Wednesday, April 14, 2021

Dr.Ambedkar- a True Nationalist

“I confess that I have quarreled with the caste Hindus over some points, but I take vow before you that I shall lay down my life in defense of our land”

-        Babasaheb1

There is recent trend in India, tacitly planned, spitefully designed, venomously orchestrated by some right wing hindutva groups which brands dalits especially ambedkarites as anti-nationals. Even though they conspicuously praise Babasaheb, they inconspicuously lay the foundation in the minds of all non-dalits to hate ambedkarites and leftists. The incident of RohithVemula is one such example. Their orchestration is admirably brilliant. When all political elites praise Ambedkar, now and then, some obscure rookie politician is made to question the integrity of Babasaheb publicly to defame the legend. Not long ago, one such politician decried publicly that Dr.Ambedkar does not deserve to have so many statues in India, more than even Mahatma Gandhi, because Ambedkar was against Indian independence!!!

            No one would have heard a more stupid and insane argument than this in his or her lifetime. Dr.Ambedkar was never against the independence of our country. He as a messiah of the depressed classes and the downtrodden strongly believed that only free India can give them the real political power, which they are deprived off. Babasaheb himself has said “We feel that nobody can remove our grievances as well as we can, and we cannot remove them unless we get political power in our own hands. No share of this political power can evidently come to us so long as the British government remains as it is. It is only in a swaraj constitution that we stand any chance of getting the political power into our hands, without which we cannot bring salvation to our people.”2Infact Dr.Ambedkar was a person with a true spirit of freedom, patriotism and nationalism. He was always convinced that justice could not be served to the people in a colonially ordained society and sincerely believed freedom is the necessary condition for the development of the human self. Hence he stressed “We must have a government in which men in power knowing where obedience will end and resistance will begin, will not be afraid to amend the social and economic code of life which the dictates of justice and expediency so urgently call for. This role the British government will never able to play. It is only a government which is of the people for the people and by the people that will make this possible.”3

            Many congressmen even today accuse Dr.Ambedkar of opposing congress, which fought for India’s political freedom from foreign rule and hence state him as an anti-national. If we read history of India with a true open mind, we could understand one thing that Ambedkar was one of those few classes of people who existed that day, who was a true patriot and batted for a real freedom. It was true that Dr.Ambedkar was against Congress, but it was not because they fought for freedom from foreign rule, but because they fought for freedom only from foreign rule. He was more a patriot and a better national than the congressmen but with a fundamental difference. As his patriotism doesn’t just meant a cry for power, so his freedom doesn’t just meant freedom from foreign rule.  For him true freedom cannot be realized only with the breakage of colonial political structure but with a supplementary collapse of Hindu social structure. His patriotism meant love for his own people rather hate for British, which the congress successfully articulated. Babasaheb believed that as long as caste hierarchy exists, strong patriarchy exists; political freedom achieved will only be a mirage. Hence he digs at the so called Congress patriots in the following way; “……nationalists and patriots are a peculiar people. A patriot and a nationalist in India is one who sees with open eyes his fellowmen treated as being less than men. But his humanity does not rise in protest. He knows that men and women for no cause are denied their human rights. But it does not prick his civic sense to helpful action. He finds whole classes of people shut out from public employment. But it does not rouse his sense of justice and fair play. He perceives hundreds of evil practices that injure man and society. But they do not sicken him with disgust4 He further confirms his position as a true patriot as, “I am glad I do not belong to that class of patriots. I belong to that class which takes its stand on democracy and which seeks to destroy monopoly in every shape and form. Our aim is to realize in practice our ideal of one man, one value in all walks of life. Political, economic and social.“5Hence Babasaheb to answer his detractors characteristically declared“the untouchables are not opposed to freedom from British Imperialism. But they refuse to be content with mere freedom from British Imperialism. What they insist upon is that free India is not enough. Free India should be made safe for democracy”.6

            Dr.Ambedkar in a strictest sense wanted a true democratically free India, not mere free India. Democracy in his sense was not just a form of government as the congress and other mere freedom fighters thought. For him it was a society in action. He really wanted a democratic society to be nurtured by all stakeholders in India that gives equal respect to all, a precondition to setup a free, independent democratic government. At least he needed some constitutional safeguards in the free India to realize the true freedom. Hence Dr.Ambedkar wrote,“A democratic form of Governmenpresupposes a democratic form of society. The formal framework of democracy is of no value and would indeed be a misfit if there was no social democracy. The politicals never realized that democracy was not a form of Government. It was essentially a form of society. It may not be necessary for a democratic society to be marked by unity, by community of purpose, by loyalty to public ends and by mutuality of sympathy. But it does unmistakably involve two things. The first is an attitude of mindan attitude of respect and equality towards their fellows. The second is a social organization free from rigid social barriers. Democracy is incompatible and inconsistent with isolation and exclusiveness, resulting in the distinction between the privileged and the unprivileged”.7His vision was more pragmatic than mere romantic. He was not ready to take the congress’s point that social suppression is a minor issue, which could be sorted out after independence but stressed on the importance of creating a concurrence among all stakeholders about constitutional safeguards. Hence he categorically ascertains “In short what the untouchables want are safeguards in the constitution itself which will prevent the tyranny of a Hindu communal majority from coming into being”8

            Babasaheb was one of the highly misunderstood figures of modern India. He himself knows this and hence says “I know my position has not been understood properly in the country. It often been misunderstood…I say that whenever there has been a conflict between my personal interests and the interests of the country as a whole, I have never pursued the path of private gain….so far the demands of the country are concerned, I have never lagged behind.”9 Isn’t it a true statement? Who else can claim the status of the real architect of modern India than our Babasaheb? Pragmatically he batted for factories and not for any romanticized farms. Apart from drafting the constitution, which everyone know, he was the first intellect to recommend for RBI, free banking, decentralized planning10, Government Insurance companies11, and regulated work time in factories12 etc. He waged a lifelong struggle for dalits, downtrodden and women. What India should always remember is whatever right any individual enjoys in this free India today is a gift of Babasaheb by virtue of his relentless struggle against the vested interests. And it becomes our resolute duty to salute this great man who breathed his last for the nation and the development of the nation.

 

Bibliography

 

1.     Quoted in “Ambedkar life and Mission” written by Keer, Dhananjay

2.     Quoted in “Thus Spoke Ambedkar” written by Das, Bhagawan

3.     Ibid

4.     Ibid

5.     Quoted in “Political philosophy of Ambedkar” written by D.R.Jatava

6.     “What Congress and Gandhi have done to the Untouchables” by Dr.B.R.Ambedkar

7.     “Ranade, Gandhi and Jinnah” by Dr.B.R.Ambedkar

8.     “What Congress and Gandhi have done to the Untouchables” by Dr.B.R.Ambedkar

9.     Quoted in “Ambedkar life and Mission” written by Keer, Dhananjay

10.  Rouledge handbook of history of global economic thought – by Vincent Barnett

11.  Dr.Ambedkar and empowerment: constitutional vicissitudes- by K.I.Vibhute

12.  Ambedkar , a critical study – by W.N.Kuber