‘TRIVENI’
HAS SHED LIGHT ON MY PATH.
BLESSED BE HER NAME!
By
K. RAMAKOTISWARA RAU
It
is usual for the “man in the street” to complain that idealism is at a discount
among Congressmen, that the lure of wealth and power has corrupted them, that
they no longer deserve to be the representatives of the people. The truth is
that the generation of Congressmen who led the freedom fight is fast
disappearing and new men have to step into their places. Most of these are not
swayed by noble impulses like their elders. And yet, the party organisation has
to be kept alive, and men must be found to fill the Congress Committees and the
Legislatures. Obviously Congressmen cannot lay a perpetual claim to the rewards
of martyrdom, nor can they always go about with a halo round their heads. They
must face the electorate like the members of any other party and convince the
voters about their personal probity as well as the integrity of their party.
From time to time, the top leaders of the Congress
send out fervent appeals to their party men all over
The
question arises, “Are the Communists any better?” Their rule in Kerala was
something of a nightmare, and their accession to power in other States is not
calculated to lead to beneficial results. The promotion of class-war, the
‘liquidation’ of large sections of the community, and the spread of
international Communism are fraught with evil for the future of the country,
and no peaceful and law-abiding citizen can contemplate the prospect with
equanimity.
Public
opinion is veering round to the view that, between now and the General Election
of 1962, the ever-growing section of countrymen who are genuinely opposed to
the Congress concept of Democratic Socialism as well as to the revolutionary
programme of the Communists should organise
themselves into a powerful party and fight the next election on the issue of
individual freedom and initiative in the many common concerns of life against
the threatened encroachment of the State power. It is necessary to place the
Congress on the defensive and compel it to justify its programmes, Whichever party happens to win, there must always be a
well-informed, effective opposition. Real democracy can function only when
well-organised democratic parties seek the suffrage
of the nation for the implementation of their programmes, and are prepared to
quit office when they suffer defeat at the polls.
Whether
the Congress Party should quit office even before the election is an
interesting point. The Swatantra Party has thrown up
a suggestion that for six months prior to the date of the election President’s
rule should prevail throughout the Indian Union, so as to give a fair chance to
all parties at the election. The Congress is not likely to oblige its opponents
by accepting this novel suggestion. But it can at least refrain from misusing
its power to favour its party candidates. A party in
office can offer many inducements to the electorate, and it can collect funds
on a large scale for election purposes. But even a vague suspicion that it is
so employing its power will impel large numbers of uncommitted voters to vote
against the Government of the day. So, election time is a time of test for
political parties. The party in power has to exercise extra care and keep
itself above suspicion. That is the correct democratic behaviour,
the life-breath of democracy.
Sri Nehru at the U. N.
It was a great day in the history of the United
Nations Organisation when the Prime Minister of India, representing the point
of view of the ‘unaligned’ nations, urged the General Assembly to ‘Build the
World without War’ and quoted the magnificent words of Lord Buddha: “The only
real victory is the one in which all are equally victorious, and there is
defeat for no one.” As a first urgent step in this adventure of peace, he
sponsored, along with the leaders of four other nations, a resolution
requesting the President of the
Neither
Sri Nehru nor his friends of the Afro-Asian group at the U. N. hoped for a
spectacular victory leading to immediate results.
The
achievement of world peace is a great end in itself, and the means to it must
be commensurate with the purity of the aim. Sri Nehru was nearer to Gandhiji
than ever when he addressed the General Assembly of the U. N. on the 3rd of
this month.
The Bi-lingual Formula
It
has been announced that a Bill will be introduced in Parliament before the end
of this year to give statutory sanction to the Presidential directive regarding
the official language of the Indian Union. An important concession to public
opinion in the non-Hindi regions was made by the Prime Minister some months ago
when he stated categorically in Parliament that, even after 1965, English will
continue to be used as an ‘associate language’ along with Hindi, till such time
as the people of the non-Hindi regions voluntarily agree to the employment of
Hindi as the sole official language for all-India purposes. This found a place
in the Preamble to the Presidential directive but not in the text. All doubts
have however been set at rest by the recent statement of the Home Minister that
the Prime Minister’s assurance will be incorporated in the Bill.
Bi-lingualism at the Centre implies the use of both Hindi and
English in the Secretariat at
During
the transitional period, which is necessarily indefinite in duration, some
degree of confusion will prevail in all the Secretariats, including the
Central, and also some silent hostility between the English and Hindi sections
in every office. But all this has to be faced, and the situation rendered less
unpleasant by a process of mental and emotional adjustment. And, as every State
is planning to make its main regional language the official language of the
State, the bulk of the Secretariat staff will function in that language, and the size of the English and Hindi sections
will shrink to the minimum needed for all-India correspondence.
Since
there is widespread agreement about the three-language formula in our
educational system, we can visualise a time, two or three
decades after 1965, when most of our boys and girls will have a working
knowledge of English and Hindi along with considerable proficiency in the
regional language. In the Hindi-speaking regions, each State will prescribe
some Indian language–preferably a Southern one–which can be taught
compulsorily in the schools in addition to Hindi and English. The results of
such training must be wholesome, and the present day
linguistic fanaticisms and rivalries may be expected to fade out, yielding
place to the normal, healthy recognition that all Indian languages are our
national languages, and each of them as dear to us as our own. Lovers of
goodwill must work towards this happy consummation and make it possible for the
coming generations of Indian citizens to realise the
fundamental unity of
It
is sometimes asserted, and notably by Sri Rajaji, that the bi-lingual formula
which originated with the Madras Government and the support of
the Governments of the other Southern States is a trap into which
The
bi-lingual solution is the least unsatisfactory of the solutions proposed at
various stages of the discussion. Like all compromise moves, it is not ideally
perfect. But it is the best that is available in the circumstances in which
1 October
18, 1960.