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Jayaprakash Narayan
- Keeper of India's Conscience
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| Testament of Protest -
An Open Letter to Mrs. Indira Gandhi |
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- Jayaprakash Narayan
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JP wrote this letter on December 5 1975 from the Jaslok
Hospital in Bombay. It was of course not published in the Indian press,
but was secretly circulating. The Far Eastern Economic Review published
from Hong Kong carried the full text of the letter in its issue of February
20, 1976. A month earlier, its correspondent in India Mr. Lawrence Lifschultz
was asked to leave for his open reporting of the Emergency excesses.
In an introductory note carrying JPs open letter to Mrs. Indira
Gandhi, Mr. Lifschultz, after paying tribute to Jayaprakash Narayan
as one of the great patriots of India, observed inter alia There
are woolly areas in his thinking ... his weakness is that he did not
explore all the implications of his more recent political programme
to rid India of corruption. That oversight led him to a bizarre association
with opponents of Mrs. Indira Gandhi - opportunists who were themselves
stinking with corruption and by no means lily-white disciples of Mahatma
Gandhi. Narayan has explained that the more urgent task was to rid India
of Congress misrule and the question therefore would resolve itself.
That some of the corrupt politicians used Narayans dazzling halo to distract from their own self-serving purposes has been exploited by the Indian Prime Minister to discredit him, but Narayans sincere commitment to Indian democracy, social justice and honesty in Government are irrefutable. |
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Dear Prime Minister, I am appalled at press reports of your speeches and
interviews. (The very fact that you have to say something every day
to justify your action implies a guilty conscience). Having muzzled
the press and every kind of public dissent, you continue with your distortions
and untruth without fear of criticism or contradiction. If you think
that in this way you will be able to justify yourself in the public
eye and damn the Opposition to political perdition, you are sadly mistaken.
If you doubt this, you may test it by revoking the Emergency, restoring
to the people their fundamental rights, restoring the freedom of the
press, releasing all those whom you have imprisoned or detained for
no other crime than performing their patriotic duty. Nine years, Madam,
is not a short period of time for the people, who are gifted with a
sixth sense, to have found you out. The burden of your song, as I have been able to discover,
is that (a) there was a plan to paralyse the Government, (b) that one
person had been trying to spread disaffection among the ranks of the
civil and military forces. These seem to be your major notes. But there
have been also minor notes. Every now and then you have been doling
out your obiter dicta, such as the nation being more important than
democracy and about the suitability of social democracy to India, and
more in the same vein. As I am the villain of the piece, let me put the record
straight. This may be of no interest to you for all your distortion
and untruth are willful and deliberate but at least the truth
would have been recorded. About the plan to paralyse the Government.
There was no such plan and you know it. Let me state the facts. Of all the states of India, it was in Bihar alone where
there was a peoples movement. But there, too, according to the
Chief Mini-sters many statements, it had fizzled out long ago,
if it had ever existed. But the truth is and you should know
if your ubiquitous Intelligence has served you right that it
was spreading and percolating deep down in the countryside. Until the
time of my arrest janata sarkars (peoples organizations)
were being formed from the village upwards to the Block (ward) level.
Later on, the process was to be taken up, hopefully, to the district
and state level. If you have cared to look into the programme of the
janata sarkars, you would have found out that for the most part it was
constructive, such as regulating the public distribution system, checking
corruption at the lower levels of administration, implementing the land
reform laws, settling disputes through the age-old custom of conciliation
and arbitration, assuring a fair deal to Harijans, curbing such social
evils as talak and dahez (divorce and the dowry
system) etc. There was nothing in all this that by any stretch of imagination
could be called subversive. Only where the janata sarkars
were solidly organized were such programmes as non-payment of taxes
taken up. At the peak of the movement in urban areas an attempt was
made for some days, through dharna and picketing, to stop the working
of Government offices. At Patna, whenever the Assembly opened, attempts
were made to persuade the members to resign and to prevent them peacefully
from going in. All these were calculated programmes of civil disobedience,
and thousands of men and women were arrested all over the state. If all this adds up to an attempt to paralyse the Bihar
government, well, it was the same kind of attempt as was made during
the freedom struggle through non-cooperation and satyagraha to paralyse
the British government. But that was a government established by force,
whereas the Bihar government and legislature are both constitutionally
established bodies. What right has anyone to ask an elected government
and elected legislature to go? This is one of your favourite questions.
