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BEYOND
NATIONS & NATIONALISMS: One World
Nadesan Satyendra
10 May 1998, Revised 10 May 2008

"..the building of a nation is of
necessity accompanied by the discovery and encouragement of universalising
values. Far from keeping aloof from other nations, therefore, it is national
liberation which leads the nation to play its part on the stage of history.
It is at the heart of national consciousness that international
consciousness lives and grows. And this two-fold emerging is ultimately the
source of all culture. "
Frantz Fannon
"...A true trans
nationalism will not come by the suppression of one nation by
another. A true trans nationalism will come from nationalisms
that have flowered and matured: from peoples who have grown from dependence to
independence to inter-dependence. It is only the independent who may be
inter-dependent - and to work for the
flowering
of the Tamil nation is to bring forward the emergence of a true
trans nationalism... Meanwhile, Tamils have no cause, to be apologetic
about their togetherness as a people. As a people, they too have much to
contribute to the rich fabric of the many nations of the
world - and to world civilisation..."
Nadesan Satyendra in One World & the Tamil Nation, 1998
We speak of the First World, Second World, Third World,
and Fourth World, and it may be helpful to ask: how did this hierarchical ordering of the world come
about? Did it 'just happen'? Or is the classification a reflection of an
often unstated,
but value laden, view of the world?
We know, ofcourse, that the First World countries are those that
are at the top end of the Gross National Product (GNP) ladder. The Second World, during the period of the Cold War, was the Communist/Socialist bloc. And the Third World were those countries at the
bottom end of the GNP ladder.
The countries belonging to the Communist /Socialist bloc resisted
this 'Second' class categorisation. Be that as it may, with the collapse of the Iron Curtain, the Second World
categorisation lost its earlier conceptual underpinning and today has a largely historical significance. And if, today, there is no Second
World as such, why is it that we continue to speak of the Third
World? Is that categorisation too a relic of the past?
Even apart from such reflections (which may be dismissed by some as a mere quibbling with words), the question remains: why
are countries at the top end of
the GNP ladder, the First World? For instance, these countries are
also at the bottom end of the ladder in so far as environmental pollution is
concerned. Should we therefore categorise them as the Second World, and the
former Communist/Socialist bloc where pollution is at its worst, as the Third
World - that is if
we rate environment before gross national product.
That the classification is itself a product
of the First World will not surprise many. Hegemony is secured not simply by military
might and economic power, but also by the artefacts of a 'legitimising
culture'.
For more than three hundred
years, until the break up of colonial empires in the aftermath of the Second
World War, the colonial ruler legitimised his rule as a 'civilising' influence.
"...One .. aspect of British authority in India ... was the conviction held by every European in India of a final and enduring racial superiority. Seton Kerr, a Foreign Secretary of the
(British) Government, explained it as 'the cherished conviction of every Englishman in India, from the highest to the lowest, by the planter's assistant in his lowly bungalow and by the editor in the full light of the Presidency
town - from those to the Chief Commissioner in charge of an important province to the Viceroy on his
throne - the conviction in every man that he belongs to a race whom God has destined to govern and
subdue'. Many equally authoritative statements of this point of view, from persons in the
highest official position in India, could be quoted to show how universal this conviction was during the last century and indeed up to the time of the First Great War. One further quotation may, however, be permitted, as it throws light on the attitude of the army. Lord Kitchener, a most distinguished Commander-in-Chief of India, declared:
'It is this consciousness of the inherent superiority of the European which has won for us
India. However well educated and clever a native may be, and however brave he may have proved himself, I believe that no rank we can bestow on him would cause him to be considered an equal of the British officer.'..."
- K.M.Pannikar in Asia and Western Dominance, George Allen & Unwin, 1953
The 'legitimising culture' of the conqueror served twin purposes. On the one hand, it
served as a rationalising platform for the conqueror to motivate his own army
and strengthen the will of his own people. On the other
hand, it helped to persuade the conquered to acquiesce in what was passed off as a 'modernising'
process. Even Karl Marx persuaded himself to the view that despite its excesses,
colonial empires helped 'modernise' the Asian economies - and in that sense were
'progressive'.
The 'Red' Indians, Aborigines,
the Negroes, the 'pagan' Indians who prayed to idols, the 'yellow' races, were 'uncivilised', even 'barbarians'
and the conqueror persuaded not only himself but in many instances, the
conquered people themselves, that he, the conqueror, was simply carrying out a civilising duty
imposed upon him by God and history. Winston Churchill was eloquent - as
always:
"I do not agree that the dog in a manger has the
final right to the manger even though he may have lain there for a very long
time. I do not admit that right. I do not admit for instance, that a great wrong
has been done to the Red Indians of America or the black people of Australia. I
do not admit that a wrong has been done to these people by the fact that a
stronger race, a higher-grade race, a more worldly wise race to put it that way,
has come in and taken their place." (1937, quoted
by Arundhati Roy in 2002)
For Abraham Lincoln, though democracy
was the rule of the people, by the people, for the people, Negroes, after all,
were not 'people' and therefore did not have the right to vote. As for
'Red'
Indians, those that had not been killed off, should be confined within 'enclosed
settlements' for their own good.
And as a divine instrument, the conqueror was not averse to giving God a helping
hand. In 1835, Thomas Macaulay, President of a
Committee on Public Instruction in Bengal, recommended for India, a thoroughly
English educational system which 'would create a class of persons, Indian in
blood and colour but English in taste, in morals and in intellect'. The
'utilitarian' underpinning was provided by James Mills and others:
"Throughout his life, Mill’s ultimate concern was the
happiness of humankind as a whole, or as I shall call it, global happiness.
