Emergency
Nazi Priestess
How do its pathetic protagonists justify it? It was lawlessness to the extreme.
Emergency
Even Acharya Vinoba Bhave supported it when it was imposed. But it soon degenerated into a monster that had to be suppressed for ever.
Khushwant Singh
The German Constitution was envisaged as one of the most liberal constitutions in the world. Yet one man motivated by the desire for personal dictatorial power subverted it and presented to the world one of the most disgraceful authoritarian regimes in history. This man was Adolf Hitler.

How did he do this? He used the constitutional provisions to declare a state of emergency. He imposed censorship on the newspapers.

 
 
In jail I met people of all backgrounds - from trade union leaders, to newspaper vendors, RSS members, naxalites and college teachers.
 
 
He detained his political opponents. He crushed all dissent. He inspired the persecution of those he was not prepared to suffer. He generated an environment of terror and sycophancy.

And why did he do all this? "To make Germany a powerful nation," he claimed. To legitimise this he announced a 25-point economic programme. He claimed that it was discipline that he was imposing, that it was the hallmark of the system. Even Mussolini had claimed in Italy that the effect of Fascism was that 'trains were running on time'. One of Hitler's Nazi colleagues had proclaimed: "Adolf Hitler is Germany and Germany is Adolf Hitler. He who swears allegiance to Hitler swears allegiance to Germany."

How was the Emergency in India any different? Indira Gandhi's personal political position was threatened. She was unseated by the Allahabad High Court from her seat in the Lok Sabha for indulging in corrupt practices during her election campaign. Her party lost the Gujarat assembly elections. A popular uprising led by Jayaprakash Narayan against a corrupt regime was building up. The young turks in her own party were joining the revolt. It was at this stage that her party president, Dev Kant Baruah, took a leaf out of the Nazi Book and declared: "India is Indira and Indira is India." How very wonderful! The party conveniently forgot that no individual is immortal. But the nation is.

Baruah's not-so-original statement was not the only evidence of what Mrs Gandhi's Emergency regime's role model was. The detention of thousands of political opponents. The complete censorship on the media. The creation of a fear psychosis in the country as a tool for governance. The subversion of every democratic institution. Under no circumstances is any of this justifiable. The moot question is: why did she do this?

Every dishonest protagonist of the Emergency would argue that it was to save the country from anarchy and to impose discipline on the Indian Democracy that Mrs Gandhi imposed the Emergency. The honest truth is very much to the contrary. She did it because she faced the danger of losing her membership of the Lok Sabha and her prime ministership. She did it because her passion on earth was - after me, my family. She wanted to perpetuate her dynasty - an all-out effort which was shamelessly started during the Emergency. It is an unnatural legacy which still persists today.

What happened to the institutions during the Emergency? The judiciary which had already been made pliable by the supercessions in 1973 was the main victim. The Supreme Court by a majority of four to one held that a person could be arrested or detained without legitimate grounds and there was no remedy in the law courts since all Fundamental Rights were suspended. The attorney-general of India argued for the government that a citizen could be killed illegally and no remedy was available since there were no Fundamental Rights of the citizen any more. Are these shameless protagonists of the Emergency justifying this?

The media fared no better. Barring The Indian Express and The Statesman, most others, partly due to pre-censorship and primarily due to their own cowardice, were sycophantic supporters of the autocracy and the family. The editor of the legendary The Illustrated Weekly of India converted the magazine into a house journal of the dynasty. Mercifully, the magazine died its own death some time later.

The police and the bureaucracy did no better. Lakhs of false firs were registered against political opponents. Thousands of detention orders were passed by district magistrates. Not one police officer stood up to resist the registration of these firs. Not one ias officer refused to sign a detention order which did not have legitimate grounds for detention. There were instances when people were killed in detention. There are examples - the Rajan case of Kerala and the Snehalata Reddy case of Bangalore.

Moreover, Article 356 was invoked against all the opposition state governments. The governments of Gujarat and Tamil Nadu were dismissed. It was a case of anarchy in governance - to wreak personal vengeance any police officer could have anybody arrested. I myself had seven prosecutions against me and was detained under misa for 19 months. I still do not know why I was jailed. I was only a student at the time.

In jail, I met people from all kinds of organisations - trade union leaders, two newspaper vendors (because they offended the censorship regulations), an editor, members of the rss and those from the Jamat-e-Islami, Naxalites, college teachers. Let alone discipline, it was a completely lawless government, anarchical to the extreme.

Among those who collapsed were also members of the intelligentsia: India's best-selling painter (M.F. Husain) painted Mrs Gandhi as Durga. India's leading danseuse at the time, Yamini Krishnamurthy, danced to the tune of the 20-point programme. Every mushaira had poetry only in praise of two persons - Sanjay and Indira Gandhi. And to top it all, even the population control programme was done by the use of force.

