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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
SONAL MANSINGH, Odissi dancer, 20th
century Draupadi
Odissi dancer, 20th century Draupadi As I grow
older, the resolve within me is becoming stronger, that
perhaps it has taken the punya (good deeds) of seven
births to be born an Indian. And I would want at least
seven more births in this land, because I still don't
know what it is. Yet it is a fantastic, mystical core.
The core that we call Indianness -- that which
distinguishes us from the Japanese, the Chinese, the
Pakistanis, everyone else -- is still intact. Just like
the kernel, even while the exterior shell keeps changing
in shape and colour.
I find this very encouraging. Nothing is lost in India.
So many came and went, so many got digested, amalgamated,
without even a burp. The entity called India is still
here within ourselves. The elements, the remnants, and
hidden streams of consciousness of thoughts, of
traditions, of belief. It is all here, not lost.
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