TRIVENI’
HAS SHED LIGHT ON MY PATH.
BLESSED BE HER NAME!
‘THE
TRIPLE STREAM’ 1
By K. RAMAKOTISWARA RAU
The Nehru Tradition
In
the context of the present complications in international affairs and the acute
rivalry between the American and Soviet blocs, the tradition of dynamic
neutrality established by Prime Minister Nehru is of the utmost value. India
has emerged as an independent entity pledged to a policy of peace through
goodwill and harmony between nations; and Nehru, the
successor of Gandhiji in the leadership of the nation, is
also the leader of the group of Asian and African countries seeking to
establish a balance between the claims of the erstwhile imperial powers and the
new forces of freedom in a resurgent world. The visit of Nehru to China indicates
the turn of events and the passing of the primacy in world-politics from the
West to the East.
At
home Nehru is thinking in terms of a ‘transfer of power’ in the Congress and
the Central Government. It is clear from his circular letter to the Presidents
of the Pradesh Congress Committees that he wishes to see a new President
installed on the Gadi of the Congress. For a time it was necessary for
the Presidentship and the Premiership to be combined
in the same individual. The arrangement ensured a unified command and the
restoration of harmony between the Congress Party and the Congress Cabinet at
the Centre. But even Nehru feels the burden of the two offices a little too
heavy. There is the further consideration of providing a succession of trained
leadership in both the spheres. While Gandhiji was alive it was inevitable that
the President and the Prime Minister should both look up to him for guidance.
But during the Presidentship of Sri Purushottamdas Tandon a conflict
between the President and the Prime Minister was precipitated, and Nehru
resolved it by taking over the Presidentship. The
time has now arrived for a permanent division between the two functions, in
accordance with the practice prevailing in the leading democratic countries.
All eyes are turned to Sri B. G Kher as the future
President of the Congress organisation. A statesman of undoubted integrity and
ability, and a leader capable of drawing the warring elements within the Party
together for the pursuit of common aims, Sri Kher is
marked out for all-India leadership. Coming from the Deccan, he must be acceptable to the North as
well as the South.
Another
measure which will afford Nehru the relief he is longing for is the revival of
the office of Deputy Prime Minister. This office has been in abeyance since the
death of Sardar Patel. Neither Maulana
Abul Kalam Azad nor Sri C. Rajagopalachari
was chosen for this exalted position, though on occasions the Maulana has presided over meetings of the Union Cabinet in
the absence of the Prime Minister. Since the recent statement of Sri Nehru the
general expectation has been that Mr. Raft Ahmed Kidwai,
a valued colleague and intimate friend of the Prime Minister, would be called
upon to be his Deputy. But, alas! even as Nehru was
fulfilling his high mission as the promoter of friendship between India and her ancient ally China, Death’s icy hand was suddenly laid on
this distinguished son of India.
This creates a problem for Nehru during the coming weeks. There are few in the
Central Cabinet tall enough to be Deputy Premier and eventually Prime Minister
of India. Sri C. D. Deshmukh has never been a Party
leader accustomed to combine departmental efficiency with skill in
parliamentary debate. Sri V. K. Krishna Menon may be expected to relieve the
Prime Minister of his duties in connection with the Ministry of External
Affairs, and enable him to function as Prime Minister without portfolio. But,
the choice of a Deputy Prime Minister will continue to be a major issue. And
judging from previous experience, a decision on the issue is likely to be put
off till after the Budget Session of Parliament in April 1955.
If
the Nehru tradition of unselfish and efficient service to the nation is to be
maintained, the leaders of the Congress Party must make up their minds to
invite middle-aged Congressmen, with a clean record of public life, to occupy
places in the Central and State Cabinets with a view to their eventual
elevation to higher office as Chairmen of the Planning Commission, Chief
Ministers or Governors of States, Prime Ministers and Deputy Prime Ministers of
the Indian Union, and Ambassadors abroad. It is the emergence of such a body of
front-rank leaders that will ensure a continuity of policy and the maintenance
of a high level of efficiency all round. The
tendency to cling to power and to refuse to train future
colleagues is a crying evil in modern India. Pandit Nehru may be trusted
to give a new lead and establish a new tradition in our public life.
