What
it Means to be an Indian
For
some, the thoughts come easily, dripping with patriotism
or pure venom. For others, it needs hours of conversation
for the words and feelings, usually buried deep or hardly
ever considered, to surface.
INDIA TODAY presents frank,
unguarded thoughts of some of the best known -- and some
totally unknown -- people across the nation who make up
the fabric of India. After 50 years of Independence, this
is the voice of India, a reflection of who we are. It
shows how far we have come. And how far we need to go.
Interview by KALLI PURIE
Photograph by BANDEEP SINGH
INDER KUMAR GUJRAL, Prime
Minister
Pride in your country is something you needn't express
everyday, but it is there. Pride is abstract, it isn't a
mantra you can get up every morning and recite. I don't
agree that our young generation don't have it. I think it
is there in the twinkle in their eyes, in the pride in
their work.
The fact is that 50 years ago my family slept on the
railway platform, and today I am prime minister. This is
a combination of the Punjabi ethos of robust optimism and
the Indian ethos of accommodation, adjustment and
assimilation.
For me, Indianness is summed up in the fact that in
1947 we imported a sewing needle, now we make everything
from a sewing needle to a satellite. Jo socha na tha,
vo aaj socha to hai. Jo dekha na tha, vo aaj dekha to
hai.
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