generated by fanatical sectional, orthodox minds,
obsessed by the rightness of their own dogmatic religions, condemning others
for differences of opinion based on
caste or race or colour. In recent years, we have seen various States denying
visas to those who say there shall be no war, thus preventing enlightened
individuals from meeting, lest they might influence each other about such fundamental
truths and values as can be held in common by private individuals.
If what has been said above
approximates to any extent with the actual situation subsisting between the
writer and the various States, then the less control there is by the State on the intellectuals the better it is for both of them.
For, it may be possible that the way for the writer is to enjoy
maximum freedom, even if this freedom makes him oppose the tenets of a
particular State, because, so far, much
of the intellectual advance which has been made by humanity is through the free thoughts of the freest minds of
every particular age. And, though the State has seemed always to win in the
immediate present, it always earned enough obloquy after the event. Nobody
condemns Socrates for his loose talk, but
everyone resents those who made him drink the hemlock; hardly anyone has a good
word for those who killed Galileo; and there are few, even among the Fascists
and the Communists, who will condemn the crimes of Hitler and Stalin against the intellectuals. Thus, the
intellectual tends to be justified by posterity, for what was once supposed to
be wrong but was really more right than the routine popular opinion, or
habitual thinking as the future proved it to be.
The far-sighted vision of the writer
should, therefore, mean the sanctioning the widest liberties for him. And those
who love liberty should not be frightened of license. Nobody should be held criminally responsible for writing a work of imagination
in which metaphor and imagery dominate, where nothing is literal, and where the
author creates many characters who often say things which the author himself
may or may not believe qua author,
but which represent the new flow of a freer age.
It might be alleged by the
apologists for the State that, as the ordinary laws apply to all other
individuals, they should apply equally to the intellectual, and that social
responsibility is as much part of his obligations as it is of the ordinary
citizen.
I believe, that, as the laws of the
modern State are mostly based on several antediluvian and obscurantist
hypotheses, relevant to societies with quite different economic and social
relations and moralities other than those we ourselves need, these laws are
often not binding up ordinary individuals. They must come under constant
criticism in a democracy, so that they can be reformed and brought up-to-date
to meet the contingencies of an evolving humanity, where the breakthrough
between the imagination of men to men, for creating understanding and contact,
and for future psycho-social growth is important. The fact that a man’s hand
can be cut off in punishment for the crime of stealing, even today, or that a
hostile look in the eyes of a person can be punished with liquidation by a
dictator, or that a traveller has to give finger-prints on entering a country,
or an untouchable burnt for stealing some coins are all obsolete survivals of
the age of the witch-hunt, which cannot stand the test of intellectual scrutiny.
And as already in the 19th century, the most enlightened thinkers tended
towards the doctrine of the ultimate withering away of the State, as the only
civilised solution of the conflict between the individual and the State, all
steps which lead in that direction ought to be accepted as minimum starting points, in any new State
much as our own Indian socialist democracy with distinction. And, by this token,
the intellectual, who will be in the vanguard of this struggle to achieve the
intensest consciousness, should enjoy the greatest liberty, and not be judged
from the point of view of the Public Prosecutor, whose tests are generally
legalistic fictions and who cannot be expected to understand literary metaphor,
symbolism and fantasy, or the freer future built or new concepts of equality
and expansion of consciousness.
Unfortunately, however, the suggestion that the State
should have as little
control over the writer
as possible in a technically backward emergent
society, is not easily
practicable. I realise that even
the existence of a new State
created by a revolution against
feudal and Imperial rule, is under the threat of subversion by remnants of the ghosts of the dead orders. There are various functions which the State under the new conditions of the post-freedom period, like those obtaining in India, has to fulfil in creating
the mechanics of culture.
As the
Central Indian State was first led by
a man whose benevolence and
tolerance distinguished him
from many of the other world politicians,
and the direction of our Government-sponsored institutions has been, by and large, towards
autonomy, the widest
collaboration has been ensured between the State and the writer. The most effective check,
however, against the several
attempts of this direction may
be in achieving full autonomy for these institutions, provided
the badly lacking finances are always available from the State without political strings attached.