A Revival of the Drama
The
all-India Academy of Music and Drama of which Sri P.V.
Rajamannar, Chief Justice of Madras, is the Chairman,
has sponsored a programme for the revival of the Drama in the various
linguistic regions of India.
Preliminary contests are now being held at the regional centres
with a view to selecting a score of plays to be staged at Delhi from the 10th of November. The Indian
Drama has suffered a partial eclipse within recent years owing to the fierce
and highly commercialised competition of the films.
From time to time, leaders of the Film Industry come forward with assurances
that there is no rivalry between the stage and the screen, and that they are
really complementary in their aims and activities. But anyone who has followed
the fortunes of the Indian stage since 1930 will bear witness to its continued
decay, due in an ever increasing measure to the migration of the best
talent–actors, playwrights, dancers and musicians–from the old to the new, from
comparative indigence to undoubted opulence. This is an outstanding event in
our cultural life, and while the magnates of the film world can be left to
their own devices for perpetuating their new-won importance, the votaries of
the stage, and the amateurs among them in particular,
need special encouragement to pursue their vocation in life. Very few plays are
being staged in India
today, and the organisers of even these few find it
difficult to engage good theatres for their performances. Only the schools and
colleges sustain the illusion of a theatre-revival by exhibiting poorly
rehearsed and indifferently produced one-act plays once a year. The annual
conferences of the lovers of Dance and Drama have failed to restore the stage
to its former position of dignity as the finest mode of entertainment and
instruction. The Academy, therefore, deserves all praise for its encouragement
of the Indian Drama. Playwrights and actors have now a chance of proving their
worth. What is of greater significance is the opportunity given to regional
theatres to evolve an all-India theatre through co-operative effort.
Our “Old Boys”
The
Silver Jubilee of Triveni will be celebrated on the 20th and 21st of
November at Bangalore,
the beautiful city which sheltered and fostered the Journal for seven years,
from 1942. As the auspicious moment draws near, I think of the
many friends who have contributed to the success of this adventure in Indian
Journalism. The Elders like the late Sir P. S. Sivaswamy
Aiyer and Sir M. Ramachandra
Rao are no longer with us. There are others not so old, but yet old enough to
be much my seniors. I refer to members of the Advisory Board, Dr. B. Pattabhi Sitaramayya and Dr. S.
Radhakrishnan who are happily with us today, and the late Sri C. Jinarajadasa. Then there are my contemporaries–the late
Justice V. Govindarajachari and K. S. Venkataramani.
Some of them like Sri Sri Prakasa
and Sri R. R. Diwakar are today Governors of States.
But my affection and gratitude are due in a special measure to the young men
who were at College or had just left it when the Journal was started in
December 1927. They began their literary careers by contributing to the pages
of the new Journal. K. Iswara Dutt, Editor-in-chief
of ‘The Leader’ of Allahabad, Prof. V. K. Gokak,
Principal of the Karnatak College, Dharwar, K. Chandrasekharan,
author and art-connoisseur, Dr. K. R. Srinivasa Iyengar,
Professor of English in the Andhra University, A. D. Mani,
Editor of ‘Hitavada’, Nagpur
and President of the All-India Newspaper Editors’ Conference, M. Chalapathi Rau, Editor of the ‘National Herald’, Lucknow and President of the All-India Federation of
Working Journalists, Manjeri S. Isvaran,
Associate-Editor of ‘Triveni’ and Literary Editor of ‘Swatantra’,
T. N. Ramachandran, Joint Director-General of
Archaeology, and the late Principal V. N. Bhushan are
among our ‘Old Boys’. They are exceedingly dear to me. But for their
enthusiasm, and their willingness to submit to my blue-pencilling
in the early years, I could not have maintained a high literary standard.
I
am growing old–only last week I completed sixty–and preparing for the day when
I must decline to look into manuscripts or read proofs. But even Chalapathi Rau and Chandrasekharan
are verging on fifty. I t is the members of the rising generation, who are
studying or doing research in our Universities, to whom ‘Triveni’ must become a
forum for self-expression and the means of enrichment of their cultural
outlook. To them I convey my affectionate blessings.
1 October
27