MODI MAAN KI BATT OF 25TH JUNE 2017
A few points from Modi's Maan Ki Batt of 25th June 2017:
1. 25th June 1975 – Imposition of Emergency
by Indra
Gandhi – India’s Dark Night:
Eternal Vigilance is the Price of
Liberty. One needs to be constantly alert about our Democracy, that is why we
must also keep remembering the events that inflicted harm upon our democracy;
and at the same time move ahead, carrying forward the virtues of democracy.
1975 – 25th June – it
was a dark night that no devotee of democracy can ever forget.
The country had virtually become a
prison. The voice of the opposition had been smothered. Several prominent
leaders including Jai Prakash Narayan had been jailed. The judicial
system too could not escape the sinister shadows of the Emergency. The press
was completely muffled.
The present-day students of
journalism and the champions of democracy have been endeavouring towards raising awareness about
that dark period, by constant reminders, and should continue to do so.
The believers of democracy fought a
prolonged war, and the great nation that India is, where the spirit of
democracy pervades the very being of all its people, the strength of that
spirit was demonstrated when the opportunity of elections came. We have to
further fortify that legacy.
2. Gifting Books or Khadi
Handkerchief instead of Bouquets:
Recently, I had the opportunity to
go to one of my favorite events. A very good programme is being run in
Kerala for the past few years, by the P.N. Panicker Foundation, which encourages people
to cultivate the habit of reading books and to enhance their awareness towards
this, by organising celebrations such as ‘Reading Day’,
and ‘Reading Month’. I had the opportunity to go for the inaugural function,
where I was told that instead of bouquets, they gift books. I liked it. Thus I
was also reminded of what had slipped my mind. Because when I was in Gujarat, I
had set this tradition of welcoming, by not giving bouquets, but books or
handkerchiefs instead. And that too, a ‘Khadi’ handkerchief, so that it promotes
‘Khadi’.
Till the time I was in Gujarat, this
habit had been ingrained in us, but after coming here, I had lost that habit.
When I went to Kerala, it was rekindled. I have already begun to issue
instructions in the government. Here too we can gradually nurture this habit.
And the life span of a bouquet is very short. You receive it in your hand for a
moment and then abandon it. But when you present a book, it becomes a part of
the household, a part of the family. One can also use a ‘Khadi’ handkerchief to welcome people, and be a support to the innumerable
underprivileged. The expenses are reduced as well, and the gift is well
utilized too.
I say this, thinking of the
historical value of such gifts. During my past UK visit, in London, the Queen
of Britain, Queen Elizabeth had invited me to dine with her. The atmosphere was
imbued with maternal warmth, and I was served with great affection. Afterwards
when she showed me a small thread-spun khadi handkerchief, her eyes lit up. With
great respect and in an emotion filled voice, she said, that Mahatma Gandhi had
sent this handkerchief to her as a wedding gift. So many years have passed and
yet, Queen Elizabeth has treasured the handkerchief gifted by Mahatma Gandhi.
And she was happy to show it to me, when I went there. As I gazed at it, the
Queen encouraged me to touch it. A small gift by Mahatma Gandhi, has become a
part of her life and a part of history.
3. Government E-Market or GeM:
Recently, I had the opportunity to read a letter, which
I feel, I should share with you. From the far south, in Madurai, Tamil Nadu, Arulmozhi Sarvanan, a housewife, sent
me a letter. And what was in that letter? She wrote, that she thought about
engaging in some economic activity keeping in mind her responsibilities such as
children’s education, to lend some financial assistance to her family.
She
got some money from the bank, under the ‘Mudra’ Scheme and commenced working towards
procuring some items from the market for sale. Then she came to know of the
‘Government E-Marketplace’ system initiated by the government. She tried to
find out the details, and asked people about it. And then she registered
herself for the scheme.
Here
I want to tell my countrymen, that if you get the opportunity, you should also
visit, the E-G-E-M, E-GEM website on the Internet. This is a great new system.
Whoever wants to supply any item to the government, small things such as
electric bulbs, dustbins, brooms, chairs and tables, they can register
themselves. They can mention the quality of the goods, the rate at which they
sell, and it is compulsory for the government departments to visit the site and
see whether the supplier can supply the goods at reasonable prices without
compromising on the quality. And then the orders can be placed. That is how the
middlemen can be removed from the system. The entire process becomes
transparent. There is no interface. Everything is done through technology. So,
when people register in E-GEM, all the government departments become aware of
them. As there are no middlemen, the goods are available at very reasonable
rates.
Now
whatever goods Arulmozhi Madam could supply, she got all those
registered on this government website. And the best part is, what she has
written in this letter is very interesting. She has written that she got the
money from the ‘Mudra’ Scheme and started her business, then
she registered the inventory of all her products on the E-GEM website, and then
she got an order from the Prime Minister’s Office. It was news to me also, I
wondered what the PMO would have ordered. She wrote that the PMO had ordered
two thermoses, and she was paid Rupees 1600/-.
This
is empowerment. This is an opportunity for encouraging entrepreneurship.
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