■ By Kartik Lokhande :
A DAY as usual begins differently with the patriotic songs
played on loudspeakers making a statement that there is
something special -- Republic
Day. Soon, crowds of genuinely happy and patriotic schoolchildren move out with older,
mostly exhibitionist, patriots.
By afternoon, some enthusiastic individuals degenerate
into miscreants. They misuse
the national tricolour mounted on motorcycles or fourwheelers as a license to jump
traffic signals, ride triple-seat
on two-wheelers, ride or drive
wrong-side. More unfortunately, these hoodlums proudly flaunt the photos, stenciled
images, and signatures of the
great men of India while failing to follow simple norms of
public decency, decorum, and
discipline. Their failure, in a
way, amounts to insulting the
great men whose photos,
images, signatures they so
proudly carry on motorcycles
or cars. This is the case on the
Independence Day as well as
on the Republic Day or when
the country wins matches or
medals in international sporting events.
Why does this happen?
Because, no matter what they
flaunt, such people do not have
a sense of pride for India, its
laws, its Constitution, and ownself!
Harsh, it may sound. But,
reality it is! They are, no doubt,
part of the Republic of India,
but do not represent the spirit of it. They are the people who,
day in and day out, belittle every
great value represented by all
the great men and women
together. They have not earned
their place as a citizen of the
country. They happen to be
known as residents of this great
country only because they are
born here. And, for those who
know better, there is a fine difference between a ‘citizen’ and
a ‘resident’. The word ‘citizen’
signifies a sense of responsibility towards oneself, one’s
family, one’s society, one’s surroundings, and one’s fellow
countrymen.
This responsibility is visible when one abides
by the law of the land, when
one focusses more on sorting
out a matter through discussion than resorting to violence,
when one carefully becomes
the architect of one’s inner constitution!
Inner Constitution?
Yes!
As India celebrates the 75
years of becoming a Republic,
it is essential to not only internalise the Constitution of India
but also to internalise the values this great document
enshrines. Political leaders may
use the concepts of the
Constitution or the Republic for
their own petty gains. But, the
people of India, who did ‘adopt,
enact, and give’ to themselves
this great Constitution, have a
bigger responsibility on their
shoulders to keep the
Constitutional values at a
safe distance from divisive
rhetorics of caste, language,
politics. Only those persons
can play this role effectively
who qualify as citizens.
And,
that qualification comes with
inherent openness to acquire
goodness of thought and
action. For that openness to be
a part of personality, one has
to rise above the conditions
one is born in. One has to equip
oneself with a strong, apolitical character through pursuit
of excellence. No doubt, it
is the hard way. There may
be difficulties of being good,
but only the person who passes the tests emerges stronger
in the end. The success of the Indian
Republic or the Constitution
of India can never be assessed
on the narrow parameters of
who shouts which slogan louder. Rather, it can be assessed
in behaviour of the people
in private, and in public. So, in
this 75th anniversary of the
Constitution and the 76th
Republic Day, may the nation
collectively build a strong and
solid ‘inner constitution’. Let us
not be just ‘residents’ of India,
but evolve into ‘citizens’ of this
great nation.
Jai Hind!