But it has been answered umpteen times by competent persons, including
well-known constitutional lawyers. The answer is that in a democracy
the people, too, have the right to ask for the resignation of an elected
government if it has gone corrupt and has been misruling. And if there
is a legislature that persists in supporting such a government it too
must go so that the people might choose better representatives. But in that case, how can it be determined what the
people want? In the usual democratic manner. In the case of Bihar, the
mammoth rallies and processions held in Patna, the thousands of constituency
meetings held all over the State, the three-days Bihar bandh,
the memorable happenings of November 4, and the largest ever meeting
held at the Gandhi maidan, on November 18, were a convincing measure
of the peoples will. And what had the Bihar government and Congress
to show on their side? The miserable counter-offensive of November 16,
which had been master-minded by Shri Barooah and on which, according
to reliable reports, the fantastic sum of Rs.60 lakhs rupees were spent.
But if that was not conclusive enough proof, I had asked repeatedly
for a plebiscite. But you were afraid to face the people. While I am on the Bihar movement, let me mention, another
important point that would illumine the politics of such a type of movement.
The students of Bihar did not start their movement just off the bat
as it were. After formulating their demands at a conference they had
met the Chief Minister and the Education Minister. They had had several
meetings. But unfortunately the inept and corrupt Bihar Govern-ment
did not take the students seriously. Then the latter gheraoed the Assembly.
The sad events of that day precipitated the Bihar movement. Even then
the students did not demand the resignation of the Ministry nor the
dissolution of the Assembly. It was after several weeks during which
firing, lathi (baton) charges and indiscriminate arrests took place
that the Students Action Committee felt compelled to put up that
demand. It was at that point that the Rubicon was crossed. Thus in Bihar, the Government was given a chance to
settle the issues across the table. None of the demands of the students
was unreasonable or non-negotiable. But the Bihar government preferred
the method of struggle, i.e. unparalleled repression. It was the same
in Uttar Pradesh. In either case, the Government rejected the path of
negotiation, of trying to settle the issues across the table, and chose
the path of strife. Had it been otherwise, there would have been no
movement at all. I have pondered over this riddle: Why did not those
govern-ments act wisely? The conclusion I have arrived at is that the
main hurdle has been corruption. Some-how the governments have been
unable to deal with corruption in their ranks, particularly at the top
level the ministerial level itself. The corruption has been the
central point of the movement, particularly corruption in the government
and the administration. Be that as it may, except for Bihar there was no movement
of its kind in any other state of India. In Uttar Pradesh, though satyagraha
had started in April, it was far from becoming a peoples movement.
In some other states though, struggle committees had been formed, there
seemed to be no possibility of a mass movement anywhere. And as the
general election to the Lok Sabha was drawing near, the attention of
the opposition parties was turned more towards the coming electoral
struggle than to any struggle involving civil disobedience. Thus, the plan of which you speak, the plan to paralyse
the Government, is a figment of your imagination thought up to justify
your totalitarian measures. But suppose I grant you for a minute, for arguments
sake, that there was such a plan, do you honestly believe that your
erstwhile colleague, the former Deputy Prime Minister of India, and
Chandrashekhar, a member of the Congress Working Committee, were also
a party to it? Then why have they also been arrested and many others
like them? No, dear Prime Minister, there was no plan to paralyse
the Government. If there was a plan, it was a simple, innocent and short-time
plan to continue until the Supreme Court decided your appeal. It was
this plan that was announced at the Ramlila grounds by Nanaji Deshmukh
on June 25 and which was the subject matter of my speech that evening.