How do the supporters of this tyranny justify all this? The nation needed discipline, they argue. To discipline a nation we need not shut down our newspapers and arrest all our editors. To discipline democracy you don't have to arrest the entire opposition and destroy every tenet of the Constitution. To discipline the system, you need not subvert all systems - the courts, the police and the bureaucracy. If all or any one of these steps could be justified then on the slightest pretext of checking protests, dissent or militancy, the nation could be pushed into such autocracy.

These pathetic protagonists of Emergency finally argue that many wrongs may have been committed but discipline was a positive outcome. Well, if Einstein were to have been born out of a rape, we must still condemn the rape. We cannot legitimise it!

Emergency
Even Acharya Vinoba Bhave supported it when it was imposed. But it soon degenerated into a monster that had to be suppressed for ever.
Khushwant Singh
 
Daily MailPublished
COLLAPSE COMMENTS :
HAVE YOUR SAY
Jun 29, 2005 12:00 AM
13
So what is your assessment of Sonia Gandhi, Deb?
dcindia
Omaha, United States
Jun 28, 2005 12:00 AM
12
While one should criticise and oppose imposition of Emergency, but drawing parrallel with Hitler and Ms Gandhi is completely wrong. It is not wrong just because Ms Gandhi didn't went about in a killing spree. The amount of blood shed depends on a lot of things which varies with time and space.
But simply because all kinds of autocracy or dictatorship is not equivalent to fascism, if one considers german nazis as the model of fascism.
Any dictatorship or autocratic mis-adventures wants to impose rules of a police-state, wants to gag the free press. These are external expressions
of dictatorship. But what separates fascism as phenomena is, its feature to paint a community or a sect as the ENEMY in the society. Fascists call
a section of its own society as the enemy of the state, and generates mass xenophobia, creates a perceived master race/community, and leads a divisive mass movement to topple the existing structure.
So, while KKK had fascist tendency, Zia ul Haq was only a dictator and not fascist.
Chausesku (I hope the spelling is correct, if not sorry) was an extremely bad and dangerous dictator, who lost any legitimacy to rule, but still was not fascist, since he was not painting
a community or a race as the scum or parasite to be trampled at will. He was simply guarding his rule by imposing the army, the police, spies, and the party on the entire population.
Indira Gandhi was a democrat (because time and again she faced the electorate), but had autocratic tendency, which needed to be opposed/criticised, but do not qualify as a fascist.
Indranil
Kolkata, India
Jun 28, 2005 12:00 AM
11
Suprisingly a so called Leader of a Major party in incapable of taking his arguements to their logical conculsion. Let us proceed. What did Hitler the RSS Icon proceed to do after he enforced emergency. He sent his hordes sweeping across Europe rounding up and exterminating jews and visiting untold hardships on the citizens in Europe. The Emergency had SOME noble intentions on hand and went about doing it. No doubt there were many excesses too with absolute authority and absence of checks and balances. What happened thereafter??? I believe Elections were held two years later and the people of the country told Indira what they thought of her and the Emergency. The Janata party got a chance to lead and what did they do? Charan Singh and ALL??? They had elections and were kicked out of power instead.

Surely you will find the end result two Totally different stories.
Radhakrishnan
Mumbai, India
Jun 28, 2005 12:00 AM
10
Raj Bodepudi writes:

>>India will soon become a Hundu minority & what's left of its history will soon be forgotten for ever-unless population controls are imposed on ALL groups with equal weightage-

Majority Persecution Complex!!!! I wonder when its going to make it into DSM-IV (Diagnostics & Statistic Manual of Mental Disorders - Fourth Edition). Does Raj want to outsource the burden of remembering "its history"?

His proposal is only a small step away from population eugenics.

>>Our primary duty of ALL Indians is to protecting, longer term, of our cultural & spiritual traditions-for centuries & millennina to come-at any cost.

How many people will we get to kill in pursuit of this goal? Can we skip over the part of evaluating the merits of those "traditions," if any, before we start imposing this "primary duty"?
Old Mac
???, United States
Jun 27, 2005 12:00 AM
9
The emergency was a big blot in the history of our nation, but I disagree with the characterization of Indira Gandhi as Nazi priestess. In fact, I think it is wholly inappropriate.

Nazis were a religious clan who combined Christianity with old european pagan traditions. They came up with a social agenda that tall and blonde Christians are the only true Germans and they have the right to be world rulers. Hitler was considered the messiah by the Nazis, people saw Jesus second coming in him.

