Literati cordially invites you to the launch of
AND WHAT REMAINS IN THE END
The Memoirs of an Unrepentant Civil Servant
(A Rupa Publication)
by
ROBIN
GUPTA
On Saturday 28th Sept.2013 at 6:30p.m.
at Literati Book Shop &Cafe
 
Please join us for Refreshments after the launch
RSVP: Savia 0832 2277740
 
 


May 16, 2013:rasheeda.bha...@thehindu.co.in


Some books leave you with a deep sense of sadness- even while they make you 
chuckle, marvel at the beauty or tenderness of a thought or human emotion, sit 
up and take note of a piece of poetic prose, rich imagery or a full-bodied 
character. Robin Gupta's And What Remains in the End - ; The Journey
of an Unrepentent Civil Servant (Rupa) does all this. At one level it is the 
memoirs of an IAS officer with 36 years in India's civil service. Like all good 
memoirs, the book leaves you with full-dimensional character, painted in deft 
strokes and vibrant colours, with shades of grey as well. But
Gupta's book is more than the ruminations of a bureaucrat in a service that has 
been, during Independent India's 66 years, woefully entangled in the mire of 
greed, arrogance, depravity, petty politics, power play and worse. In 
scintillating prose, the author gives us rich images of the nooks and
corners of India - Delhi, West Bengal (Gupta's home cadre), Haryana, Madhya 
Pradesh and Punjab -  where he served as an IAS officer. In this honest 
account, the corruption, sycophancy and chicanery, on which the bulk of our 
babu-dom thrives, comes through. Gupta, a 1974 batch officer, is
different from the bulk of his colleagues, perhaps because of his pedigree, 
upbringing and values. The narrative is strung together with his myriad 
postings. As he refuses to kowtow to higher powers and passes orders on merit, 
does not entertain "requests" from his political bosses, and
shows flashes of arrogance and highhandedness, sometimes in an inebriated state 
-  if there was ever a child of Bacchus, it was him! - he faces a plethora of 
transfers. And like others before him, has to cool his heels in insignificant 
postings. ...........................................
.......................................

The greatest merit of Gupta's memoirs, apart from the racy style, and sensitive 
and poignant manner in which he relates the story, is his basic honesty and 
humour. There isn't any visible attempt to dress up anything. The pages are 
dotted with Gupta's drunken interludes and orgies, including his
socking a policeman and breaking his teeth, when a group of them demanded a 
bribe as he was driving under the influence of alcohol. They refuse to believe 
he was an IAS officer as he lived in his family house in a posh area in Delhi. 
......................................................
We get interesting snapshots of politicians. Narasimha Rao's flawless French 
and austere living; Zail Singh's kindness; Devi Lal's warmth and astute 
governance, his son Chautala's violent temper and fits of uncontrollable rage, 
and his penchant to physically assault legislators and insult senior
officers.
And of cities too. In Calcutta, Government files were works of art. It had a 
large Muslim population and excellent Mughlai food. "But the veneer of 
secularism that I witnessed in the upper echelons of Calcutta society erupted 
sporadically, through subtle nuances in conversation
rather than any violent exchange. I found a deep distrust between Hindus and 
Muslims alike."
Gupta gives the readers a startlingly close look at the various layers that 
hide inefficiency, sloth, corruption, high handedness, nepotism and worse in 
the way India is governed. And all this is
related in effortless prose, a tone that is neither sanctimonious nor bitter, 
but sometimes philosophical. Of his meteoric rise in the Punjab cadre, he says 
it ends on "a rather low octave owing to my failure to grasp the dynamics of 
success" and his rigid stand on issues, and "biting
replies" to MLAs.
Without the bottle and philosophy as his constant companions, and of course his 
mother who goes on to live for 100 years and is a rock of support to the single 
officer, his constant incarceration in the service would have been difficult to 
digest. The book is full of
hilarious anecdotes -  as tragic as they are comic. For instance, when as 
Forests Secretary in Punjab, he refuses to allow the ecologically fragile bit 
of forest in the Shivalik area to be developed into modern hosing colonies on 
the periphery of Chandigarh, both the CM and advocate general are
not amused. Asking him to reverse his opinion, the latter writes with biting 
sarcasm: "You are being dramatic. I understand that you are a poet, a writer, 
and occasionally an administrator. Be practical. And may I suggest to you, as a 
supporter of our government, to get hold of some land in
this area for your retirement home? It is close enough to the golf course and 
the clubhouse has a good watering hole."
Refusal to comply ends his stint; Gupta returns to the department three years 
later as financial commissioner, and insists on open tenders to auction a 
timber contract
and not renew it automatically. The minister, who has been bribed, summons him 
and screams at him, and then talks to the CM over the phone & "in hushed tones, 
as lovers whose romance has narrowly escaped discovery might"  He gets up, 
applies "another daub of tilak on his
furrowed forehead" and storms out to the CM's office, returning in 30 minutes 
with Gupta's transfer orders. With the numerous scams that we witness these 
days, where both the politicians and babus appear equally brazen and shameless, 
what Gupta says in the prologue rings true. "There is
little doubt in my mind that the country is veering dangerously towards 
catastrophe; the largest democracy in the world, in a little over six decades, 
has displayed a remarkable inability to take charge of itself." With its 
intellect, wit and humour, honesty and a fine writing style, this book
is truly a literary milestone" as Khushwant Singh puts it.
 

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