The programme was for a selected number of persons to offer satyagraha
before or near your residence in support of the demand that you should
step down until the Supreme Courts judgement on your appeal. The
programme was to continue for seven days in Delhi, after which it was
to be taken up in the states. And, as I have said above, it was to last
only until the judgement of the Supreme Court. I do not see what is
subversive or dangerous about it. In a democracy the citizen has an
inalienable right to civil disobedience when he finds that other channels
of redress or reform have dried up. It goes without saying that the
satyagrahi willingly invites and accepts his lawful punishment. This
is the dimension added to democracy by Gandhi. What an irony that it
should be obliterated in Gandhis own India! It should be noted and it is a very important
point that even this programme of a satyagraha would not have
occurred to the Opposition had you remained content with quietly clinging
on to your office. But you did not do it. Through your henchmen you
had rallies and demonstrations organized in front of your residence
(begging you not to resign). You addressed these rallies and, justifying
your stand, advanced spurious arguments and heaped calumny on the head
of the Opposition. An effigy of the High Court Judge was burnt before
your residence. Posters appeared in the city suggesting some kind of
link between the Judge and the CIA. When such despicable happenings
were taking place every day, the Opposition had no alternative but to
counteract the mischief. And how did it decided to do it? Not by rowdyism
but by orderly satyagraha, self-sacrifice. It was this plan and not any imaginary
plan to paralyse the Government that has aroused your ire and cost the
people their liberties and dealt a deathblow to their democracy. And why was the freedom of the press being suppressed?
Not because the Indian press was irresponsible, dishonest or anti-Government.
In fact, nowhere under conditions of freedom is the press more responsible,
reasonable and fair than it has been in India. The truth is that your
anger against it was aroused because on the question of your resignation,
after the High Courts judgement, some of the papers took a line
that was highly unpalatable to you. And when on the morrow of the Supreme
Court judgement all the metropolitan papers, including the wavering
The Times of India came out with well-reasoned and forceful editorials
advising you to quit, freedom of the press became too much for you to
stomach. That cooked the goose of the Indian press, and you struck your
deadly blow. It staggers ones imagination to think that so valuable
a freedom as the freedom of the press, the very life-breath of democracy,
can be snuffed out because of the personal pique of a Prime Minister. You have accused the Opposition of trying to lower
the prestige and position of the countrys Prime Minister. But
in reality, the boot is on the other leg. No one has done more to lower
the position and prestige of that great office than yourself. Can you
ever think of the Prime Minister of a democratic country who cannot
even vote in his Parliament because he has been found guilty of corrupt
electoral practices? The Supreme Court may reverse the High Courts
judgement most probably it will be in this atmosphere of terror
but as long as that is not done your guilt and your deprivation
of your right to vote remain)1 . As for the one person who is supposed to
have tried to sow dissatisfaction in the armed and police forces, he
denies the charge. All that he has done is to make the men and officers
of the forces conscious of their duties and responsibilities. Whatever
he has said in that connection is within the law, the Constitution,
the Army Act, and the Police Act. So much for your major points, the plea to paralyse
the Government and the attempt to sow dissatisfaction in the armed and
police forces. Now a few of your minor points and obiter dicta. You are reported to have said that democracy is not
more important than the nation. Are you not presuming too much, Madam
Prime Minister? You are not the only one who cares for the nation. Among
those whom you have detained or imprisoned there are many who have done
as much for the nation as you. And everyone of them is as good a patriot
as yourself. So, please do not apply salt to our wounds by lecturing
to us about the nation. Moreover, it is a false choice that you have formulated.
There is no choice between democracy and the nation. It was for the
good of the nation that the people of India declared in the Constituent
Assembly on November 26, 1949, that we, the people of India, having
solemnly resolved to constitute into a Sovereign Democratic Republic
give to ourselves this Constitution. This democratic Constitution
cannot be changed into a totalitarian one by a mere ordinance or a law
of Parliament. That can be done only by the people of India themselves
in their new Constituent Assembly, especially elected for that special
purpose. If Justice, Liberty, Equality and Fraternity have not been
rendered to all its citizens even after a quarter of century
of signing of that Constitution, the fault is not that of the Constitution
or of democracy but of the Congress party that has been in power in
Delhi all these years. It is precisely because of that failure that
there is so much unrest among the people and the youth. Repression is
no remedy for that. On the other hand, it only compounds the failure.
