Revolution is a reaction by the people to the current state of affairs in the country....
Sikhism represents a belief that every Indian can be proud to be a part of. The Sikh Gurus are held in high esteem and sacrosanct not only by Sikhs but by all supporters of independence in general as role models.
The Sikh Gurus have motivated us to be a better being in an era that was perhaps the most challenging chapter of our history. One cannot forget the contributions of Sikh Gurus and their selfless sacrifices to strengthen the societal framework.... giving them direction and provide leadership to overthrow the rule of invaders.
The medieval era represents the darkest phase of our society in Punjab. Internally we were being eroded by termites of casteism...... gender discrimination..... And overt ritualism emanating from Vedas.
And externally, we were being butchered by ethnic groups of the most uncivilized tribes of West Asia – the Ghaznis, Khiljis, Mughals, Slaves, Tughlaqs etc.
The Sikh gurus, in these turbulent times, lit the lamp of divine wisdom and steered the society towards the original and deep rooted tenets of our culture.
The Gurus did what the radical Bhaktas could not: create a society outside the caste-based society, the democratic Sikh...free ...classless Panth...... where everyone stood equal in every respect.
The Gurus laid stress on social service ....Sewa. In my last post I shared ...some words about the relevance of Sewa & Satsang in our life...
Guru Nanak, after his travels around the world, took to farming, from where he would send the grain to the common kitchen.....The Langar.
Guru Arjan Dev established a leper asylum at Tarn Taran, which runs even to this day.
But change is not easy.....for it means flowing against the current. Resistance we encounter is variable with time and place. Buddhism and Jainism shun the use of force , They stay clear from it.....and Brahmanism sanctioned it only for "upholding the caste order".
But under the Sikh thesis, armed resistance to tyranny was a religious duty. Guru Gobind Singh "institutionalised his ideal of defending dharma by creating the Khalsa".
The Sikh Gurus condemned idol worship, ceremonialism and ritualism. What was needed was a separate identity, for the Gurus realised that "it was imperative to build a social system and organise the people outside the caste-society". The instrument of the Khalsa was created to "capture political power for a plebeian mission".....
Historian Hari Ram Gupta writes about the persecution of the Sikhs at the hands of the Mughals: "Majha, the homeland of the Sikhs was completely ruined. A wonderful and terrible trial indeed, from which the weak came out strong, from which the strong came out sublime." The masses joined the revolution because the Sikh Gurus were always in the forefront making supreme sacrifices for the right cause.
It has been said that the Sikh movement was...... perhaps on matters of eminence alone is probably the greatest social revolution.
The Sikh revolution is comparable with the revolutions in France and America, ...But in those countries changes took a long time coming ...In France the class interests and in US the racial aversion and even longer to be banished there.
Quite at divergence with them the Sikhs’ had a surgical transformation of its followers on the grounds of fraternity, liberty and equality. Also, the times were bad and the Sikh revolution took place at a difficult time, in a caste-ridden society and under a fanatical foreign rule.
Can we say that the Sikh Revolution was social and political in nature, secular in kind and driven by religious inspiration?
Had there been no Guru Gobind Singh and his call to arms, Sufi saint Bulleh Shah writes that the entire population would have been either circumcised or converted.
Historians agree unanimously that the French Revolution was a watershed event that changed Europe forever, following in the footsteps of the American Revolution, which had occurred just a decade earlier.
The causes of the French Revolution, though, are difficult to pin down: based on the historical evidence that exists, a fairly compelling argument could be made regarding any number of factors. Internationally speaking, a number of major wars had taken place in the forty years leading up to the Revolution, and France had participated, to some degree, in most of them.
The Seven Years’ War in Europe and the American Revolution across the ocean had a profound effect on the French psyche and made the Western world a volatile one.. The costs of waging war, supporting allies, and maintaining the French army quickly depleted a French bank that was already weakened from royal extravagance.
Finally, in a time of highly secularized Enlightenment, the idea that King Louis XVI had absolute power due to divine right—the idea that he had been handpicked by God—didn’t hold nearly as much water as in the past few decades.
We mentioned above .....No one factor was directly responsible for the French Revolution. Years of feudal oppression and fiscal mismanagement contributed to a French society that was ripe for revolt.
Noting a downward economic spiral in the late 1700s, King Louis XVI brought in a number of financial advisors to review the weakened French treasury. Each advisor reached the same conclusion—that France needed a radical change in the way it taxed the public—so he appointed a new controller general of finance.....He suggested that, among other things, France should begin taxing the previously exempt nobility. The nobility refused, even after controller general pleaded with them during the Assembly of Notables in 1787.
