hidden image

Greeting a Young India!

Robert Clements Robert Clements
19 Aug 2024

Many countries lined up to greet the young seventy-seven-year-old on Independence Day a few days ago. "Happy Birthday, India!" said China. May you become as great a superpower as I am!"

"I already am," smiled India, "with a billion and quarter people who can think what they want, say what they'd like to and not get butchered in Tiananmen Square when trying to express themselves! I am a super power!"

"May your rulers rule long!" sniggered Bangladesh.

"Ah," smiled India indulgently, "they rule as long as my people wish them too, not like yours, overthrown by a treacherous army and college students."

Tibet, who had been standing behind, went up to India, "I wish you peace, my friend!"

"Thank you," said India, hugging the bleeding country, "I wish you the same; that you be allowed to get back the freedom you deserve, that the great dragon bully who crushes your people will be thrown out and your Dalai Lama may return."

"But there is bloodshed in your country!" cried Burma, "People are lynched and raped!"

"But," whispered the young seventy-seven-year-old, "I have courts not guns. A constitution, not military law, and even if these courts take time, they bring justice to all!"

"Happy Birthday, India!" shouted the confident voice of the USA. "I didn't see any gold medals won at the Olympics, though!"

"Ah no Mr America, we're too busy winning with IT and software and gearing up to beat your economy in a decade or two!"

"You have a million soldiers," said Russia after greeting India, "Send some over, we'll pay you good money."

"Ah no, bringing down legitimate governments is not our cup of tea Putin, even if you gift us an aircraft carrier free!"

And then, close to the birthday party, two men, long dead, walked together. One with a cigar stuck in an arrogant, determined bulldog face, the other, bespectacled, with only a loin cloth and walking stick, kept abreast.

"Look at the countries around," said Churchill with a smirk, "at China, Korea, Malaysia, they have progressed far more than your people have."

Gandhiji smiled, "My people are free, their minds unshackled!"

"And that?" asked Churchill, pointing down, "Lynching and love jihad gangs?"

A tear rolled down the eye of the Father of The Nation. "As much as freedom moulds heroes, so also does it breed bullies," he said slowly, "but the heroes we have are men of valour who when they take on the bullies will finally win like I did for the country. Men of courage are slowly being fashioned and they are slowly being heard. The freedom I won for them gives them courage to speak."

The national anthem was played. The Mahatma shouted "Jai Hind," as he clearly heard the Englishman next to him doing the same, and he smiled for a country he loved!
 

Recent Posts

As China powers ahead with trillion-dollar trade surpluses and futuristic innovation, India drifts into culture wars and symbolic debates. Shrinking parliamentary scrutiny and political distraction ar
apicture A. J. Philip
15 Dec 2025
The rapacity for tribal land and violation of tribal autonomy are being masked by the Hindutva forces as a battle for personhood. Adivasi Christians face assaults, expulsions, and judicial indifferenc
apicture John Dayal
15 Dec 2025
The IndiGo meltdown exposes the more profound crises developing in India. We are drifting toward monopoly economics, where regulators just blink, corporations bully, and citizens pay. If essential sec
apicture Jacob Peenikaparambil
15 Dec 2025
India's democratic foundations—rooted in rights, modern education and egalitarian ideals—are being reshaped as Hindutva politics elevates duties over freedoms. Modi's rhetoric signals a shift from con
apicture Ram Puniyani
15 Dec 2025
When a woman leads, we expect her to do wonders and that her presence alone will solve the problems she inherits. At the very least, we expect her to understand women's anxieties, respond with empathy
apicture Jaswant Kaur
15 Dec 2025
In the cold, unforgiving silence of the prison cell, Keshav—once defined by his crime—now holds a driver's license, a key to a new life, and a quiet smile. This subtle yet profound transformation is t
apicture CM Paul
15 Dec 2025
As Hindutva leaders rewrite identity and weaponise myth, minorities remain loyal while being vilified—and lakhs of Hindus themselves flee the stifling culture imposed in their name. A nation built on
apicture Thomas Menamparampil
15 Dec 2025
O Sanatan, the walls of your temple ring with my suffering, Not with words, not with deeds, but with each inch of my flesh that has your stain upon it. I am the Pariah, branded at birth, a curse wri
apicture Dr Suryaraju Mattimalla
15 Dec 2025
This year has shown us that dishonesty walks confidently through the front doors of our institutions. Chanakya's cleverness is praised. Cheating is normalised. Those who take shortcuts are applauded f
apicture Robert Clements
15 Dec 2025
From colonial opium to today's smartphones, India has perfected the art of numbing its youth. While neighbours topple governments through conviction and courage, our fatalism breeds a quietism that su
apicture A. J. Philip
08 Dec 2025