I no doubt see that the papers are full these days
of reports of new policies, new drives, show of new enthusiasm. Apparently
you are trying to make up for lost time, that is to say, you are making
a show of doing here and now what you failed to do in nine years. But
your 20 points2 will go the same way as your 10 points did and the stray
thoughts. But I assure you this time the people will not be fooled.
And I assure you of another thing too: a party of self-seekers and spineless
opportunists and jee-huzurs such as the Congress, alas,
has become, can never do anything worthwhile. (Not all Congressmen are
such. There are quite a few exceptions, such as those who have been
deprived of their Party membership and some of them their freedom. There
will be a lot of propaganda and much ado on paper but on the ground
level the situation will not change. The condition of the poor
and they are in great majority over the greater part of the country
has been worsening over the past years. It would be enough if
the downward trend were arrested. But for that your whole approach to
politics and economics will have to change. I have written the above in utter frankness without
mincing words. I have done so not out of anger or so as to get even
with you in words. No, that would be a show of impotence. Nor does it
show any lack of appreciation for the care that is being taken of my
health. I have done it only to place the naked truth before you, which
you have been trying to cover up and distort. Having performed this unpleasant duty, may I conclude
with a few parting words of advice? You know I am an old man. My lifes
work is done. After Prabhas3 going I have nothing and no one to
live for. My brother and my nephew have their family and my younger
sister the elder died years ago has her sons and daughters.
I have given all my life, after finishing education, to the country
and asked for nothing in return. So, I shall be content to die a prisoner
under your regime. Would you listen to the advice of such a man? Please,
do not destroy the foundations that the Father of the Nation, including
your noble father, had laid down. There is nothing but strife and suffering
along the path that you have taken. You inherited a great tradition,
noble values and a working democracy. Do not leave behind a miserable
wreck of all that. It would take a long time to put all that together
again. For it would be put together again, I have no doubt. People who
fought British imperialism and humbled it cannot accept indefinitely
the indignity and shame of totalitarianism. The spirit of man can never
be vanquished, no matter how deeply suppressed. In establishing your
personal dictatorship, you have buried it deep. But it will rise from
the grave. Even in Russia, it is slowly coming up. You have talked of social democracy. What a beautiful
image those words call to the mind. But you have seen in east-ern and
central Europe how ugly is the reality: Naked dictatorship and in the
ultimate analysis Russian overlordship. Please, please do not push India
towards that terrible fate. And may I ask to what purpose all these draconian measures?
In order to be able to carry out the 20 points? But who was preventing
you from carrying out the 10 points? All the discontent, the protest,
the satyagraha were due precisely to the fact that you were not doing
anything to implement your programme, inadequate as it was, to lighten
the misery and burden under which the people and youth were groaning.
This is what Chandrashekhar, Mohan Dharia, Krishna Kant and their friends
have been saying for which they have been punished. You have talked of drift in the country.
But was that due to opposition or to me? The drift was because of your
lack of decision, direction and drive. You seem to act swiftly and dramatically
only when your personal position is threatened. Once that is assured,
the drift begins. Dear Indiraji, please do not identify yourself with
the nation. You are not immortal, India is. You have accused the Opposition and me of every kind
of villainy. But let me assure you that if you do the right things
for instance, your 20 points, tackling corruption at ministerial levels,
electoral reforms, etc., take the Opposition into confidence, heed its
advice you will receive the willing cooperation of everyone of
us. For that you need not destroy democracy. The ball is in your court.
It is for you to decide. With these parting words, let me bid you farewell.
May God be with you. - Jayaprakash |
| Introduction>>> |
| Contents |
| Jayaprakash Narayan - Keeper of India's Conscience Courtesy : indiaisthebest.com |
| A Personal Tribute - Arvind Deshpande |
| The Architect of India's Second Liberation - Prem Vaidya |