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Book
Review
What
the Hand Holds
The Indian National Congress
not only steered India to freedom but also guided it through
the hazardous early years of independence to emerge as a
nation. Throughout that arduous journey, the basic character
of the idealist conception of a modern nation has been maintained.
Some feel the Congress has been able to do so without any
specific ideology guiding its way. Incredible though this
may sound, the Congress is considered a centrist organisation
that incorporates all the influences and schools of thought
that India has to offer.
Ashish Talwar’s book is
a sparkling attempt to define the ideology of India’s oldest
and largest political party. Congressism is defined as a
doctrine that seeks to establish a democratic and secular
government, with reservational representation for socially
challenged sections in proportion to their numerical strength,
the ultimate aim of which is to establish a welfare state.
The book rubbishes those
who believe that the ideology of the Congress is Left to
Centre, that is, the Congress is leftist but not Marxists
or Communist. On the opposite end, the Indian National Congress
is called Conservative but not rightist. According to Talwar,
those who believe that the ideology of the Indian National
Congress cannot be defined, are doing so from fear of exposure
of the hollowness of their ideologies.
The book brilliantly counters
the thought that the economic policy of the Congress has
changed with the development of the Indian economy. While
every political party in world history has demonstrated
changes in ideological character over a period of time because
of political expediencies, the Congress has done so for
the health of the Indian economy and the betterment of its
people. The book quotes Rajiv Gandhi who was most critical
of these ‘positional’ shortcut explanations of the Congress
ideology and said, ‘There is no question of Left or Right
or Left of Centre or Right of Centre. It is a question of
what is good for India today.’ The liberalisation process
set into motion in the Eighties has taken into account the
shifting paradigms in relation to the global economic situation
and that prevailing in the country.
A need for clear ideological
elucidation has been accentuated due to the attempts by
non-Congress political formations at redefining and obfuscating
the tenets that the Indian National Congress has stood for.
These attempts at distortion are not limited to the Congress’
ideology, the Sangh Parivar has made insidious efforts to
underplay and distort the contribution of Congress leaders
with a view to promoting to national prominence those whose
contribution was obscure.
The tenets of Congressism
- secularism, nationalism, democracy, its economic and foreign
policy - have all been dealt with. Incredible though it
may sound, in the long history of the Congress there has
been no book on the ideology of the Congress.
Congressism is a
valuable book for those who want to study the role of the
Congress’ ideology in its growth and survival for the past
117 odd years.
- Pankaj Vohra
(Courtesy- The Hindustan Times)
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DEPCO
Felicitates Congressism
Ashish
Talwar was felicitated by Shri Salman Khurshid, Chairman,
AICC Department of Policy, Planning and Coordination
(DEPCO) on the publication of his book, Congressism:
The Ideology of the Indian National Congress.
Senior leaders of the Congress, including CWC members
and AICC office bearers were invited for the programme
that was held at 99 South Avenue, the office of DEPCO
on 12th of March, 2003.
Introducing
the book and welcoming those present, Shri Salman
Khurshid appreciated the hard work put in by the young
author. Ashish Talwar spoke on why he felt the need
for such a book in today’s political situation and
gave an outline of the tenets of Congressism that
form part of the book. Senior leaders who were present
were: Dr. Manmohan Singh, Shri Arjun Singh, Shri K.
Natwar Singh, Shri Ahmed Patel, Shri Oscar Fernandes,
Shri Balram Jakhar, Shri Mahavir Prasad, Shri Sunil
Dutt, Shri Anil Shastri, Shri Anand Sharma, Shri Satyavrat
Chaturvedi, Shri Subodh Kant Sahay, Shri Satpal Maharaj,
Shri Vishwajit Prithvijit Singh, Justice Ranganath
Mishra, Shri Jairam Ramesh, Major Ved Prakash, Major
Dalbir Singh, Captain Praveen Davar and Ms. Archana
Dalmia.
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| Madhya
Pradesh chief minister Digvijay Singh inaugurating a
conference organised by state Mahila Congress in Bhopal.
Others who spoke at the convention were Pradesh Mahila
Congress president Smt. Shobha Ojha, Rajya Sabha MP,
Shri Suresh Pachauri, Smt. Garag and Saroj Patel. |
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