Thursday, February 21, 2013

Wisdom of the East

There was a time (just prior to independence and for some time afterwards) that India could justifiably lay claim to a moral high ground. Our culture, history and society was of a higher order than the materialistic West (or so we thought). Nehru was a leader of the non-aligned movement and our political leaders had stature and statesmanship. This happy state of affairs lasted for some time as India meandered along at the Hindu rate of growth through much of the 50s, 60s and 70s. Regrettably the stature of our leaders and the quality of our politicians declined steadily. Our cultural underpinnings were confined to Gurus like Maharshi Mahesh Yogi who provided a convenient cover for disillusioned western youth seeking an escape from toil and war in their own societies.

Perhaps the most scathing view about India was held by China. From the late 19th Century, Chinese thinkers regarded India as the 'lost country' who had been enslaved by foreign invaders for the last 1000 years and more. This view found expression in the negative treatment meted out to Tagore on his trip to China in the 30s. He was regarded as the quintessential eastern sage, out of touch with modern progressive society, advocating a quaint and laughable 'return to the classic period'. Gandhi and his views about the utopian village republics was met with equal scorn. This attitude found its culmination in the war in the early 60s where the Indian army was brushed aside by the Chinese.

The independence movement and its immediate aftermath offered a brief interlude when the average Indian could hold his head up with justifiable pride as outlined above. However, the path we chose of building up the public sector, central control over the economy and so forth was nothing short of disastrous. It was also utopian and dangerously out of touch with global realities.

The fact is that our impoverished millions demand economic progress today. The world has no time for moralising. Realpolitik is the only policy and national self interest the only mantra. It is here that India's leaders have really failed. We have rapidly and gleefully abandoned all pretence of stature and statemanship. Unfortunately, instead of replacing the 'Oriental Wisdom' of Radhakrisnan or Gandhi with the hard headed realpolitik and business sense of a man like Sardar Patel we have fallen between two stools. Indian policy still tries to hang on to a vestige of independent thought as in the non aligned movement and succeeds in exasperating even our few friends. Our economic policies yo yo between spurts of liberalisation after which a beleagured governement licks its wounds inflicted by the militant left and other moonies. There is only one way forward. Our great classical civilisation, our wonderful eastern wisdon and all the rest of it need to take a break. We need to move on the economic front and we need a hard headed, no nonsense driver to steer the ship. The world will not wait for the Indian elephant forever.

Saturday, February 16, 2013

Corrupter or Corruptee

When I was thinking of a title for this post I realised that both the words that I was planning to use were actually not words at all. However the sense of what needs to be conveyed is brought out clearly enough.

The question that I want to address is: who is more culpable? There is an ongoing case in India right now where a very senior retired Air Force Officer has come under a cloud. This is, of course, nothing new and there are literally hordes of people in power who have been accused of various kinds of wrong doing at different points in time. On the other side there is a spider web of corruption. Money in unimagined quantities, women and all sorts of blandishments abound.

I have often speculated on the nature of corruption. There is a famous (very likely apocryphal) story of George Bernard Shaw and an actress. When GBS asked the actress if she would sleep with him for a million dollars she said yes! Afterwards he asked her whether she would sleep with him for a hundred dollars to which she replied indignantly - "What do you think I am". GBS's inimitable reply was "Madam we have already established your profession. We are now merely negotiating the price." The story, of course, reiterates that every man (or woman) has his price and is hence corruptible. It is this kind of thinking that leads down the slippery slope to a morally corrupt society.

The fact is that corrupters and tempters are as old as Satan. They have (to use a Biblical term) sold their souls for material benefits. Their belief is to trade long term discomfort in a possibly mythical purgatory for current pleasure. While such men are dangerous and a menace to society they are at least predictable. One expects a loan shark to arm twist people to recover his money or a pimp to make money out of women. Or even a commision agent to pursue men in power with his bag of goodies. What they are banking on is that like GBS demonstrates in his apocryphal story that every man has his price.

What is truly despicable and difficult to understand is persons who abuse their positions of power (which they have presumably reached through genuine hard work and brilliance) for narrow, selfish ends. Temptations will always abound and the more senior the posts you hold the larger the potential rewards of corruption. But there is no excuse for people who fall a prey to such temptation. Truly, Corruptees are worse than Corrupters.


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Sunday, February 10, 2013

The Awful Indian

Rama Bijapurkar's book - "We are Like that Only" captures a colloquial truth about India. However there is a complacent ring about it. "Accept us as who we are, don't try to change us, we are the best" and therein lies the rub. I have mentioned in these pages before that there is much about India, Indians and Indianness that is less than desirable:
  1. Manners - Indians generally display the worst public manners out of many countries that I have experienced. Breaking queues, personal hygeine (peeing in public, spitting), rudeness (don't you know who I am), shouting at hapless subordinates and so forth.
  2. Attitude towards Women - Enough has been said in the recent past about our patriarchal society and the awful treatment of women.
  3. Corruption - this seems to have seeped into our bones. There is nobody and nothing that is not for sale. Ordinary work is impossible without bribing a long list of people.
  4. Violence - The attitude of  "Main tumko dekh loonga" and "Jante nahin main kaun hoon" has been extended into a feeling that disputes can be settled by violence. Perhaps it also symptomatic of the lack of faith that ordinary Indians have in the Police and the Judicial System. We are being increasingly pushed to take the law into our own hands.
  5. Work Ethics - Are we really a hardworking people? I don't think so. We always find a way to weasel out of hard work or "beat the system". Aspirations have gone up manifold but there is no commensurate work ethic to justify higher salaries and benefits. A related issue is lying and cheating. We are not above making money or misrepresenting facts to suit our ends if we can get away with it.
  6. Poor Management - Many of our big ticket public works and even smaller projects in both the public and private sector suffer from poor management. We claim to have good technical and management education but it does not manifest itself in the work we do.
This is a depressing list but it is reality. One of our failings is that we find it difficult to face upto facts and choose to hide behind platitudes. Accepting faults is not a sign of weakness. On the other hand it lays the foundation for improvement. It is time that we stopped considering ourselves as the heirs of a glorious civilization and instead started focusing on our faults and how to improve them.


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