Financial ruin thus seemed imminent.
In a final act of desperation, Louis XVI decided in 1789 to convene the Estates-General, an ancient assembly consisting of three different estates that each represented a portion of the French population....The clergy....The nobility ...and the common man.
If the Estates-General could agree on a tax solution, it would be implemented. However, since two of the three estates—the clergy and the nobility—were tax-exempt, the attainment of any such solution was unlikely.
Feuds quickly broke out over this disparity and would prove to be irreconcilable. Realizing that its numbers gave it an automatic advantage, the Third Estate declared itself the sovereign National Assembly. Within days of the announcement, many members of the other two estates had switched allegiances over to this revolutionary new assembly.
Shortly after the National Assembly formed, its members took the Tennis Court Oath,..... swearing that they would not relent in their efforts until a new constitution had been agreed upon.
The National Assembly’s revolutionary spirit galvanized France, manifesting in a number of different ways...
Prison Bastille |
From here onward began the civil disobedience that would eventually pave the way for the revolutionary regime to get noticed and put the changes in effect. The storming of the Bastille prison in the East of Paris on the 14th of July is regarded as being the landmark event that led to the social disorder. This was done in the attempt to gain arms and ammunition's from the prison. Inspired by this event the peasants revolted against there feudal lords eventually freeing themselves of the unfair contracts that they were signed into.
Shortly thereafter, the assembly released the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen, which established a proper judicial code and the autonomy of the French people.
The French revolution paved the way for the secular system of governance that we now see governing most of the countries of the world. From the perspective of freeing the people from unjust monarchist regimes that committed all sorts of crimes under the banner of religion it can be seen as a successful and valiant effort on the part of the people.
Anna Hazare is a simple man ....
In real terms he is Lal Bahadur Shastri's.... Jai Jawan Jai Kisan.... From 1962 his soul and.... heart cried for India and sung for India..... To see that India is mired in rampant corruption in everyday life pained him.....To see what the hapless Indian citizen confronts when dealing with any part of a monolithic state apparatus . What has has been compounded by a cynical realisation is that almost all the major pillars of a burgeoning democracy are now tainted with institutional turpitude.
Anna Hazare saw that individual greed and naked opportunism has been tacitly encouraged by an unholy politico-bureaucratic nexus that encompasses different kinds of mafia groups -- the builders lobby, the kerosene and petrol adulterators, road building robbers, private education empires, black money tycoons.The Common wealth scandal and the 2G scam are the proverbial tip of a very murky iceberg.
This complex eco-system that had its genesis in corrupt Polity and mafiosi...and the dalals....
These dubious links have been captured evocatively by Bollywood ..... for that matter you have to see the hypothetical Anna film Dabangg poster... Anna in Salman Khan avatar.
The world’s largest democracy has the dubious distinction of having the largest number of legislators with a criminal record and some state governments are brazenly admitting notorious individuals into the party-fold for electoral considerations.
Anna wants to change the way of governance...not the Government.
I read an article in by The Deccan Chronicle and thought I would share it with you all on the blog
Written by... Lt Gen S.K. Sinha , a retired lieutenant-general, was Vice-Chief of Army Staff and has served as governor of Assam and Jammu and Kashmir.
Democracy arrested
The architecture of the Indian Constitution is based on the spirit of liberty, equality and fraternity, as espoused in the French Revolution; on the concept of the rule of the people, by the people and for the people, as articulated by Abraham Lincoln in his Gettysburg address; and on the format of parliamentary democracy as developed in Britain, the mother of democracy.
Dr Bhimrao Ambedkar, the architect of our Constitution, while urging its adoption by the Constituent Assembly, stated, “However good a Constitution may be, it is sure to turn out bad if those who are called to work it happen to be a bad lot.” We need to ask ourselves whether our generation has lived up to the hopes of the founding fathers of our Constitution. The answer is an emphatic no. We have been persistently debasing our democracy.
Parliamentary, or presidential, democracy is at variance with people’s democracy. The latter provides for one-party rule and for the supremacy of the party over government functioning. We got a close glimpse of that during the visit of Khrushchev and Bulganin to India in 1955. The first secretary of the Soviet Communist Party mattered more than the Soviet PM. A similar equation has developed in India. The distinction required in a parliamentary democracy between the government and the ruling party has been obliterated. Self-glorifying advertisements at tax-payers’ expense are put out with pictures of the party president and PM. The former now often inaugurates major government projects. This does not happen in any parliamentary democracy, nor did it happen earlier in India.
