Having lived overseas for more than half of my adult life, I have often been asked the question “What is India like?” I always find this question difficult to answer, because India, unlike many other countries in the world, is very difficult to categorize.
There is nothing homogenous or uniform about India. When people want to categorize India, I often tell them to think of India as Europe – if Europe had been a single nation. India has fifteen (or is it sixteen) different languages (each with its own unique script), thousands of dialects, and dozens of ethnic groups. Culturally, ethnically and linguistically, Hungary and Iceland have more in common than Tamil Nadu (a South Indian state) and Uttar Pradesh (a North Indian state). Western India is more economically prosperous than Eastern India, Southern India is better educated than Northern India, and then of course, there are the “seven sisters”, India’s North-eastern states, beautiful but distant, with warm and hospitable people but populated by separatist groups. Culturally, the North-eastern states have more in common with Tibet and Myanmar than India.
This same diversity applies to India’s urban and rural areas. Urban India has its face to the West, and sophisticated Indian cities have some of the finest restaurants, entertainment and nightlife on offer anywhere in the world. Parts of rural India on the other hand (especially in economically backward Northern and Eastern India) are as backward and poor as sub-Saharan Africa. Real estate prices in Mumbai and Delhi are among the highest in the world; on par with cities like Tokyo and New York. An Indian corporate magnate recently constructed one of the most expensive buildings in the world, and converted it into his residence. He is among the fifty richest men in the world, I think. Yet, barely a hundred kilometers from where he lives is one of India’s poorest districts, where malnutrition and hunger cast a dark shadow on the lives of the rural poor.
Is India a rich country? Yes. Is India a poor country? Yes. Are primary education standards in rural India abysmal? Yes. Does India have some of the finest universities and scientific research institutions in the world? Yes. Is a large percentage of the Indian population illiterate? Yes. Does India have the largest English speaking population in the world? Yes. Is India’s government venal, corrupt and inefficient? Yes. Does India have some of the best-run private sector companies in the world? Yes. Does caste and religious discrimination still exist? Yes. Are some of India’s most distinguished people (including the country’s Chief Justice as well as former President) from these communities? Yes. Does religious bigotry exist in India? Yes. Are all religions equal under the law in India? Yes. Is India one of the most densely populated countries in the world? Yes. Are parts of India among the most sparsely populated places on the planet? Yes. Is India a hot country? Yes. Is India a cold country? Yes.
You see how difficult it is to categorize the place. All this diversity causes huge problems that would daunt many nations. Yet somehow India endures. I would like to say that it thrives, but that would be too strong a word to use. It is my fervent hope that India can and does start thriving soon. In school, we were taught that India meant “unity in diversity”. That cherished idea is still alive and well, despite many organized attempts to kill it. India can and should thrive, because no other country in the world is as diverse, as unique and as flawed. But this diversity also means unlimited potential; a latent ability to show the rest of the world how so many different cultures, races, ethnicities and religions can co-exist and prosper. It is an honor for me to call myself Indian. To paraphrase Nobel Prize winning Indian poet Rabindranath Tagore, may India thrive and “into that heaven of freedom, My Father, may my country awake”.
Tuesday, October 27, 2009
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7 comments:
Wonderful, apt yet short description of India.
I can definitely agree mots of the things.
Probably should help many NRIs, OCIs to explain their friends what India is........
excellent post! loved reading it :-)
i am going back to India after many years in USA. i am neither foolishly emotional about India nor disillusioned by the American Dream... i am going back to fulfil the promise made to myself. it helps me that i am armed with all the knowledge and experience to achieve my dreams anywhere in the world... and at this junction of my life, all i feel is unctrollable excitement towards a life i will create when i am back in India for good!
best wishes,
Manasi
Nice One!
The cliche' "India is a land of contradictions" describes it best.
This subject deserves a longer post.
As Mark Twain put it: "India is the cradle of the human race, the birthplace of human speech, the mother of history, the grandmother of legend, and the great grandmother of tradition. Our most valuable and most instructive materials in the history of man are treasured up in India only."
However, the difference betwwen North and South Indians should not be exaggerated. Latest genetic research shows that the population of India, even in the South, is mostly descended from the ANI (Ancient North Indian) and although there are people with ASI (Ancient South Indian) genetic type, the Andamanese are the best representatives of the pure ASI root population.
Sandeep, it is very well written and briefly describes what India is and is not. It is the biggest paradox that I have ever come across in my rather eventful life! No one can describe it fully although many attempts have been made and the authors themselves acknowledge defeat. Unlike Manasi, I am foolishly emotional about India, and almost border on being jingoistic about it. I would not like to live anywhere else in the world. I am still living my dream here.
Nice post Sandy!! where are you now?? pls call!
Hey thats very nice...you have covered most of the topics in brief...
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