Monday, August 6, 2012

The Elephant, The Tiger and the Cellphone



Title: The Elephant, The Tiger and the Cellphone – Reflections on India in the Twnety-first Century
Author: Shashi Tharoor
Publisher:  Penguin-Viking, 2007 (First)
ISBN: 978-0-67008-145-5
Pages: 387

A scion of international politics who almost made it to the Secretary-Generalship of the U.N, and a charismatic politician who redefined politics the way we practised it since independence, Tharoor is an Indian at heart and rejoices at the unity in widespread contradictions – that is, India. Though he spent most of his career overseas, he opened his heart and mind to the vibrations emanating from the motherland and formed well developed ideas about how the country made its precarious crawl to Indira-style socialism and began to run thereafter, ever since P V Narasimha Rao ushered in the winds of change. As the title amply illustrates, India was a lumbering elephant in the first four decades of her independence. The gait was unwieldy, decisions painfully slow to make and the actions forever delayed in materializing. Liberalization exposed the true potential of Indian industry and trade, changing the metaphor to the tiger. But the transformation was not complete – it still has tiger’s stripes on the elephant’s body which still need a long time to fully transform as a tiger. The cellphone symbolizes India’s success story like no other. From waiting lists which would have taken years for the public to get a basic phone, the cellphone has revolutionized communication to plenitude.

The book is divided into five sections and 76 articles which originally came out in op-eds and columns of the country’s newspapers. Naturally, repetitions are to be expected and the reader finds them frequently. The sections cover a wide area of an author’s experience, like the transformation of India, Ideas of Indianness, India at work and play, Indians who helped make my India and Experiences of India. This is not a survey of Indian politics or history nor reportage. It reflects the world view of the English-speaking, educated professional and entrepreneurial classes who are driving change and prosperity in India, who still manages to live in several centuries at the same time.

Tharoor turns critical only when he encounters the blunder which passed for planned economy in pre-liberalized India. The book is also an indictment on the centrally planned notions prevailed then. Communication was woefully inadequate with 8 million customers and 20 million in the waiting list. C M Stephen, the then communications minister in Indira Gandhi’s cabinet, once replied to a question on unreliability of telephone lines in Parliament that the telephone is a luxury and anyone dissatisfied with the state monopoly service can return the sets! How the country has changed thereafter.

What Tharoor repeats again and again is the eclectic and assimilative nature of Indian culture which proved to be the meeting place of all religions known to mankind. Just like America is referred to as a great ‘melting pot’, India may be called a great thali, where the different ingredients do not actually mix, but provide delicious taste to the offering. Such an inimitable mix of ideas and opinions is possible only in a true democracy which provides every opportunity for the marginalized to express themselves. The author specifically points to the political scenario which emerged soon after the 2004 General Elections. A Hindu-nationalist party was voted out in a country of 80% Hindus, a Sikh (Manmohan Singh) was sworn in prime minister by its Muslim President (A P J Abdul Kalam) upon the recommendation by a Roman Catholic leader (Sonia Gandhi) of the major winning party. Nowhere in the world can such a spectacle take place.

Tharoor always love to portray himself on the politically correct side of a question. One wonders whether his true feelings are expressed in the book. It does not seem to be what he actually thinks, but what he should think. A few hundreds of pages are devoted to display the moral highstand which is repetitive and lacks sincerety. Most articles are ideally suited for quoting in school essays and nothing else. It lack depth and resort to exaggeration of even mild achievements to skyhigh praise. The comparison of Infosys to Microsoft is a case in point.

Tharoor includes a collection of biographies and reminiscences as a section. Prominent personalities in the Indian social life, like the Mahatma, Nehru and Maulana Abul Kalam Azad are included without the slightest concern for relevance or criticism. Except for an objective review of Indira Gandhi’s life, all others pander to the political objectives of the author. The life story of Mariam Thresia, a Keralite nun who was beatified in 2000 includes references to her supernatural miracles like levitation taken at face value.

On the other hand, the book is a delight to read, with Tharoor’s cheerfulness pervading the book cover to cover. Nobody could complete the volume without extracting a bit of the optimistic streak coursing through and between the lines. A fine introduction to India for those foreigners who want to familiarize the country and also a good review of how our society went through its day to day life over the eons. This book should set a fine example to illustrate the point that how secularism found an unshakeable place in the national psyche, without denying religion to any of its citizens.

The book is strongly recommended.

Rating: 3 Star

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