Those who advocate keeping the PM above the jurisdiction of the Lokpal are not bothered about the PM being made to play second fiddle to the party president. Like the politburo in a Communist state, we now have an extra-constitutional body in the National Advisory Council, a super-Cabinet for formulating government policy. Dynastic rule is anathema in a democracy, but this prevails at the Centre and has been avidly adopted by regional parties in states.
So far, the BJP and the Left parties have not followed suit.
Jawaharlal Nehru was initially hesitant in promoting his daughter in politics but towards the end he made her party president, setting her on course to become PM. However, he did not project her as his successor. Indira Gandhi had no inhibitions. She openly projected one son as her successor and, on his tragic death, her other son was made heir-apparent. That tradition continues.
Sanjay Gandhi inaugurated the Anglo-Sikh War Memorial at Ferozepore, at a function organised by the government, with much fanfare.
The courtiers hailed the first crown prince as a man of genius, comparing him with Vivekananda and Emperor Akbar. They are doing the same now with the current heir apparent. We have also been creating a new feudalism under the garb of promoting youth in politics. The progeny of old loyalists have been inducted in government. A feudal outlook has permeated our public life. Everyone wants a flag and red light on his car.
In the colonial period only the Viceroy, the governors of provinces and senior military commanders were so authorised. This practice is still followed in Western democracies. Our bureaucracy is shedding its neutral character and getting increasingly committed. The “lick up and kick down” approach is now in vogue. The common man visiting government offices encounters the arrogance of power.
Vote-bank politics is rampant, with little consideration for probity and national security. In the Nehru era, iftar parties at public expense were not held. Now it has become common practice for people in power to do so. If the state has to fund a religious function or subsidise a pilgrimage, let it be for all religions, not just one.
Illegal migration from Bangladesh is being promoted to build vote banks without considering national security or a state’s demographic structure. For a PM to assert that a particular religious community should be the first priority for his government violates the spirit of the Constitution. The poor, irrespective of community, should be the government’s first concern.
And now we have the monstrosity of the Communal and Targeted Violence Bill, drafted by the National Advisory Council. It violates the fundamental principle of equality enshrined in our Constitution which is the bedrock of our legal system. The murderer has to be tried under the Indian Penal Code on the basis of his crime, and not whether he is from the majority or minority community.
Communal riots in our country are almost always confined to a district or a city. The Gujarat, anti-Sikh and post-Ayodhya riots were exceptions. There are many districts in which the majority in that state is in a minority. Thus the yardstick for this atrocious bill should have been the district, and not the state. If the administration is not effective in dealing with communal violence, it should be made effective instead of enacting a new law promoting divisiveness and violating natural justice.
The most debilitating factor today is the rampant corruption. Such corruption, involving the highest echelons of government, has never taken place in the history of any worthy democracy. Having succeeded in brazening it out in the Bofors affair, the bizarre attempts of the government to do so again in these numerous scams are counter-productive. There is now a national upsurge against corruption. JP led a crusade against corruption and for the restoration of democracy. He succeeded but the leaders he installed in power squabbled among themselves and fell prey to the same evil. V.P. Singh used the Bofors card to come to power but his short tenure was futile. Corruption during these two movements was peanuts compared to that today.
Anna Hazare’s movement has generated a national upsurge which needs to be channelled through constitutional means, or else it may become a loose cannon. The Indian people must act to ensure this, or else our debased democracy may become a lost democracy.
What is the role of modern day revolution?
Revolution is a reaction by the people to the current state of affairs in the country or the world for that matter that has reached a certain critical mass large and powerful enough to spark off a social movement that takes action towards the change, for better or worse, of the form of government or the people in the government or the very principles of Governance...
Modern democracy is also a reaction of the people to their realisation that the old model of monarchy or absolute autocracy or aristocracy does not work anymore.
Yet The reality check is that there is no such thing as a perfect political system.
Modern democracy is also a reaction of the people to their realisation that the old model of monarchy or absolute autocracy or aristocracy does not work anymore.
Yet The reality check is that there is no such thing as a perfect political system.
We are witnessing today an Arab people's revolution
We are in the midst of a brave new world.
The uprisings raging from Tunisia to Egypt to Yemen are heralding a new Arab, post-Islamist revolution.
