• About us
  • Contact us
  • Our team
  • Terms of Service
Wednesday, December 17, 2025
Kashmir Images - Latest News Update
Epaper
  • TOP NEWS
  • CITY & TOWNS
  • LOCAL
  • BUSINESS
  • NATION
  • WORLD
  • SPORTS
  • OPINION
    • EDITORIAL
    • ON HERITAGE
    • CREATIVE BEATS
    • INTERALIA
    • WIDE ANGLE
    • OTHER VIEW
    • ART SPACE
  • Photo Gallery
  • CARTOON
  • EPAPER
No Result
View All Result
Kashmir Images - Latest News Update
No Result
View All Result
Home OTHER VIEW

In Good Faith: Sarvodaya for polarised times

Other View by Other View
October 9, 2018
in OTHER VIEW
A A
0
In Good Faith: Sarvodaya for polarised times
FacebookTwitterWhatsapp

By: Mahmood A. Madani

It is an axiom that a nation can forget its great leaders only at its own peril. Indeed, some leaders have a far-reaching influence on the nation in its onward march, as they serve as a lighthouse. If there ever was one leader in modern India in whom the characteristic civilisational ethos of India manifested as living truth, it was Mahatma Gandhi. In his 150th anniversary year, we ought to recall the words and actions of this great man who will remain an everlasting source of inspiration for the world.

More News

The Great Escape from Mathematics and Sciences

Cleanliness: A Responsibility we cannot outsource

COACHING CULTURE IN INDIA: EDUCATION OR AN ANXIETY INDUSTRY?

Load More

If we have embalmed the man with the epithet father of the nation, we do need to reflect whether he would be at ease, leave alone he be happy, with the state of the nation today. The question that we need to begin with is: Is this the India of Gandhiji’s dreams?

There seems to be a general unease among the populace at large, from villages to cities. Some sections at more unease than others because of their community identities and markers. Sadly, this unease is barely reaching those who are in the driving seats of the nation.

Today, when communal disharmony and enmities — primarily between Hindus and Muslims — have reached an unprecedented height, we need leaders with a Gandhian moral urgency to address the situation. We need to recall that these issues had primacy over the attainment of swaraj in the Gandhian worldview. This pervasive communalised environment has unleashed institutionalised as well as ad hoc rabid forces with an exclusivist agenda. This agenda wants to push those already on margins, most pronouncedly Muslims, further to the edge with disparaging appellations such as anti-Hindu, misogynist, extremist, etc. This has created a stark polarisation, where the political class as a whole shies away from stating the obvious for fear of eroding their vote-bank. In such an environment, it is not the principles of civility or constitutional ethos of rights or the equality of rule of law that informs and nudges our leadership. Gandhi must feel ashamed.

For Gandhiji, India’s religious and linguistic diversity was an asset, not a liability. His use of metaphors like “clay pot” and the “oceanic circle” while talking about nurturing civic nationalism is quite fascinating and needs to be emulated. Moreover, as opposed to V D Savarkar’s understanding, he wants to see a deep emotional tie between different sub-national groups.

In today’s times, when general misconceptions and outright fallacies about Muslims and Islam are spread with unrestrained passion, we need to recall how Gandhiji had to deal with the similar issues in his day — most prominently immediately, during and just after Partition. His writings, speeches and actions did much to imbibe the moral ethos of a composite culture in the warring communities. He didn’t allow the majoritarian perception about Islam and Muslims to become a verity. True to the great syncretic and evolved tradition of India, he proceeded to understand Islam and Muslims not through hearsay and tittle-tattle but his own reading of the Quran, the Prophet and Muslims he had lived and grown up with. He approached it with objectivity and sobriety and found Islam essentially to be a religion of peace and the Prophet as a pure soul with pious purpose.

Gandhiji was, in many ways. the Indian equivalent of Thomas Carlyle who shook the prejudicial attitude of Jews and Christians towards Islam and Muslims through his 1840 lecture titled “The Hero as Prophet”, where he showered praise on Islam and called the Prophet genuine, compassionate and humane. It was Gandhiji’s commitment to communal harmony that led him to engage with great freedom fighters like Maulana Mahmood Hasan and Maulana Husain Ahmed Madani, among many other stalwarts of the Jamiat Ulema-e-Hind.

