Shyam Saran: If Modi really sees India as a democracy, then he must stop the labelling exercise / Sukhbir Badal says BJP is ‘real tukde tukde gang, has smashed national unity’
At the foundation stone-laying ceremony for the country’s new Parliament building, Prime Minister Narendra Modi declared that in a vibrant democracy like India, there was room for differences, but not disconnect. This is a welcome acknowledgement of the Argumentative Indian who loves debate, who is curious about the world around them and is open to ideas, no matter where they may come from. This is because India is a truly crossroads culture, its present determined by a long history of engagement with other races and cultures.
This engagement may well have taken place through invasions, migrations, trade or evangelical missions, but these have led to a remarkably diverse and plural society blessed with an innate cosmopolitanism. There is no homogeneity among its people, neither of race nor religion, neither of language nor traditions. It is the shared historical experience, a mutual enrichment of cultures and an affinity born out of a deep attachment to the idea of India that underlie its nationalism. In its most positive and dynamic articulations, this nationalism has been accommodative, not exclusionary. It is infused with a sense of common humanity…
Discussion on Indian Agriculture and the ongoing Kisan agitation
Amit Bhaduri: Faces
in mirror held up by farmers’ protest
Ravinder Kaur: Has Modi finally met his match in
India's farmers?
Indian Farmers'
Protest - Work in progress videos
STATE OF RURAL AND
AGRARIAN INDIA REPORT 2020. By the Network of Rural and Agrarian Studies