'We have to be a coalition nation because that is the only way India will maintain her unity in diversity'
Where do you think India is going? How do you visualise our future?
I am very upset and worried about the country. But, at the same
time, I see a spark of hope. Because realisation has finally dawned
on the people.
They may make fun of the ruling 13-party coalition, but you have
to remember that India is a coalition of peoples. Unless we admit
that, we cannot go any further. Otherwise, there will be Balkanisation,
purely on the basis of politics and power, that will prove to
be infinitely worse because it has nothing to do with ideology
or ethnicity or anything.
We have to be a coalition nation because that is the only way
India will maintain her unity in diversity. No one man, no one
party, no one province can lead this country. We have to have
a coalition. You journalists must promote this instead of saying
that Narasimha Rao is not going to last two months or that Deve
Gowda's going to go out in two days or four days or 10 days. We
are a coalition nation. Admit that first.
Today, more and more people who have committed crimes like corruption
and social injustice are being exposed. And it is the women of
India who are going to save this country.
Why do you say that?
After all, we comprise half the population. For many centuries,
we've been suppressed and have not been allowed to play our rightful
role. We have been treated as if we are weak and ineffective.
But now, women are coming out of their shells.
With education, women have developed a clearer view. They don't
get blinded by passions or anger. And the fact that they are mothers,
or would-be mothers, gives them a different perspective altogether.
Even when communal incidents take place, we have found heroic,
brave and committed women taking foolhardy risks for no reason
except a sheer sense of justice. Women have these feeling of "I
have been living next to this family for the last 15 years, how
I can go and kill them or betray them to be killed? As a result,
they have saved so many lives."
I feel that if there is more involvement from women, if more rights
are given to women, it will make a big difference. People were
sceptical when reservation of seats for women was introduced in
the panchayat. Everyone said, "Oh, what can all these uneducated,
illiterate village women do?" Let me tell you - if the village
is to have one tube well or one hand pump only, a woman will not
insist that it should be installed outside her house only. She
will know the right place.
A woman is aware of things like that. Because she is the one who
suffers. The problems of India today affect women more than they
affect men. She is exploited socially, she is exploited financially,
she is exploited economically and she is exploited because she
is a woman. She has to fight against all this. Changing society
for the better is something that a woman can do.
What do you think about the attempt to reserve 33 per cent ofthe seats in Parliament for women?
We opposed this step for a long time. But seeing the way things
are going and, after the experience of the panchayat elections
and the way reservation has worked there, I feel reservation is
very necessary. Otherwise, there is a tendency to bypass completely
women altogether.
What do you think about women like Phoolan Devi who are making
waves on the political scene?
But the poor things are not coming up on their own. They are being
put up by men who want to make use of them. It is not their fault
at all.
What do you think of Prime Minister Deve Gowda's announcement
of a new state, Uttarakhand?
(laughing) And Uttarakhand will lead to Jharkhand. And Jharkhand
will lead to Gorkhaland. And Gorkhaland....
In short, is there unity in diversity today?
Yes, it is possible. Despite all the machinations of these politicians,
we still have an underlying unity in diversity. The politicians
are doing their best to break this unity, but it is still there.
Why do you think India needs an Indo-Pak match on a crisis to
unite?
We don't just need an Indo-Pak match. The sense of unity becomes
even stronger when people meet on foreign soil. Why, all these
Pakistanis tell us, "I don't know why we are separated because
everywhere we go people think we are Indians. Hamare mathe pe
nahin likha hain ke hum Pakistani hain ki Hindustani hain."
(Our nationality is not written on our foreheads.)
I've met so many young Pakistanis and people from Bangladesh, they
have come to one of our INA conventions in Calcutta. Outside we
are united because we have to fight against the white man. At
such times we feel, why did the Partition have to happen?
What do you think of the liberalisation process?
I don't think it is right at all.
Why do you say that?
Who is the liberalisation process benefitting? The policy, as
it is today, has thrown thousands of people out of jobs. What
we need in India today are new jobs. But how is that going to
be possible when you don't give education facilities to anybody?
Today, we use computers; we use the latest technology. How are
the people who have been denied all these facilities ever going
to catch up. They will never catch up.
Today, the poor cannot
even afford to send their children to school because education
is so expensive. I suppose the government hopes they will all
die because, today, a poor person can't even afford any illness.
What do you think we should do then? What should we focus on to
build a better, stronger nation?
First, we must have more than constitutional equality - we must
have real equality. No one should be more equal than the others.
The other thing is education. Education is very very, very important
in today's world.
How do we ensure this equality?
We must begin at the school level. We must ensure that children from
all strata of society are admitted to educational institution and that they all
get the same treatment there. Once we get there, we can move on to bigger things.
What is your opinion on the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty?
I absolutely agree with India's stand. And we found the backbone
to maintain that stand because we had a woman in charge. We could
not be browbeaten. Arundhati Ghose made me feel really proud of
being an Indian, of being a woman.
America constantly tomtoms human rights. But, of all the nations
in the world, they have abused human rights the most. Why did
they have to drop that atomic bomb on Hiroshima and Nagasaki?
The war was already over; the Japanese had surrendered. Not only
did the Americans kill thousands of people; they even destroyed
future generations.
What have they done in Vietnam? They have laid waste the ground
so that not even a blade of grass will grew there for the next,
I don't know, how many hundreds of years. And they talk of human
rights!
Do you think dynastic rule will make a comeback in India?
There will be many attempts to bring it back but I don't think
it will happen. All these sychopants are after Sonia Gandhi today,
but the ordinary people are not. Besides, she is a sensible lady.
She does not want to meet the fate of her husband and mother-in-law.
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