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Dr Ambedkar needs a world-class biographer
By K. Natwar Singh

On January 26, 1950, we are going to enter into a life of
contradictions. In politics we will have equality and in economic and
social life we will have inequality... We must remove this contradiction
at the earliest moment, or else those who suffer inequality will blow up
the structure of political democracy which this Assembly has so
laboriously built up.

Dr B.R. Ambedkar (1891-1956)

Free India's first Cabinet was sworn in on August 15, 1947. Its strength
was 14, including Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru. The amazing fact is
that six out of the 14 were non-Congressmen: Dr John Mathai, C.M. Bhaba,
Dr B.R. Ambedkar, Sir Shanmukham Chetty, Dr Shyama Prasad Mukherji and
Sardar Baldev Singh. This aroused no controversy. Such was the authority
and sway of the Congress at that time.  The name that stands out is that
of Babasaheb Bhimrao Ramji Ambedkar. He had been a determined and fiery
critic of the Mahatma and other senior leaders of the Congress. Yet,
Gandhiji, Pandit Nehru and Sardar Patel invited him to be a member of
the Cabinet. This did credit both to the Congress and Babasaheb
Ambedkar.

I have lately been reading The Essential Writings of B.R. Ambedkar,
edited by Valerian Rodrigues. Two facts need to be taken note of. Dr
Ambedkar was born in an untouchable family. Every kind of discrimination
and ostracism was experienced by him and his family. One has to only
read his autobiographical essay, On the Road to Goregaon to get some
idea of the brutal odds he faced and overcame.

Let me quote. The incident took place around 1900:
"From our dress or talk no one could make out that we were children of
the untouchables. Indeed the station-master was quite sure we were
Brahmin children and was extremely touched at the plight in which he
found us. As is usual among the Hindus, the station-master asked who we
were. Without a moment's thought I blurted out that we were Mahars.
(Mahar is one of the communities which are treated as untouchables in
the Bombay Presidency.) He was stunned. His face underwent a sudden
change. We could see that he was over-powered by a strange feeling of
repulsion."

No benign fairy ever came to Dr Ambedkar's rescue. The second fact is
his awesome intellect. There are many brilliant people, but Dr Ambedkar
was exceptionally brilliant. He did his BA from Elphinstone College,
Bombay in 1912, with English and Persian as subjects. He next secured
one of the two scholarships which the Baroda state offered to backward
caste graduates.  In 1913, Dr Ambedkar joined Columbia University in New
York. From then there was no looking back academically. London School of
Economics, Law at Grey's Inn.

At the London School of Economics for his DSc, he wrote on The Problem
of the Rupee.  I have given these facts because they are not as well
known as they should be. Recently, much has been said and written on
reservations. The debate has produced fire and flame, force and fury,
but little illumination. Political public expression is generally ill
informed.  I find the eight-nine per cent growth mantra obscene.
Millions of Indians live in abject poverty. Dr Ambedkar was not delicate
when he wrote about our villages being cesspools of ignorance and
inequality. For him, no glorification of poverty. On such subjects, his
utterances take wing. His passion was to build an India fit for heroes.

I strongly recommend the book The Essential Writings of B.R. Ambedkar.
Every one of us should read his speech in the Constituent Assembly on
November 4, 1948, introducing the draft Constitution. Read this:
"Constitutional morality is not a natural sentiment. It has to be
cultivated. We must realise that our people have yet to learn it.
Democracy in India is only a top-dressing on an Indian soil, which is
essentially undemocratic."

One more quotation from the same speech:
"Another criticism against the Draft Constitution is that no part of it
represents the ancient polity of India. It is said that the new
Constitution should have been drafted on the ancient Hindu model of a
state and that instead of incorporating western theories the new
Constitution should have been raised and built upon village panchayats
and district panchayats. There are others who have taken a more extreme
view. They do not want any Central or political governments. They just
want India to contain so many village governments. The love of the
intellectual Indians for the village community is of course infinite if
not pathetic."

What the great Babasaheb Ambedkar needs is a world-class biographer and
clay statues with blue suits and red ties. He is in many ways a titanic
figure.  Several biographies exist. The better known among them is by
Dhananjay Keer (1913-1984). It has been reprinted several times.
Something more substantial and less hagiographic is required. No
pedantry, no trivia.

No political party can ignore Dr Ambedkar. He did something out of the
ordinary. Even more than Gandhiji, he gave the Dalits awakening and
courage and pride. Mr Valerian Rodrigues deserves praise for putting
this book together. He is professor of political science at Mangalore
University. Also a former Agatha Harrison Fellow at St. Anthony's
College in Oxford and Fellow of the Indian Institute of Advanced Study,
Simla.

K. Natwar Singh is a former minister for external affairs

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