“The time
has come to think seriously about whether we have a national character or not,”
Today, unfortunately, the atmosphere is that if you go to anybody for work,
that person will immediately ask, ‘What is in this for me?’ When he learns that
there is nothing for him, he will say, ‘Why should I?”
Narendra
Modi
My father always told me that there
is no substitute for good honest hard work. He used to say that what you do is
much less important than how you do it. Whether you are mopping a floor or
finding a cure for cancer, do your job to the best of your abilities and take
pride in doing it. What happened to the work ethic of our fathers and
grandfathers? Why do Indians today seem to lack pride in everything we do,
including being Indian?
Perhaps it has to do with the fact
that we all grew up during the license Raj, when graft was just as much a part
of our daily routine as brushing our teeth. The postman wanted his baksheesh to
deliver our letters, the garbage man to take out the trash, the policeman to
file a complaint, and the politician for doing absolutely nothing other than
being elected to office. It seemed nobody wanted to do his job, just to sit
back and collect money from the same taxpayer who was paying his salary. We
could not renew our passports without bribing someone or having a connection
high up in the bureaucracy. We could pass our driving test but not be issued a
license unless we were willing to grease a palm. In fact, we had to bribe someone
for virtually every basic right we had as citizens of the world’s largest
democracy; for our water, electricity, to pass through toll booths, to get a
telephone line and even to park our car in a free public parking lot.
After we got rid of the license Raj,
ushering in an era of liberalisation, instead of ridding us of the disease of
graft, we may have just spread it further afield. Today, it has been extended
into a willingness to use money as a means to get ahead in every aspect of
life. We seem to have become content using our increasing disposable income to
willingly pay people to help us cut queues, get our kids into school, to avoid
penalties for wrongdoing, and even to help us escape the clutches of the law,
after we have knowingly and brazenly broken it. Is this what we want to
accomplish with our growing economic prosperity: the ability to buy people and
cut corners without earning anything rightfully or on merit? We seem to have
become a society of rule breakers for those with means and money, content to
apply a different set of rules for those without. As our new Prime
Minister stated in his Independence Day speech, the only thing a growing
majority of people seem to care about is what’s in it for them. It has reached
a point where people are not willing to perform their paid obligations or help
their fellow Indians in need, unless they are incentivized in some way. We call
ourselves a democratic society, yet how many times have citizens been assaulted
and told that it is better not to go to the police or that it would be wiser to
buy justice? I even know of a well-respected surgeon in Bombay who decided to
negotiate the amount he would be paid in “cash” (or black money) before
allowing the patient to be wheeled into the operating theater for the life-saving
surgery he was about to perform. It seems neither education nor upbringing have
any effect on this mentality of pure and unadulterated greed. We have become a
society that never cares to ask what we can do for our fellow man, woman or
country.
Yet, every Indian likes to talk
about India becoming a global super power. We yearn for respect on the world
stage, and want to stand shoulder to shoulder with America, but we do not feel
ashamed to pee on the street or outraged by the fact that 60% of Indians
still defecate in the open due to lack of toilets. Nor do we seem embarrassed
by the fact that our flyovers and highways, many built a mere decade ago, are
already crumbling (or are yet to be completed). It took us almost as long as we
have been an independent nation to build one sea-link in traffic-congested
Bombay; however we were content talking about building it for more than fifty
years. We love to talk, but when it comes to action we don’t seem to care about
following through or doing it with pride. The great irony in all this is that
this seeming apathy has nothing to do with our lack of talent or smarts. When
we put our minds to it and our country first, we can build on time and under
budget the world’s best and most advanced underground metro in New Delhi and a
smart airport terminal in Bombay. A terminal on the strength of which Bombay (the only
Indian city) has made the recently released A-list on National Geographic's list
of "smart cities," across the world.
What’s more, people all over the world marvel at the work ethic, brilliance and
innovation of Indian immigrants. From high-tech and engineering to the arts and
the corporate world, Indians excel in virtually every field that we compete in.
Indian immigrants who left India with nothing now own the majority of homes in
the affluent suburbs of North London, and rule the boardrooms of Silicon
Valley. There was a time when Indians left due to the lack of opportunities
within India. This is also no longer true. In fact, India today is one of
the greatest lands of opportunity and potential in the world and more attractive
than China because we have a stable government and democratic systems that work
(for the most part) - so why are we seemingly still unable to unleash this
potential we have on paper and fulfill our destiny on the world stage? At the
moment it seems like the more we liberalise and open up our economy, the more
we seem to encourage a society where the shortest, fastest and
least honest and hardworking path to success seems to be the correct one. Success is measured
almost entirely by the increased number of zeroes in our personal bank account.
What would happen if we spent one decade giving back to our country and helping
everyone grow?
I am proud to be an Indian. I am
prouder yet to be part of a civilization whose origins date to before
Christianity; but that is the past. I want to be proud of our present and
future through tangible successes, not just words and chest beating. I want to
be proud of the great public institutions we build, of world-beating product
innovations and brands we create, of our indigenous missile defense systems
that become the envy of the world. I want to be proud of our space program and
23rd century urban infrastructure and transportation systems.
I want footpaths in every city, toilets in every home, educational institutions
that rival Harvard and Cambridge, attracting the brightest and best student
minds from every corner of the globe. I want clean city streets and paved rural
roads. I want teachers and parents to once again instill a civic sense and
pride in the next generation of children. I want us to take pride in what we
can accomplish, collectively as a nation, if each of us were to put his mind to
it, point his heart in the right direction. If we can see put aside just a
small amount of our selfish needs and desires and think for a moment about how
we can contribute to building a better, stronger and more developed India, then
we will all see Acche Din...