What to know about India’s jumbo election
Rashmee Roshan Lall
PhD. #FRSA Journalism @timesofindia @theneweuropean. Teaching university, London. Ex–BBC etc. UEA. Novel Hachette UK. Sign up below for This Week, Those Books, which has nearly 11,000 followers in 120 countries
One month to the day since India began the world’s largest exercise in electoral democracy, here’s some crucial context from the April17 edition of This Week, Those Books. Read here or sign up at https://thisweekthosebooks.com/ and get the post the day it drops
The Big Story:
India begins the world’s largest exercise in electoral democracy on April 19. The numbers are huge:
India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi says it is “the mother of democracy”.
But “great elections do not convert into great democracy”, India’s former chief election commissioner S. Y. Quraishi has said, in reference to the intensifying clampdown on opposition parties by Modi’s governing Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).
The Backstory:
Opinion polls say the BJP — described as the world’s biggest political party with more than 180 million members — will win the election despite a decade in power.
There is rising international criticism of the actual practice of Indian democracy under Modi’s Hindu nationalist BJP government:
Many Indians agree. One Indian media outlet has alleged that the “Modi government’s ‘rule by [tax] raids’ [on the political opposition] weakens India’s democracy”.
Other Indians push back against such categorisations. The BJP says they use “distorted metrics” and display “an inherent bias in favour of so-called liberal democracies in the West”.
This Week, Those Books:
India After Gandhi: The History of the World’s Largest Democracy
By: Ramachandra Guha
Publisher: Picador
Year: 2023 (3rd edition)
A highly readable account by one of modern India’s most respected historians. Ramachandra Guha covers India’s testing path from independent nationhood in 1947 — high on idealism and Gandhian philosophy — to the present day when “muscular majoritarianism” rules. He illustrates the difference between India then and now with a 1949 story from Bombay about M. S. Golwalkar, leader of the RSS sectarian Hindu group, and India’s first prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru. “A hundred thousand people had come to hear Golwalkar espouse the idea of a Hindu theocratic state for India. But in this Maharashtrian stronghold, six times as many came to cheer the prime minister’s defence of democracy against absolutism, and secularism against Hindu chauvinism. In this contest between competing ideas of India, Jawaharlal Nehru was winning hands down; for the time being, at any rate.”
That was then. In the book’s first edition Guha judged India to have a 50–50 chance of making a success of democracy; now he suggests it’s closer to 30–70.
领英推荐
Choice quote:
Making Sense of Modi’s India
By: Various
Publisher: HarperCollins India
Year: 2016
A good primer on the rise of the BJP and its effect on India at home and abroad. Contributors include the Indian-born British economist Lord Meghnad Desai, the BBC’s veteran India-watcher and historian Andrew Whitehead and US-based academic, editor and India-Pakistan peace activist Beena Sarwar.
Full disclosure: Your correspondent, India-born-and-bred, is watching India’s election with intense interest. I wrote a chapter in this book on a non-resident Indian’s view of BJP-ruled India.
The White Tiger
By: Aravind Adiga
Publisher: Atlantic Books
Year: 2008
Aravind Adiga’s debut novel achieved two rare distinctions — it won the Booker Prize and it caused so much angst in India because of its unglamorous portrayal of social inequality that Indians almost forgot to hail him as one of their own. But the novel became a bestseller and then a film starring Priyanka Chopra. The plot is stark. Narrator Balram Halwai is a self-styled “entrepreneur”, who started life working in a tea shop (like Prime Minister Modi). Balram struggles against the “India of Darkness”, one that renders invisible the colossal underclass — the poor, the provincial, the ‘other’ of any sort (Muslims, for example). He gets to the “India of light” — one of globalisation and a mall culture — by dint of his cunning and by murdering his employer. He becomes a “white tiger”, that rare creature with superior attributes, because he refuses to be bound by any moral code except self-interest.
A compelling portrayal of how one man achieves all that is promised by the ‘new India’…ruthlessly.
Bonus read:
An Undocumented Wonder: The Making of the Great Indian Election
By: S.Y. Quraishi
Publisher: Rupa Publications India
Year: 2014
The author, a former Chief Election Commissioner of India, backs up Modi’s claim that India is the mother of democracy and lays out the tough logistics of organising the country’s periodic trysts with the ballot box. The foreword by Gopalkrishna Gandhi, grandson of Mahatma Gandhi, addresses a key point made by Quraishi: that it’s crucial for India to go beyond “procedural successes to become not just the world’s largest but its greatest democracy”.
Originally published at This Week, Those Books