Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
National

India Doesn't Need Nationalism After 70 Years Of Independence: Nayantara Sahgal

Darpan News Desk, 29 Jan, 2018 12:01 PM
    India doesn't need any lessons on nationalism 70 years after Independence, feels eminent writer and member of the Nehru-Gandhi family Nayantara Sahgal, dubbing the BJP's nationalism agenda a "load of rubbish".
     
    "We do not need nationalism. Their (BJP's) idea of nationalism is a load of rubbish. We needed nationalism when we were fighting to become a nation, fighting to free ourselves from British rule. We are a nation for the past 70 years. So we do not need nationalism. It is all nonsense," Sahgal said in an interview to IANS on the sidelines of the Apeejay Kolkata Literary Festival here.
     
    The nonagenarian writer, who was one of the most prominent faces of the 2015 "award wapsi" campaign to protest intolerance in the country, said India is going through a dark, grim phase with no democracy. Art and artists are frequently under attack and nation's history is being tampered with.
     
    "We are in a dark situation in India. There is no democracy. We are already seeing signs of that because debate and dissent have been crushed. History is being wiped out and being re-written. Filmmakers are being attacked. Writers are also under attack. Many have been murdered. So what else can you believe," she asked.
     
    Sahgal feared that, at this rate, the Hindutva brigade would declare India a "Hindu Rashtra", where all other communities would be considered outsiders and the Muslims regarded as enemies.
     
    Sahgal, whose new novella "When The Moon Shines By Day" chronicles the country's journey towards "a fascist Hindu reality", maintained it is not just the intellectual community, but people from all walks of life are under attack.
     
    "It is not only concerning the intellectual community. It is the common person who is under attack. Cattle transporters have been murdered, a poor man who was a blacksmith, has been lynched by a mob, a little boy was knifed to death while returning from his Eid shopping. These are not intellectuals. These are ordinary people carrying on with their ordinary business," she pointed out.
     
    Sahgal, the daughter of first Indian Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru's sister, Vijaya Lakshmi Pandit, said despite their defeat, Congress' performance in the recent Gujarat elections is a sign that the situation in the country is changing.
     
    "The situation is already changing. We have all seen the result in Gujarat. In Modi's home state Congress has made quite a considerable comeback, which is very encouraging. Then there are protests all over the country from various spheres. That is bringing a change."
     
    "The Dalits have risen in protest. They have declared they would not pick up the cow carcasses any more. It is from the different groups from all over the country that the protests are arising," she said.
     
    "The real change ultimately comes from the votes. But now all the opposition parties -- and many Indians who do not belong to any party -- are suspicious about the EVMs because they have been tampered with," she alleged.
     
    "The BJP would go to any length to win elections. Of course, they have a lot of money because the corporates are backing them and the opposition parties cannot compete with them on that front at all," Sahgal added.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Adoption Rates 'Disappointing,' Declining This Year, Says Children's Rep

    B.C. Adoption Rates 'Disappointing,' Declining This Year, Says Children's Rep
    VICTORIA — British Columbia's child and youth representative says a government plan to increase adoption rates for young people in care is faltering.

    B.C. Adoption Rates 'Disappointing,' Declining This Year, Says Children's Rep

    Former N.S. Female Firefighter Says She Is To Get Official Apology For Discrimination

    Former N.S. Female Firefighter Says She Is To Get Official Apology For Discrimination
    In an interview Tuesday, Liane Tessier released details of an agreement that she says comes after years of complaints about abusive and disrespectful behaviour from her male counterparts.

    Former N.S. Female Firefighter Says She Is To Get Official Apology For Discrimination

    What Canadians Were Curious About: Google Searches Suggest 2017 A Tough Year

      Google has released its 17th annual survey of top-trending searches, and top-of-mind topics for Canucks in 2017 ranged from devastating hurricanes to deceased rock icons to the continuing political circus south of the border.

    What Canadians Were Curious About: Google Searches Suggest 2017 A Tough Year

    Housing Market Expected To Slow Next Year, But Prices Still Forecast To Rise

    Housing Market Expected To Slow Next Year, But Prices Still Forecast To Rise
    TORONTO — New stricter mortgage rules are expected to slow the housing market next year, but prices are still expected to rise about five per cent, according to a report by Royal LePage.

    Housing Market Expected To Slow Next Year, But Prices Still Forecast To Rise

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau Boasts About By-election Results, Tories And NDP Defensive

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau Boasts About By-election Results, Tories And NDP Defensive
    OTTAWA — Justin Trudeau says the results of four federal byelections Monday night show the Liberals are on the right track with their focus on middle-class Canadians.

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau Boasts About By-election Results, Tories And NDP Defensive

    Halifax Police Charge 66-Year-Old Man With Manslaughter In Manor Pushing Death

    A 66-year-old man has been charged with manslaughter in relation to a pushing death of a fellow resident at a Halifax apartment complex.

    Halifax Police Charge 66-Year-Old Man With Manslaughter In Manor Pushing Death