Today's events across Egypt illustrate the futility of a dictatorial Mubarak regime seeking to push back the tides of history with mere repression and brutality. They will not succeed.
President Hosni Mubarak's days, like those of deposed Tunisian President Zine El-Abidine Ben Ali, are numbered. The effects on the region were, until today, unthinkable.
And Tripoli has fallen ousting the most powerful Libyan regime of Gadaffi.
Percussions of History..........Jagjit Singh.
The greatest social revolution.......Himmat Singh Gill
Ashok Sharma ....Yes Daar ji And Anna looks like too like LB Shastri somewhat low hight complexsion and features ! Ha ha ..
ReplyDeleteAshok Sharma
It is only the Unconditional Love that prevails, and nothing else ! -Ashok
Daarji Returns
ReplyDeleteSpeaking hours after Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and opposition leader Sushma Swaraj urged him to call off his hunger strike, Hazare placed three conditions -- inclusion of lower bureaucracy in the Lokpal bill, formation of Lokayukta in all states, and citizen's charters in government offices.
He told the thousands gathered at the Ramlila ground that he would stop fasting if the government agreed to introduce the Jan Lokpal Bill drafted by his team Friday and initiate a debate on the three issues. ....
Probably Debate in Parliament....Meeting ON...??
17 hours ago · Like · · Unsubscribe
Nilesh Saraf, Bharat Saptarshi and 2 others like this.
Davinder Kumar Malhotra inclusion of lower beurocracy and citizens charter are the two things which will benefit the aam aadmi directly in day to days bussiness and once these are made and strictly adhered corruption will definitely be curtailed
17 hours ago · Unlike · 1 person
Ashok Sharma next 48 hrs are too critical.Nation may Celebrate, mourn or do both side by side. My Prayers Blessings and Good wishes with Anna and his team as well as with
all members of Parliament, who in One Voice I see clearing this LKP Bill tomorrow i...
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14 hours ago via · Like
Daarji Returns Intriguing.....In for palace politics ..you guess
Nilesh Saraf
ReplyDeleteIts 8th day, Anna is not well now and Govt. still buying time. Anna is providing a chance to India to be Corruption Free, if this revolution got failed anyhow no one will ever dare to raise the voice again. Remember: It will take many more years to set up this revolution again. Leave office, come on streets, its Now or Never!! Save INDIA... Make INDIA!!
Swarnjeet Singh Brar
ReplyDeletethis is beutiful...farooq abdullaha...country will grow when I see allaha in modi s eyes ,and he sees bhagwan in mine....I think this statement from mr abdullaha carries a lot of weight
Nilesh Saraf negotiation is an art in itself!! pinch in such a way that the person won't feel the pinch and yet you have the pleasure of pinching!! no government will bow down.. it will send a wrong signal to the world!! anna and his team need to understand this point..
ReplyDelete19 hours ago · Unlike · 1 person
Swarnjeet Singh Brar MY GOODNESS DAARJI ...HERES OUR PM EVEN US WANTED HIM TO GIVE IN...HES WITHERED THE STORM HOW ABOUT THAT
17 hours ago · Unlike · 1 person
Swarnjeet Singh Brar LOL THIS COUNTRY HAS SEEN OUR PM...LOOK HOW HE SOLD LIBERALISATION...HOW HE GOT UPA REELECTED...MY DEAR FRND AND DAARJI GIVE HIM RESPECT ...HES NEVER SHOWN EGOES HERE ...NOR DID HE TOLERATE NONSENCE...GREATEST EVER PM I MUST SAY...ON HIS FIRST TAKE SAYS BRING ME IN....I REMIND U BOTH OF THE LTTR U ARE 79 YRS OLD SHOW GUTTS ...LOL HES SHOW IMPECCIBLY ...GUYS GO HAVE A SOUND SLEEP
17 hours ago · Unlike · 1 person
Daarji Returns As i said earlier..I have the deepest respect for this honourable Man....our PM...but his silence was unnerving...and our expectations in him were high....which is something which cannot be said of others..... Hahah!!! So old is still gold....a generation almost slipping on to posterity....Look fwd to him do complete justice to us.
17 hours ago · Like
Swarnjeet Singh Brar THNK GOD WE ARE SMILING TONIGHT LOLZ
17 hours ago · Unlike · 1 person
Daarji Returns This has strengthened the institution of democracy in India.....in blatant contrast to countries around us....Jai Ho!!!
