• This forum contains old posts that have been closed. New threads and replies may not be made here. Please navigate to the relevant forum to create a new thread or post a reply.
  • Welcome to Tamil Brahmins forums.

    You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our Free Brahmin Community you will have access to post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today!

    If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact contact us.

We need to rethink our 21st century idea of India

Status
Not open for further replies.
Are NRI's over enthusiastic in India's politics...I do not think so..They are part of the Indian parivar, especially for the first generation who migrated to greener pastures..They may be US/UK/Australian citizens, but they are Indians at heart...How about the second and third generations Indians..Hindutva may be the binding force for them too

We need to rethink our 21st century idea of India

Vir Sanghvi
October 05, 2014





Many American commentators who have written about Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit to the US have noted how each of his public appearances was greeted with rapturous support from people of Indian origin who now live in the States.

In many ways, this phalanx of NRI supporters was Modi’s secret weapon. He came across not as an outsider visiting America but as a man who already commanded a considerable measure of powerful support within the US. And because NRIs are among the richest and best-educated ethnic groups in the US, their influence could not be easily ignored by American politicians.



In India however, the reaction to Modi’s Indian-American supporters was more ambivalent. You only had to look at social media during the PM’s visit to see how sneering some of the responses of resident Indians could be. When NRIs sang “Sare Jahan Se Achha Hindustan”, one cynic tweeted, “Then, come back, na!”


When they screened a short film before Modi’s Madison Square Garden speech about the sacrifices made by Indian-Americans, many resident Indians were annoyed by the notion that these ‘sacrifices’ basically consisted of how they scraped together enough money to get out of India.


Nor was this indignation restricted to trolls or Modi baiters. Sociologist and TV don Dipankar Gupta tweeted: “Very cute; Migrated willingly to USA, won’t come back & yet chiming “I love my India.” Is their India Real or Imagined? Ancient or Modern?” That one tweet was retweeted an astonishing 1,200 times because it so perfectly captured the mood of many indignant resident Indians.
India’s relationship with its diaspora has always been complex. We are proud of the prominence of large Indian-origin communities in Mauritius, South Africa, Fiji, the West Indies and East Africa. But few members of those communities hold Indian passports or claim any connection to India other than cultural (which usually means Bollywood). When Idi Amin expelled thousands of Indians from Uganda in the early 1970s only a small number opted to come to India. Most went first to the UK, and then on to North America and other places.


We are more willing to regard Indians who live in West Asia as full-fledged Indians. We believe that they are migrant workers or professionals who do not identify (or are not allowed to identify) with the countries they live in. Most intend to return to India someday and in the meantime, their remittances back home add to our foreign exchange reserves.


The only area where ambiguity exists is in our attitude to Indians (or people of Indian origin) who live in Western Europe and the US. Many of them have surrendered their Indian passports (which is why Modi told a cheering New York crowd that he would give them long-term visas), want their children to settle in their adopted countries and do not necessarily dream of returning to India.


India came to terms with this phenomenon only in the 1980s (when the term “NRI’’ came into vogue) because ethnic Indians in the US and UK began growing in affluence and influence. Since then, NRIs have become a part of our cultural and economic landscape. The government launched schemes to encourage NRIs to invest in India and Bollywood discovered that it had a natural audience across the oceans. Thirty years before Modi got there, Amitabh Bachchan had already packed out Madison Square Garden with his NRI fans and there is a whole sub-genre of Hindi cinema dedicated to the NRI market.


We now think of political NRIs as BJP-supporters. But in the 1980s, it was overseas branches of the Congress that welcomed Rajiv Gandhi to the US. And successive governments of all parties have used NRIs to lobby for India. For instance, it was NRI tycoons who persuaded Tony Blair to meet AB Vajpayee’s principal secretary Brajesh Mishra to break the chill that followed India’s nuclear tests. And American NRIs routinely lobby senators and Congressmen on India’s behalf.


So, why the sudden ambivalence and hostility? Well, it is not new. Whenever NRIs are seen as a threat, they begin to be perceived more cynically. In 1983 when Swraj Paul tried to take over Escorts and DCM, Indian industry banded together to defeat him. Later that decade, when the likes of Manu Chhabria used the NRI scheme to gain control of such large companies as Shaw Wallace, they were treated as criminals.

We need to rethink our 21st century idea of India - Hindustan Times


One reason why NRIs are being seen as a threat again is because so many of them have become active (and frequently, abusive) on social media, usually in support of the Sangh parivar and often against India’s minorities. Many resident Indians are annoyed enough to ask, as Dipankar Gupta did on Twitter, how US citizens can have any stake in the future of India. Do they even understand today’s India? Or are they fantasising about some imaginary ancient India? And besides, if they care so much about this country, then why don’t they just come back home?


These are not unreasonable questions. And the short answer has to be that yes, many NRIs demand the luxury of broadcasting reactionary views from the safety of their New Jersey homes.


But there is also an important counter question to be asked: why not? If we want them to watch our movies and support our interests abroad, then can we really complain when they use new media to air views that some of us may find primitive and ugly?


The answer, I suspect, is that we need to rethink our idea of India. As the diaspora spreads and grows in influence, it will become a more important contributor to Indian political discourse (and abuse). Technology knows no borders. And as social media helps the voices of the diaspora to be heard louder and louder here, we’ll just have to accept that the 21st century avatar of the idea of India also knows no territorial boundaries.


- See more at: We need to rethink our 21st century idea of India - Hindustan Times
 
Vganeji,
Yes I saw that article, and feel it is realistic. I have been chastised for being an NRI and having an opinion on Indian or Hindu matters.
Sometimes when you are deep in the Tree you do not see the jungle, you have to rise above to see a better picture. At other times you can get insulated from the action staying so far away, that can happen within India too.
The article is balanced and paints the new reality.
 
Vir sanghvi is a paid journalist and was exposed in radia tapes. He was The conversation showed that he listed the points he would include and asked for approval and feed back from corporates and party. The supreme court is sitting on release of tapes and is no hurry to decide one way or the other. He is a tainted journalist and has to remain so till radia tape related issues are made public and sorted out by analysis, discussion and possible blood letting. Shame PCI chaired by ex judge katju has conveniently buried it.

There is nothing new in his report; the same logic and analysis was used by anti modi and anti bjp congress friendly seculars and the usual communist bents. A small group was able to influence the democratic us govt. to deny visa on a law which has not been applied on any one else. Speaks volumes on american values and justice.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Latest ads

Back
Top