India @ 73: Musings of an ordinary Indian

I was born in Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh, three years after independence and so smelled the early fragrance of independent India

Anil K. Rajvanshi Aug 14, 2020
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I was born in Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh, three years after independence and so smelled the early fragrance of independent India.

My father went to jail for 2.5 years during the independence struggle and I am sure his fierce patriotism and sacrifices for India came into my DNA also.  My father Jagdish Rajvanshi was doing his Ph.D. in Hindi literature at Allahabad University in 1940 when Mahatma Gandhiji’s call stirred him, just like it did for lakhs of other students, and he joined the freedom struggle movement and was jailed for 2.5 years. In doing so he left a very lucrative career of a possible university professorship.

He was an idealist and somehow could not get into the mainstream of politics which very rapidly degenerated, after independence, into producing corrupt politicians who were more interested in amassing wealth rather than governing and this process became a norm. So an honest politician was called weak whereas a wheeler-dealer was called a 'dynamic' leader.

Very briefly in 1975, he became a minister in H. N. Bahuguna’s Uttar Pradesh. cabinet and was entitled to a car and bungalow but never left his Lal Bagh flat and would walk to the state assembly (it was within walking distance) from our flat since he did not want to lose his habit of walking.

I think as India achieves the milestone of being 73 years old, we should reflect on these things on how from the heights of Gandhi-Nehru era of idealistic leaders, we have come to the present sorry state where leaders are behaving like dictators, trying to create a rift in society, breaking it along religious lines and where building the temple becomes the most important event for the country.

My own journey from Lucknow schools to IIT Kanpur then to the US and back to rural India reflects aspirations of an ordinary but proud Indian and in some ways mirrors my father’s journey. 

After my Ph.D. and teaching in the US for a couple of years, I came back to rural India in 1981, partly because of idealism and partly because of arrogance. At that time when a very large number of bright students of India were going to the US. I chose to come back to rural India. I felt that my knowledge of solar energy will help India and that I will change India.  India is an ancient civilization and has a tremendous inertial mass for change and yet I was foolish enough to think that I will change it.

India  changed me

India did not change but it changed me. Working and living in rural India taught me humility and spirituality. Humility in the sense that I realized there are millions of problems in this ancient land which have to be tackled and it will take generations and more than a few lifetimes of struggle to change them.

Living in rural India helped me simplify my life.  With hardly any avenues to spend money and the availability of very few amenities, one starts living a simple life, which is the first step towards spirituality.  Initially one may not like it but with time one starts to enjoy the benefits of a simplified life. I recommend such a life for anybody who believes in sustainability because when everyone becomes sustainable in their personal life, the world will automatically become sustainable. This together with my spiritual leanings and readings during the early 1960s helped me on the path of spirituality. 

Spirituality is the basic soul of India. Spirituality is not religion. It is the state of mind that makes it understand that the truth is beyond the barriers of worldliness, religion, caste, creed, race, or geographical boundaries. This is what our great ancient philosophical thought of yoga, Upanishads, etc. have taught us and we seemed to have forgotten it and have gotten entangled in the ritualistic things like temple making and similar religious rituals.

Just like Buddhism, Jainism, Sikhism was born because the leaders of these religions revolted against the ritualistic traditions of the aging and decaying Hinduism, similarly I feel there is hope that a thought based on India’s spirituality together with modern high technology will form a new paradigm of development for India and the world.  

Sprituality+technology = Happiness 

In my work in rural India, I have touched on both these themes of spirituality and high technology and believe that spirituality + technology will bring us happiness and allow us to live a sustainable lifestyle. This is the theme I have explored in greater detail in my new book Spirituality + Technology = Happiness. 

Spirituality gives us the wisdom to reduce our needs and greed; and high technology allows us to fulfill these reduced needs very efficiently. This combination can lead us to sustainability and create a wholesome and emotionally satisfying world.

The journey to this line of thinking started when at the age of thirteen, I was given a birthday gift – the book “Autobiography of Mahatma Gandhi” (in Hindi). Reading this book changed my life and thinking. That book propelled me on the path of spirituality and with my training in engineering in IIT Kanpur and later in the US, showed me how technology is very necessary to live a sustainable life.

And so when I came back from the US in 1981 to rural India I felt that India was on the cusp of a new development model and in the late 1980s and early 1990s hopes were high that India had broken its shackles of old thinking and was on a path of general economic recovery. Yet it also brought tremendous corruption and decay in the polity of the country.

Since then there has been economic progress (increasing GDP) but the quality of life and standards of political life has gone downhill and with the ever-increasing threat to democratic values.

Yet I feel there is hope. A country that has produced great leaders like Buddha, Ashoka, Adi Shankaracharya, Guru Nanak, Gandhi, etc. cannot be that bad.  The genetic material of Indians is still the same. I feel the present set up is an aberration and feel it shall pass. However, what is sad is that the younger generation which is the future of the country has stopped the discourse on and engagement with the story of India. They seem to be too preoccupied with their social media and activities related to it. Social media has become today’s opium of the masses.           

So as we approach India @73 it is the duty of the older generations like ours and who are attached to the story of India to engage the youngsters in India’s development through spirituality and technology.  How do we teach our children and make them excited about a great India which will have a different model of development based on our ancient philosophical thought; is a great challenge. Yet if we overcome this challenge then India can show a new path of development for itself and for the world.           

(The writer is Director, Nimbkar Agricultural Research Institute (NARI),  Phaltan, Maharashtra. The views expressed are personal. He can be contacted at anilrajvanshi@gmail.com. https://www.nariphaltan.org/writings.htm)

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