In order to ensure adequate
growth to these bodies towards
autonomy, independent commissions should be set up, from time to time, to examine their functioning and to secure their integrity.
The creation
of other autonomous private organisations of intellectuals, at least for discussion and exchange, may help the academies rather than hinder them in their growth,
because the amateur and the professional groups, who are not eligible to
the academies, for one reason or the other, can express their urges and achieve recognition for their ideas by the State-sponsored institutions, as also help to extend
the range of these institutions.
Similarly, the coming of the National Book Trust
does supply the mechanics
for the production of books on a mass scale, which no private initiative can bring
about under the conditions in which the language and literature of
India were left by alien rule.
This depends, however, on the spirit in which the National Book Trust
functions, that is to say, the extent
to which it can involve the private publishers and benefit them with assured, small, reasonable profits, without discrimination, and thus pronl0te the pecuniary interests of writers and publishers.
One of
the areas where the Indian State has intervened arbitrarily is in regard to alleged obscene books,
paintings and films. Both the Centre, and some of the
States, have banned works which have been allowed to be published in several
countries or the world. The reason for these shameful actions often given is
that the Law of Obscenity which applied under foreign rule has not been
revised. But, beyond that lame excuse, is the fact that the standards from
which even people in our country often judge works to be obscene are outmoded
survivals of our feudal past, when the attitude towards sex was governed by the
fear of rape, torture and assault of invaders from outside. The resulting
subjugation of women, and the denial of the beauty of sexual relations, and of
tenderness between the male and the female, through arranged marriage to guard
virginity, has led to a national psychosis in which all frank talk of sex is
supposed to be obscene. The puritanism of the Christian Church has also
rigidified the obscurantist attitudes of the local orthodoxies. The recent
discussions about allowing “kissing” in films, if this is organic to the theme,
has shown that even the intelligentsia is being offered to justify the ban of
kissing in the country which produced the tenderness of the classical art of
Khajuraho and Konarak, and where Vatsyayana wrote the Kama Sutra.
The alliance of the
establishment with the conservative religions is utterly reprehensible and
unworthy of the heirs of Kalidasa, Bhavabhuti and Bhartruhari. There is obvious
in our whole country a lack of dynamic in the minds of men for the creation or
a new way of life. This dynamic can only be produced by the high pressure, bold
thinking and writing of contemporary intellectuals, aware of the subtle and
long-range influence of enlightened ideas on the body politic. Without making
culture subservient to the State in any manner, it could, in fact, be made the
primary concept in which the projects of the plans would figure as an important
part. For, after all, the development of the individuals should be the
inspirations behind planning, and not the making of the State power more
important than it is at present.
At the moment, there is hardly any
mention of culture even in the Education Commission Report, and what mechanics
of culture have been offered as those which are inevitable, to the bureaucratic
concepts of culture which can decorate power and glory. An organic cultural
development demands, for instance, that the mechanics of theatre,
culture-centre, museum, and such other forms be immediately multiplied by the
State, so that culture may grow, through healthy competition. There is however, as yet little realisation
among the planners that in the modern age the processes of culture are as
essential as bread and water, or more essential in view of the inroads made by advanced technologies on the life
of the individual. The framers
of our plan seem not to be aware that if
there are no checks and balances through
the cultural evolution against the inevitable coming of an industrial
society, then the horrors of the commercialist West may be visited upon our own people in a far worse form than in
Europe and America.
It is unlikely these and other
criticisms of the direction can
be
made unless the intellectuals themselves take up the struggle for the fundamental right of free
expression, embodied in our constitution. The intelligentsia seems negligent,
frightened and busy with internecine warfare for power, money and
position. For this reason, whatever the difficulties of finding a balanced
relationship between the writer and the State, this relationship has to be
built by those who believe in
free expression, On the basis of absolute independence and mutual respect and
absence of fear of discrimination and revenge in case the writer’s ideas turn out
to be wholly critical of the
State and even antagonistic to it. And some responsive connection for
generosity and nobility from both sides, the State and the writer is asked for.
Certainly, the present situation requires
courage from the writer.