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Thoughts on India’s Republic Day

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Thoughts on India’s Republic Day

The strength of a country is based on the strength of its people. It must be understood today that we can choose to have a strong country only after the citizens are able to lead their lives with dignity…and then hold their heads high.

By Nazarul Islam

We are frequently reminded that India is the emerging global power. That India is a powerful country….the strong nation, located in a bad neighborhood. We need to ask ourselves….What makes a nation strong? Is it one, where a few people move from strength to strength, or is it one where the vast majority have access to education, healthcare, work, opportunities and a social ethos that allow them to live a life of dignity and fulfil their potential? Conversely, we need to ask: what makes a nation ‘weak’?

Can we see this strength as happy citizens, social cohesiveness, freedom to speak out, resilience and cultural influence?

A journalist friend, who recently visited India’s historical city, has this to share: Here is a view from the pavement. On a bitterly cold Delhi afternoon last week, I stopped for a chat with Shiv, a cobbler I have known for some time. We talked about this and that, and as always, we landed up exchanging a word or two about his life. Life had become harder than usual for Shiv —he lost his son last year, did not have much work, went back to his village, was in debt, and customers are few and far between.

“Who wants to get bags and shoes repaired when they are being sold out, for much less?” he wryly said. I asked him about his thoughts for the future. Did he feel the country was becoming stronger? Shiv did not immediately reply. After a slight pause, he broke into a familiar, toothy grin. “I am not educated. I dropped out of school. What is a country but its people? Do I look strong to you?”

Shiv is one among the millions of what academics call the ‘urban poor’. A recent survey by People’s Research on India’s Consumer Economy (PRICE), a Mumbai-based think-tank, between April and October 2021, has this to say “….the annual income of the poorest 20 per cent of Indian households had been rising since 1995 but plunged 53 per cent in the pandemic year 2020-21 from their levels in 2015-16.”

In the same five-year period, the richest 20 per cent have seen their annual household income grow 39 per cent. This survey covered 200,000 households in the first round and 42,000 households in the second. It was spread over 120 towns and 800 villages across 100 districts. Even among the poorest 20 per cent, those in cities have been hit harder than their rural relatives and acquaintances.

There is another data that points to growing inequality and the précarization of those at the bottom. A recent report by Oxfam India flags important points about India’s inequality crisis – the number of Indian billionaires grew from 102 in 2020 to 142 in 2021, the worst year yet for India during the pandemic, the report notes.

This was also the year when the share in the national wealth of the bottom 50 per cent of the population was a mere 6 per cent. The Oxfam report also refers to the FAO report on The State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World. That report says there are over 200 million undernourished people in India. There are other disturbing insights in the Oxfam report – the life expectancy of a Dalit woman is approximately 15 years less than that of an upper-caste woman.

Additionally, research has suggested that relative to upper-caste Hindus, Adivasi life expectancy is more than four years lower, Muslim life expectancy is about one year lower, and Dalit life expectancy is more than three years lower; economic status explains less than half of these gaps.

Arguably, India is not the only country where the poor have been bludgeoned by the pandemic, nor is India the only country with glaring inequalities. But at a time when the poor, like my journalist friend’s neighborhood cobbler, find themselves in an increasingly vulnerable position for no fault of theirs, what kind of message are we giving out, particularly when we say that talking about rights, paves the way to the nation’s weakness?

Strength is not an abstract term. The strength of a country is based on the strength of its people. The Constitution of India guarantees certain fundamental rights. When these rights are violated, an Indian citizen can go to court, at least in theory. In reality, there is a huge backlog of cases, a lack of awareness about legal rights and millions of Indians are denied their fundamental rights.

Shiv, the cobbler from Delhi, like every other Indian, or neighboring Bangladeshi or a Pakistani or a Nepali or Sri Lankan daily wage earner has a right to live with basic dignity. And, he also has a right to speak out.

An Indian citizen has the right and the duty to point out when he sees the violation of rights of people— who are less privileged, with increasing fragility and deepening inequalities around him. Only by doing so – by talking about people’s fundamental rights enshrined in the Constitution and other rights like healthcare, education, nutrition and decent work – can a citizen lead a life of dignity.

Fellow Indians like to boast of their strong economy. However, it is time that their leaders understood why a poverty ridden, war torn, and taunted as the breadbasket nation called Bangladesh, has managed to climb up the sale of prosperity right under their noses. Their Economists led the way by curbing their population growth and then steadily rose up the ladder of economy, beating their own benefactor, India.

Neighboring Pakistan, another broken country struggling to breathe, has succeeded in forcing India to maintain its distance, by way of developing nuclear deterrent capacity. And, here lies the nation’s strength for survival.

It must be understood today that we can choose to have a strong country only after the citizens are able to lead their lives with dignity…and then hold their heads high. By muting discussion about rights of citizens, shall only weaken the unity and strength of the Republic of India.

[author title=”Nazarul Islam ” image=”https://sindhcourier.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/Nazarul-Islam-2.png”]The Bengal-born writer Nazarul Islam is a senior educationist based in USA. He writes for Sindh Courier and the newspapers of Bangladesh, India and America. He is author of a recently published book ‘Chasing Hope’ – a compilation of his 119 articles.[/author]