However, the violence and intimidation against the oppressed by organised zealots and individual psychopaths alike have made minorities feverishly insecure. This insecurity — physical as well as psychological — when matched with material privations has engendered a sense of estrangement and helplessness, which bodes ill for any civilised, democratic polity.

In such a situation, Gandhiji should serve as a reminder that the idea of swaraj has as a central tenet the notion of “sarvodaya”. As a nation, we must assure that our minorities must feel at home, fully partaking in public life as free and equal citizens. Gandhiji’s ethical concepts and moral universe are capable of dealing with the violent sectarian politics that is being unleashed today.

Finally, a sane voice from the East needs to have a dialogue with the hegemonic West. As the humongous force of globalised capital has created havoc — destabilising nations and endangering peace — a counter-hegemonic discourse is the need of the hour. This capital, the biggest Satan of our time, has already destroyed lives in many poorer nations. It constantly puts up “enemies” as a trope to find new sources of profit. It has unleashed crass materialism and consumerism that is eating into away at the norms of family and community. We must face this onslaught with the moral force Gandhiji employed throughout his political career. Our fight must remain, under all circumstances, non-violent.

–Courtesy: The Indian Express

Previous Post

Hazard lifts Chelsea

Next Post

20 killed in New York state car crash: Police

Other View

Other View

Related Posts

The Great Escape from Mathematics and Sciences

Regional-bilateral significance of Nepal PM Dahal’s India visit
by KI News
December 17, 2025

Education shapes the destiny of a society, and at the frontline of human progress stand three remarkable pillars: Mathematics, Physics,...

Read moreDetails

Cleanliness: A Responsibility we cannot outsource

Regional-bilateral significance of Nepal PM Dahal’s India visit
by KI News
December 16, 2025

Among the many issues that affect our day-to-day life, there is one that often goes unnoticed but continues to trouble...

Read moreDetails

COACHING CULTURE IN INDIA: EDUCATION OR AN ANXIETY INDUSTRY?

Regional-bilateral significance of Nepal PM Dahal’s India visit
by Shahid Ahmed Hakla Poonchi
December 15, 2025

The Rise of the Coaching Classroom In many parts of India today, the academic day no longer ends with the...

Read moreDetails

Emerging and Resurging Vector-Borne Diseases

Emerging and Resurging Vector-Borne Diseases
by Dr. Tasaduk Hussain Itoo
December 14, 2025

Recently, I attended an educational activity on emerging Vector-borne diseases, organized by American College of Physicians (USA), of which I...

Read moreDetails

The Vanishing Soul of ‘Chillai Kalan’ in Kashmir

Tourists posing for photographs near a frozen waterfall in Drung Tangmarg.
by KI News
December 14, 2025

  Chillai Kalan, the harshest phase of Kashmiri winter, occurs from December 21 to January 29 every year. It is...

Read moreDetails

When ‘Hamaam’ warmed our soul, not just bodies!

Regional-bilateral significance of Nepal PM Dahal’s India visit
by KI News
December 13, 2025

There are moments in the story of a society when something ordinary becomes extraordinary not because it changes in shape...

Read moreDetails
Next Post
20 killed in New York state car crash: Police

20 killed in New York state car crash: Police

  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Our team
  • Terms of Service
E-Mailus: kashmirimages123@gmail.com

© 2025 Kashmir Images - Designed by GITS.

No Result
View All Result
  • TOP NEWS
  • CITY & TOWNS
  • LOCAL
  • BUSINESS
  • NATION
  • WORLD
  • SPORTS
  • OPINION
    • EDITORIAL
    • ON HERITAGE
    • CREATIVE BEATS
    • INTERALIA
    • WIDE ANGLE
    • OTHER VIEW
    • ART SPACE
  • Photo Gallery
  • CARTOON
  • EPAPER

© 2025 Kashmir Images - Designed by GITS.