17 hours ago · Unlike · 2 people
Bharat Saptarshi Well articulated !!!!
ReplyDelete8 hours ago · Like
Manini Gandhi when the seeds of wrong are sown then who n how,,,,can one stop its growth,,,uprooting,,,anyhow,,,
7 hours ago · Unlike · 1 person
Daarji Returns ihope we have the critical mass to bring an effective change...
5 hours ago · Like
Nilesh Saraf o yes daarji!! the critical mass is there
Vakul Singh Gupta
ReplyDeleteIn 1982, In Singapore, LOKPAL BILL was implemented and 142 Corrupt Ministers & Officers were arrested in one single day.. Today Singapore has only 1% poor people & no taxes are paid by the people to the government, 92% Literacy Rate, Better Medical Facilities, Cheaper Prices, 90% Money is white & Only 1% Unemployment exists.. Re Post this if you want to live in a corruption free country.. !!
Bharat Saptarshi
ReplyDeleteI hope and pray that Anna's labour and penance for the welfare of the nation bears fruits. Let all sections of our society , without any divisions on caste, creed,religion and political affiliations, rise in unison as one nation. Even Anna's team has to be polite, courteous and adhere to the highest standards of dignified public discourse.The people owe this to each other . Our nation expects and deserves this from us.
Daarji Returns
ReplyDeleteWhat is the role of modern day revolution?
Revolution is a reaction by the people to the current state of affairs in the country or the world for that matter that has reached a certain critical mass large and powerful enough to spark off a social movement that takes action towards the change, for better or worse, of the form of government or the people in the government or the very principles of Governance...
Yesterday at 1:24pm · Like · · Unsubscribe
Nilesh Saraf, Manini Gandhi and 2 others like this.
Bharat Saptarshi Well articulated !!!!
Yesterday at 1:55pm · Like
Manini Gandhi when the seeds of wrong are sown then who n how,,,,can one stop its growth,,,uprooting,,,anyhow,,,
Yesterday at 2:55pm · Unlike · 1 person
Daarji Returns ihope we have the critical mass to bring an effective change...
22 hours ago · Like
Nilesh Saraf o yes daarji!! the critical mass is there
17 hours ago · Like
Ashok Sharma Yes Daar ji And Anna looks like too like LB Shastri somewhat low hight complexsion and features ! Ha ha ..
ReplyDeleteAshok Sharma
It is only the Unconditional Love that prevails, and nothing else ! -Ashok
Swarnjeet Singh Brar well sir none be anyone as every individual is unique...we falter when we put tags and then the actor fails....
ReplyDeleteYesterday at 8:28am · Like
Daarji Returns That is true SSB.... It sad to see that very few heroes live up the expectations.....Let us see... However my theme for blog pasted was People power.....and transitions that are changing the world order...
Yesterday at 11:17am · Like
Nilesh Saraf Daarji - explore the thread further- the world order is indeed changin!!
Yesterday at 3:37pm · Like
Daarji Returns Interesting Nilesh....Do a short brief...... We will put Part 2 on the blog...
22 hours ago · Like
Swarnjeet Singh Brar SIRJI WE DONT NEED GANDHI 2 ...BECAUSE NONE CUD MATCH IN A COUNTRY WHICH NEVER CARED AS TO WHO KILLED HIM...AND WATCHING THE ACTORS TAKING SUPPORT FROM THEM ...LOL NEXT U COMPARED IS IMPOSSIBLE BCAUSE JAI JAWAN NAHRA IS NOT EVERYBODYS CUP OF TEA...BCAUSE WE NEVER STAY HUNGRY
18 hours ago · Like
Nilesh Saraf look at the immediate scenario after post world war 2 - the middle east and india -we had new world order.. some where back 20 years the transition started with the disintegration of soviet and now with many a middle east countries gripped in change and even we also... isn't it cyclic???
18 hours ago · Like
Swarnjeet Singh Brar YES THATS A PARASITE THESE ARTIFICIAL INSANUITIONS WANT A REFUGE IN...SORRY WE DONT HAVE A GADDAFI HERE BUT WE NEED TO CATCH SOME OUTLAWS LOL
18 hours ago · Like
Nilesh Saraf more than that... the worldhas long ago burried communist theory.. it hs evolved a lot politically
18 hours ago · Like · 1 person
Swarnjeet Singh Brar AND THIS SO CALLED REVOLUTION IS TAKING REFUGE WHERE???