DK Barua did proclaim that Indira is India. At the most you can say that he took a leaf out of the Nazi books, but that hardly is enough to call Indira Gandhi, a Nazi priestess.


dcindia
Omaha, United States
Jun 27, 2005 12:00 AM
8
fortunately for me that at the time of emergency i was three year old. my grand father who is also a freedom fighter fled away due to the arrest warrant issued against him. i know at my home in bihar Dr. Jayprakash narayan has stayed for some times during emergency. the barbarian and anarchy that pervailed during that period was still in my memory. what arun jaitley has told its one part of the story the other part of story is the chamcha culture in congress party at that time which is still continuing in different format. it was the northern state which was the greatest sufferer of emergency and in todays world we fill that the shrewd politician like laloo and his chamchas, Ram vilas paswan, Mayawati are still running the same culture aas envisased by Indira and sanjay.
ganesh chandra
guwahati, India
Jun 26, 2005 12:00 AM
7
Let us see:
1984 Sikh riots: 4000 sikh killed in delhi we can;t have excuse that military could not reach in time we have bloody cantonment sitting in Delhi itself.

How come post-godhara riots mind u godhara is very very important link here becomes worse that above mentioned...

We have not even bothered to opwn Nanavati commission report on this riot..
Rahul
Delhi, India
Jun 26, 2005 12:00 AM
6
Tuku writes:

>>Since when did Arun Jaitley become such a staune ch anti-Fascist. He called Narendra Modi, the closest thing in India to Hilter, a "folk hero". He did not once shed a tear for the months long Kristalnacht in Gujarat. His article is delicisously ironic.

Ever since he needed a political makeover.
Old Mac
???, United States
Jun 25, 2005 12:00 AM
5
Since when did Arun Jaitley become such a staune ch anti-Fascist. He called Narendra Modi, the closest thing in India to Hilter, a "folk hero". He did not once shed a tear for the months long Kristalnacht in Gujarat. His article is delicisously ironic.
tuku jayaram
therwil, switzerland
Jun 25, 2005 12:00 AM
4
We should agree fully with Arun Jaitley in his recap of what happened during the emergency. But he should also agree with us that the post-Gadhra riots in Gujarat had also shades of emeregency. No leader from the BJP including jaitley could muster courage to condemn them and their perpetrator. It is always more easy to preach than to practice.
Sachdi Nanda
New Delhi., India
Jun 25, 2005 12:00 AM
3
It is pathetic to see our politicians cry over issues which have absolutely no relevance for the common man. They hide their own hypocrisies behind those they criticize. For a common man, India has been in a state of emergency ever since the Independence. I see no difference of what the former PM of India did during the emergency & what is being done now by the current lot of politicians (Mrs. Gandhi only pushed it a little too far). They would choose any means whatsoever to remain in power. Our so called ‘Democratic institutions’, ‘Judiciary’, ‘Constitution’ are often used by them to cover-up the mess that they create.

Do we need a Arun Jaitley or an Advani to explain us the meaning of Democracy or Secularism. What happened in Gujrat in 2002 was in all conceivable ways more revolting than what happened during the emergency. But Mr Jaitley would make sure to remind us that ‘Law is taking its own course’ & ‘Mishaps’ do happen in Democracy. And then they would counter their argument by exposing the hypocrisies of Congress during the ‘Sikh Riots’ in 1984.

Let’s just hope that they all shut up & do their Jobs we have employed them for.

Regards
Rohit Grover
Rohit Grover
New Delhi, India
Jun 25, 2005 12:00 AM
2
It is pathetic to see our politicians cry over issues which have absolutely no relevance for the common man. They hide their own hypocrisies behind those they criticize. For a common man, India has been in a state of emergency ever since the Independence. I see no difference of what the former PM of India did during the emergency & what is being done now by the current lot of politicians (Mrs. Gandhi only pushed it a little too far). They would choose any means whatsoever to remain in power. Our so called ‘Democratic institutions’, ‘Judiciary’, ‘Constitution’ are often used by them to cover-up the mess that they create.

Do we need a Arun Jaitley or an Advani to explain us the meaning of Democracy or Secularism. What happened in Gujrat in 2002 was in all conceivable ways more revolting than what happened during the emergency. But Mr Jaitley would make sure to remind us that ‘Law is taking its own course’ & ‘Mishaps’ do happen in Democracy. And then they would counter their argument by exposing the hypocrisies of Congress during the ‘Sikh Riots’ in 1984.

Let’s just hope that they all shut up & do their Jobs we have employed them for.

Regards
Rohit Grover
Rohit Grover
New Delhi, India
Jun 25, 2005 12:00 AM
1
Some of the vernacular magazines such as Thugluk run by Cho,reproduced public speeches of eminant indian politicians especially Pundit Nehru and others which were against such impostions on freedom.
P.N.Venkatachalam
Vadodara, India
COLLAPSE COMMENTS   
Post a Comment
You are not logged in, please log in or register
ABOUT US | CONTACT US | SUBSCRIBE | ADVERTISING RATES | COPYRIGHT & DISCLAIMER | COMMENTS POLICY