Special Feature: Rashtriya Ekta Diwas (31st
October)
Sardar
Patel’s Birth Anniversary
Sardar Patel - Man who United India
*Aaditya Tiwari
Sir John Strachey, a British Indian civil servant used to address
his civil servants-in-training by saying, "The first and most important
thing to learn about India is that there is not and never was an India." Historian
David Ludden in his book Contesting
the Nation: Religion, Community, and the Politics of Democracy in India writes 'the territory that we
use to describe the landscape of Indian civilization was defined politically by
the British Empire. India was never what it
is today in a geographical, demographic, or cultural sense, before 1947.' Many
like Winston Churchill had predicted that post independence, India would disintegrate
and fall back into the Middle Ages.
India, after attaining independence faced massive challenges. One
of the biggest tests the leaders of the time faced was to have a defined
boundary of the land whose geographical sense had flowed among the masses
through ages. Diana L Eck in her book, India-A
Sacred Geography describes this land of Bharata to have been 'enacted ritually
in the footsteps of pilgrims for many hundreds of years.' Pandit Jawaharlal
Nehru writes about this sense of unity of India as an emotional experience. In Discovery
of India, he explains the experience of instilling sense of oneness among
the peasants of India, 'I tried to
make them think of India as a whole...the task was not easy; yet it was not so
difficult as I had imagined, for our ancient epics and myths and legends, which
they knew so well, had made them familiar with the conception of their
country.'
The task of reconstructing India - territorially and emotionally -
was immense. Entire nation was going through a period of mayhem. There were
forces at play which wanted a divided nation. The big question for leaders like
Mahatma Gandhi at the time of partition was whether there will be two nations
once British are gone or 565 different nations. At such a time, responsibility
of reconstruction of India fell in the able hands of Iron Man – Sardar Vallabhbhai
Patel.
Sardar Patel despite his falling health and age never lost sight
of the larger purpose of creating United India. VP Menon who ably assisted Sardar Patel in this enormous task
writes in The Story of the integration of the Indian Sates, 'India is
one geographical entity. Yet, throughout her long and chequered history, she
never achieved political homogeneity......Today, for the first time in the
country's history, the writ of a single central Government runs from Kailas to
Kanyakumari, from Kathiawar to Kamarupa (the old name of Assam).' Sardar Patel played
an instrumental role in creating this India.
Congress had given its assent to the June 3 plan which was about
partitioning India into two territories - India and Pakistan. India was then a
mosaic of British occupied territory and 565 princely states. The princely
states had to choose between joining either of the two nations or remain
independent. Few princely states like Travancore, Hyderabad, Junagadh, Bhopal
and Kashmir were averse to joining the state of India while others like
Gwalior, Bikaner, Baroda, Patiala and others proactively joined India.
Sardar Patel was aware 'you will not have a united India if you do not have a good
all-India Service', therefore
before embarking on reorganization of states, he build confidence in the 'Steel
Frame' or the Indian civil
services. Sardar Patel worked tirelessly to build a consensus with the princely
states but did not hesitate in employing methods of Sama, Dama, Dand and
Bhed where ever necessary. Sardar Patel along with his aide VP Menon
designed ‘Standstill Agreements and Instrument of Accession’ accommodating
requests and demands from various rulers.
Approach of Sardar Patel and VP Menon was more conciliatory as
compared to the approach of Pandit Nehru, who in May 1947, had declared that
any princely state that refuses to join the Constituent Assembly would be
treated as an enemy state. The official policy statement of the Government of India
made by Sardar Patel on July 5, 1947 made no such threats. It reassured the
princely states about the Congress' intentions, and invited them to join
independent India 'to make laws sitting together as friends than to make treaties
as aliens'. He stitched the princely states along with British Indian
territory, and prevented balkanization of India.
Sardar Patel was also conscious of the fact that mere political
reorganization of this land was not enough. He was aware that the wounded
civilization of India needed to be stirred to its core and woken up from the
past slavery and misery. There was an urgent need to rekindle among the people
of India the bond they shared with their diverse cultures. On November
13, 1947, Sardar Patel, the then
deputy Prime Minister of India, vowed to rebuild Somnath Temple. Somnath had
been destroyed and built several times in the past and the story of its
resurrection from ruins this time would be symbolic of the story of the
resurgence of India. The then President
of India, Dr. Rajendra Prasad speaking at the inaugural ceremony at the temple
said, "It is my view that the reconstruction of the Somnath Temple will be
complete on that day when not only a magnificent edifice will arise on this
foundation, but the mansion of India's prosperity will be really that
prosperity of which the ancient temple of Somnath was a symbol." He added,
"The Somnath temple signifies that the power of reconstruction is always
greater than the power of destruction."
Sardar Patel played a heroic role in the reconstruction of the
Indian civilization, and at a time when Prime Minister Narendra Modi has given
a call for 'New India', Patel’s words in a letter to Princely rulers are
more relevant than ever, "We are at a
momentous stage in the history of India. By common endeavour, we can raise the
country to new greatness, while lack of unity will expose us to unexpected
calamities. I hope the Indian States will realise fully that if we do not
cooperate and work together in the general interest, anarchy and chaos will
overwhelm us all great and small, and lead us to total ruin.......let it be our
proud privilege to leave a legacy of mutually beneficial relationship which
would raise this sacred land to its proper place amongst the nations of the
world and turn it into an abode of peace and prosperity."
*****
*The author is currently a Senior Research
Fellow at India Foundation.
Views expressed in the article are author’s personal.