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OPINION
In defence of rooted Indian nationalism
Indian nationalism does not seek to conquer or colonise other countries. Instead, it supported national struggles in other countries
under imperialist rule, emphasising sovereignty and democracy.

By Abhinav Prakash Singh


PUBLISHED ON MAR 04, 2021 07:38 PM IST

Indian nationalism has always been inward-looking and focused on national development, which was always strongly imbued with welfare and
social justice goals (Raj K Raj/HT PHOTO)

In his reply to the motion of thanks in the Rajya Sabha, Prime Minister (PM) Narendra Modi emphasised the importance of Indian
nationalism, and argued that nationalism in India is neither narrow-minded nor aggressive. But he suggested that it has come
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under attack of late, with every occasion being used to mock and demean India. Referring to the threat of “foreign destructive
ideology”, the PM was right in underlining that we remain far too much in awe of the theories and constructs flowing in from the
West.

The false parallels drawn between nationalism in western countries and nationalism in India exemplify it. Unlike the exclusivist
nationalism in the West built around linguistic or ethnic supremacism, Indian nationalism emerged in opposition to imperialism.
Since its inception, Indian nationalism endeavored to bring together people of different languages, religions, castes, classes, and
ethnicities based on unity in diversity.

And despite the setback caused by Muslim separatism and consequent Partition, it continues to champion the same values of
democracy, liberty, diversity, and equality. To equate it with the western concept of nationalism and “de-construct” it in line with
fashionable western intellectual trends is remarkable intellectual bankruptcy.
Take, for instance, the grandiloquent talk about being a patriot and not a nationalist. Patriotism is a pre-industrial construct rooted
in the patriarchal notions of “blood and soil”, i.e. defence of land and kinsmen. It served the same practical purpose as nationalism
in an industrial society. But a faux debate is generated to make nationalism sound regressive and, in millennial slang, uncool and
glorify the agrarian, patriarchal construct of patriotism.

With intricate ties to the wider Anglosphere, India is precariously placed in the face of wokeness and social science theories
emanating from American universities. For many years, there has been a concerted attempt to delegitimise not just India’s anti-
imperialist struggle and Indian nationalism but also Hinduism and the existence of Hindus as a people too. In this academic
discourse, each of these categories has been converted into an “oppressive identity”, whose destruction is crucial to attain the
elusive “azadi”.

This mirrors academic and intellectual trends within America itself. Just like the “preservation of slavery” has been sought to be
placed at the heart of the American war of independence, the “preservation of the caste-system” has been attributed as the main
motive behind India’s freedom struggle. Indian nationalism is painted as a conspiracy of the upper castes to deny the political
aspirations of the Dalits, backward classes and minorities.

But far from being a tool of oppression, Indian nationalism has been a force of integration and upliftment of the masses. The
growth of nationalism enabled people to transcend the narrow confines of caste and community. It propelled them to create
common platforms and advocate social reform and economic upliftment of the masses.

Indian nationalism does not seek to conquer or colonise other countries. Instead, it supported national struggles in other countries
under imperialist rule, emphasising sovereignty and democracy.

Indian nationalism has always been inward-looking and focused on national development, which was always strongly imbued with
welfare and social justice goals. The resolutions on fundamental rights and national economic programme in 1931 Karachi
resolution of the Congress, an umbrella organisation of mostly Hindu nationalistic forces, amply demonstrate this. In India,
nationalism resonates with the masses as a positive construct, unlike its western variant. Nationalism binds this diverse geography
and demographics together, something that would have been otherwise unimaginable.

But this critical distinction is often forgotten, and the idea that nationalism needs to be banished has taken hold in urban
intellectual discourse. But such adventurism has proved costly even for America, where the deconstruction of a common narrative,
banishment of nationalism and dethronement of religion has created a crisis of identity and polity.

Instead of a nation, there are just different groups in silos such as Blacks, White males, LGBTQ+, women, and a range of ethnic
categories, making agreement even on basic issues strenuous. With a far more complex society and social fault lines, India needs to
academically, socially and politically contest attempts to push such theories and ideas in our context.

The sanctity of the nation and territorial integrity of states should not be confused with grandiose constructs such as constitutional
patriotism. A Constitution simply reflects the underlying working of the nation and demographics, and not the other way around.
Without state power to enforce it, it is just another book. This is starkly reflected in how the Indian Constitution is weakest in
regions where Indian nationalism is weak. Another charge of nationalism vs Hindu nationalism is an old one. Before Independence,
the Congress was called a Hindu nationalist party and nationalism a Hindu supremacist construct. There is nothing new inFREEthese
charges and the language now deployed against the BJP and Indian nationalism. E-Paper Games

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needs to strongly Mostnationalism
reassert Read My Reads
in the Savedand mass culture and push back against the attempt to confuse or
realm of ideas
delegitimise it. And the task starts with resisting the theories sweeping in from the Anglosphere while rejuvenating social sciences
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in India, rooted in Indian reality. The decoupling of social sciences in India and the wider Anglosphere must be the next
decolonisation movement.

Abhinav Prakash Singh is an assistant professor, economics, Sri Ram College of Commerce

The views expressed are personal

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