Raghavan’s Praise for PM Modi’s 73rd Independence Day Speech
Raghavan, who is one of the few living to have heard all the
Independence Day Speeches of all the Indian Prime Ministers beginning from
Jawaharlal Nehru in 1947, had said: INSPIRING AGENDA FOR INDIA’S GREATNESS. I
certainly was one of the few living to have been part of the team which put
together the Independence Day speeches of Lal Bahadur Shastri and Indira Gandhi in the years
1964-69. I can asseverate with full conviction that this year’s Independence
Day speech by Narendra Damodardas Modi is the best that I
have heard.
Of course, Modi is nonpareil in his oratorical eloquence and in the art
and science of effective communication. But speaking this year from the
ramparts of the Red Fort he excelled himself in content, diction and delivery –
all extemporaneously flowing replete with felicitous expressions and
captivating word play.
The only other Indian Prime Minister with whom he stands
comparison is Jawaharlal Nehru who too shunned prepared speeches and
established instant rapport with his audiences. Nehru, however, was given too
much to generalities, whereas Modi is crystal-clear, crisp, specific and relevant both in
the goals he sets for the country and in the inspiring language in which he
sets them, evocatively linking them to great names and great occasions.
For instance, whereas all other Prime Ministers before
him indulged in vague and airy-fairy bla-blas, Modi, in his very first
Independence Day address in 2014,
brought up the importance of toilets and cleanliness and pledged his
Government to a nationwide plan of action by undertaking sustained and vigorous
measures. That speech became equally memorable for his rousing “Make in India”
call. The announcements he makes and agenda he sets for himself and his
government are evidence of the thorough preparation and hard-nosed homework
that go into them.
While this is generally true for all his past addresses,
this year stands out for some highly impactful announcements.
Heading the list is the long overdue decision to have a
Chief of Defence Staff. Beginning
from the chairman of the joint chiefs of staff of the US going back to the
1940s and a chief of defence staff of Britain,
instituted in 1959, there are similar posts in all advanced industrialised countries, which
have found the post to be essential for defence planning and preparedness and effective coordination
among the different Services in respect of intelligence and operations.
The recommendation that India should have one emanated
in 1966 from the Political and Security Policy Planning Directorate of which I
was in charge, and the Kargil Committee only
reiterated that recommendation.
This year’s Independence Day address is notable for Modi’s strongly worded
stress for the first ever time from the Prime Minister’s level and on such a
momentous occasion, on the imperative need to take steps to counter the
population explosion. For far too long, the government had been soft-pedalling this perturbing
feature of India’s polity, without coming out boldly in favour of vigorous measures
to contain and reduce population, which is uncontrolled in States like Bihar,
Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh (the so-called BIMARU States).
Modi’s unequivocal
pronouncement should help put all the government’s weight behind efforts to
reverse the trend, based on some of the policies found effective in countries
like China. Sustainable development is impossible and rapid exhaustion of
resources inevitable without bringing down population level. It is heading
towards catastrophic proportions and without reining it in in the shortest
possible term, all the dreams Modi was talking of will become nightmares.
The vigorous push to be given to the expansion and
strengthening of infrastructure with an allocation of 100 trillion rupees and
to Jal Jeevan Mission to carry
piped water to every household with an allocation of 3.5 trillion rupees is yet
another indication of concrete goal setting by Modi which is the hallmark of his leadership.
I was
intrigued to find him quoting in Tamil a little-known but the most appropriate
couplet from Thirukkural of Thiruvalluvar who had
categorically asserted 3000 years ago that there was no well-being and survival
without water which, he averred, was indeed the foundation of stability and
order in society itself.
If I were asked to choose, from among all the
commitments that Modi has made in his
speech, the most cardinal one having a vital bearing on empowering the citizens
to scale pinnacles of achievement, I would unhesitatingly plump for his highly
imaginative and empathetic undertaking to guarantee ease of living.
The oppression, harassment and humiliation that a
citizen experiences in his dealings with government agencies in India are such
that he simply dreads having anything to do with a government office or a
government official.
Modi will earn the eternal gratitude of the average citizen
and householder if he effectively carries out his pledge to remove, as he put it,“excess domination of the
governments over people's lives” so that they have the freedom of pursuing
their aspirations and rise to their full potential.
This is how, in his address, he graphically and
sensitively portrays the rising expectations of the people:
“People's thinking has changed. Earlier, people were
happy with merely a railway station or bus station.
Now they ask: When will Vande Bharat Express come to my area, when is a good airport
coming? Earlier the aspiration was to have a good mobile phone but now, people
aspire better data speed…..India cannot be content with incremental progress.
A high jump is needed, our thought process and vision
have to match the people’s aspirations.
A change in the mindset at all levels of government and
society has to be brought about. We have to keep in mind global best practices
and build good systems.
What distinguishes him from other heads of government
India has had is his drive and keenness to deliver on the commitments he makes.
All reports are that he keeps his ministers on their
toes by constantly goading them to higher levels of performance and by
monitoring and reviewing the progress of ongoing projects at frequent
intervals.
All told, Modi has emerged as an inspirational leader who has the
right priorities, right goals and right policy responses.
Through his Independence Day address, he has left his
ministers, policy makers, public servants and the civil society in no doubt
about his earnestness to bring to fruition his vision of New India in the
forging of which, one hopes, they will be full-blooded and enthusiastic
participants.
Comments