Opinion

My Patriot Versus Yours

Guha바카라s 바카라constitutional patriotism바카라 is not Gandhian nationalism. Instead of the Left바카라s dead, white men, he has savarnas.

My Patriot Versus Yours
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George Orwell celebrated patriotism and decried nat­ionalism. Ramachandra Guha celebrates both. Orwell of 1945 shared Guha바카라s mistrust of the Left, and both share a mastery of lucid, persuasive, prose. But, reading Guha바카라s essay Patriotism Vs Jingoism (Outlook, February 5), I was also reminded of Orwell, when he wrote, 바카라A nationalist is one who thinks solely, or mainly, in terms of competitive prestige.바카라 Guha바카라s dismay at our current state of affairs is understandable. This is the moment to celebrate, as he does, the history of a more inclusive, diverse and tolerant sense of belonging over chest-thumping jingoism. Even an ardent admirer of his writing, however, would question whether his was the best way to make that point. The argument he makes is necessary, even crucial, at this point in our history. But doing so by celebrating the superiority of Indian nationalism over other nationalisms robs his argument of its moral authority and historical gravitas.

Elevating, as Guha does, Gandhi바카라s patriotism as superior to Jinnah바카라s nationalism (or Indian natio­nalism over its European variant) smacks of a competitive 바카라my nationalism is better than yours바카라 attitude, and undermines the point (however con­testable) about distinguishing betw­een patriotism and nat­ionalism. Not only does it veer dangerously close to the jingoism that Guha rightly condemns, it compels him to marshal an argument open to historical questioning. To argue for a more inclusive nation­alism doesn바카라t need an ahistorical celeb­ration of 바카라our바카라 nat­ionalism. Unfort­unately, Guha app­ears to slip into precisely that competitive mode at many points in his essay. Surely, there is a better way to celebrate inclusivity and diversity than pointing out that we are better than the rest. Moreover, collectively, historically바카라in terms of the violence, injustice and inequities 바카라we바카라 (India or Indians) have heaped upon the less powerful among us바카라are we really better than anyone else? Not really.

It was surprising to see the ease with which Guha slips from Gandhian nationa­lism to 바카라constitutio­nal patriotism바카라, when it is quite evident in his magisterial India After Gandhi that the Indian State, which came into being, was not the state Gandhi envisioned, nor was the Constitution a Gan­dhian one. Gandhi was remarkably underwhel­med by parliamentary or other representative dem­ocracy, and makes that quite clear in Hind Swaraj. In any case, Gandhi바카라s vis­ion was somewhat unique (even idiosyncratic) within his own party. Certainly, there is no way we can move from Gandhi바카라s vision of the nation to 바카라constitutional patriotism바카라 without acknowledging the huge differences between his and the very different visions of the nation within the party. The Con­s­titution we have reflects deba­tes and compromises bet­ween all these visions, and Guha knows that.

To prove his point about Indian nationalism바카라s moral superiority, Guha gives the example of Jinnah imposing Urdu on East Pakistan바카라s Bangla speakers. Does he find no parallels with the great constitutionalist Jawaharlal Nehru바카라s  frankly colonial attitudes to the Nagas and the Northeast in general? How about his dismissal of the world바카라s first elected Communist government? Guha contrasts India바카라s 바카라disaggregated patriotism바카라 with Spain바카라s more unitary model to acc­ount for Catalonian separatism, but doesn바카라t ask whether the Indian government would permit a referendum on Kashmir바카라which is unlik­ely, given that students were arr­ested on sedition charges merely on calling for 바카라azadi바카라?

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Let바카라s certainly celebrate local patriotisms, as Guha suggests, but of Kashmir as much as of Karnataka, of Badgam as well as Basavangudi. A truly disaggregated patriotism would not insist upon the primacy of the nat­ional identity. The abs­ence of Kashmir in this essay, just like Sherlock Holmes바카라s dog that didn바카라t bark, is quite telling. Could the absence be bec­ause the positions of the constitutional patriot and the jingoist on the Kashmir issue might overlap, with only different words being used? Moreover, isn바카라t mentioning Catalonia but forgetting Kashmir an example of not paying enough attention to people within the borders of the nation-state? He does level this imp­ortant acc­usation against the Indian Left.

Guha has been sniping at the Left, sometimes for good reason, through much of his intellectual career. While welcome to the old chestnut about the failure of Communists to participate in the Quit India movement, it hardly behooves a scholar of his stature to make the anachro­nistic argument that students celebrating Hugo Chavez바카라s visit to JNU are somehow enabling jingoistic Hindu ­nationalism. Historians know that each nationalism, though representing itself as unique, is also a response to global contexts. Some Indian nationalists celebrated Britain바카라s ene­mies during World War II. Students celebrating Chavez, or those earlier supporting Saddam Hussein, rejoiced because these men were cocking a snook at the most aggressive imperial power of the day, the United States. They were not celebrating these leaders바카라 ­domestic policies, just as Bose was not end­orsing the genocide by Nazis or Japanese war crimes.

By celebrating Chavez, the students were exh­ibiting their nationalism rather than mindlessly admiring a foreign leader. One may fault them for their understanding, but can hardly accuse them of enabling jingoism.

More seriously, to claim that the Left바카라s non-­patriotism is the primary cause for the rise of intolerant jingoism in India defies all logic and history. It igno­res the history of colonialism, which created modern religious identities and communal repre­sentation, and fails to acknowledge the primacy of many varieties of Hindu nationalism, from Bankim and Tilak to Savarkar and the Hindu Mahasabha, which have made our times possible. It forgets the extent to which global capital and associated technologies are complicit in enabling our current version of jingoistic nation­alism. No, for Guha, the failure of the Indian Left to celebrate Indian heroes is the primary reason for the rise of jingo­ism in our times. This not only betrays an ethnocentricism not dissimilar to the European-style national­ism he criticises, it also echoes the critique made of the Left by those he would term jingoistic.

Perhaps, the Left바카라s association with the idea of being citizens of the world, rather than of a particular nation, leads Guha to the surprising position that 바카라global citizenship is a mirage; or a cop-out,바카라 and to condemn those who 바카라accord themselves the fanciful and fraudulent title of 바카라citizen of the world바카라.바카라 Really? Is there another way to deal with the planetary environmental crisis outside of seeing ourselves as not bounded by interests of nation-­states? This, coming from someone who is an environmental historian, who has written global histories of environmentalism, leaves me frankly flabbergasted. This is not just nat­ion­alism, but tantamount to a narrow statism.

And, what of Guha바카라s well-placed barb about the Indian Left only celebrating dead, white, foreign, men? It was good to see Guha embracing gender as a category of historical analysis, not one he has often employed, whether for understanding politics or cricket. We would be better served if that ran more consistently across the essay, rather than as a way to bash the Left. Gandhi and Tagore are wonderful counterpoints to the current wave of hyper-masculine jingoism. But Guha doesn바카라t point to Gandhi바카라s very different imaginings of masculinity or Tagore바카라s critique of existing gender inequalities as enabling alternative imaginings of India. In fact, other than a passing reference to Kamaladevi Chattopadhyay바카라s shame, no women other than Indira Gandhi figures in Guha바카라s essay. There are, on the other hand, lots of savarna men, most of whom are dead.

(The writer is professor of South Asian history at Northern Arizona University. He teaches a course on 바카라Contemporary India바카라 using Guha바카라s India After Gandhi as the primary text.)

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