Global happiness will be obtained if all races of peoples of the globe are
‘civilized’ in the utilitarian sense. Mill had a conviction that all
non-European peoples would become ‘civilized’ if the European knowledge,
arts, manners, and institutions were diffused to them. Mill was particularly
concerned with how to bring enlightenment to what he believed to be
‘half-civilized’ peoples, such as peoples in India and other Asian
nations..." Man To Leung
on James Mill and British Imperialism
Today, those of us who are 'Indian in
blood and colour but English in taste, in morals and in intellect' may,
without much thought, perpetuate a categorisation of the world which proclaims that the First World is
somehow 'First' and that the Third World is 'Third' - and has some catching up
to do. The Empire may be dead, but the dead, sometimes, rule from their graves. For those in the so called Third World to accept a hierarchy imposed by their erstwhile colonial
rulers, is to perpetuate that rule by less obvious means.
It is not that the Third World does not have much to learn from
the First. It does. But learning is a two way street and the Third World has also much to teach the First - a
First World, which is rushing onwards on the basis of its Cartesian
certainty 'I think, therefore I am', without knowing when and
how to stop; which is caught with a consumerism which is destroying the
environment and produces an
underclass within its own territorial boundaries; which is unable to find answers to those fundamental
questions which trouble the human heart and mind; which seeks escape from that
unease by immersing itself in a search for heightened sensation;
and
whose more evolved minds, in a search for meaning, are turning to the fundamental truths embedded in the
civilisations of the Third World.
"The general notions about human understanding ... which are illustrated by
discoveries in atomic physics...have a history, and in Buddhist and Hindu thought a more
considerable and central place."... Julius Robert
Oppenheimer
Deprived of direction, the so called 'First World' is
intent on getting there fast.
..Apart from their self assurance, the most common characteristics of our elites
are cynicism, rhetoric and the worship of both ambition and power... The assumption is
that world-weary cynicism demonstrates intellectual superiority. In reality it indicates
neither intelligence, experience or accuracy... To be world weary is to be willing to go
on repeating old mistakes...
Spirit, appetite, faith, emotion, intuition, will, experience
- none of these are
relevant to the operations of our society. Instead we automatically assign blame for our
failures and crimes to the irrational impulse...Our society was largely conceived by courtesans. They have therefore defined the idea
of modernism in a way which reinforces their skills... It isn't surprising that like most
ageing religions, reason is able to get away with presenting itself as the solution to the
problems it creates...
The rootless wandering is perhaps the explanation for the hypnotic effect which the
idea of efficiency has upon us. Deprived of direction, we are determined to go there
fast... We confuse intention with execution. Decision making with administration. Creation
with accounting. On the dark plain that we wander, totems have been erected, not to
indicate the way, but to provide hopeful relief.... What hope there is lies precisely in
the slow, close to reality enquiry and concern of the humanist. But first he, and perhaps
more hopefully she, must stop believing that the accomplishments of the last few centuries
are the result of rational methods, structure and self interest, while the failures and
violence are those of humanity and sensibility. In spite of the rhetoric which dominates
our civilisation, the opposite is true..."
John Ralston Saul in Voltaire's
Bastards - The Dictatorship of Reason in the West
If we wish to persist in a classification of the countries of
the world on the basis
of GNP, it may be more liberating to adopt a more fact based approach. The so called Third World is in truth the Majority World - and the so
called First World is the Minority World. Such a classification will at
least accord with the number of people who belong to each category without
imposing an hierarchical pecking order.
By focusing on numbers, such a categorisation will also help
many in the Majority World to more easily understand
why some political leaders of the First World, see the Third World
as posing a threat to their security.
".... the combination of demographic pressures and political unrest will generate
particularly in the third world, increasing unrest and violence... The population of the
world by the end of this century will have grown to some 6 billion people.... moreover
most of the increase will be concentrated in the poorer parts of the world, with 85% of
the world's population by the end of this century living in Africa, Latin America and the
poorer parts of Asia.... the problems confronting Washington in assuring US national
security will become increasingly complex..." - Power and Principle: Memoirs of the National Security Adviser, 1977-1981 published by Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1983
A fact based approach which names the First World as the
Minority World, will have the added advantage of helping the First World recognise that they too have a lot of catching up to do; that
GNP does not necessarily bring wisdom; that a continuing onslaught on the
environment will not bring progress but deprivation for all; that the
future will be built by the peoples of the Majority World and the Minority World working
together as partners; and that political leaders will need to truly
serve the constituency that they seek to lead - the emerging One
World, as a whole, and not partisan state interests.
The One World will not emerge by giving credence to the notion
" that the Free Market breaks down national barriers, and that Corporate
Globalization's ultimate destination is a hippie paradise."
"...There is a notion gaining credence that the
Free Market breaks down national barriers, and that Corporate Globalization's
ultimate destination is a hippie paradise where the heart is the only passport
and we all live happily together inside a John Lennon song. (" Imagine there's no
country...") But this is a canard. What the Free Market undermines is not
national sovereignty, but democracy. As the disparity between the rich
and poor grows... Corporate Globalization needs an
international confederation of loyal, corrupt, preferably authoritarian
governments in poorer countries to push through unpopular reforms and quell the
mutinies...not the free movement of people, not a respect for
human rights, not
international treaties on racial discrimination or chemical and
nuclear weapons,
or greenhouse gas emissions, climate change, or god forbid,
justice.."
Arundhati Roy, 2002 in Come September
And Immanuel Wallerstein was right to point out -
"...Though it is fashionable to speak of globalization today as a
phenomenon that began at the earliest in the 1970's, in fact trans-national
commodity chains were extensive from the very beginning of the system, and
global since the second half of the nineteenth century. To be sure, the
improvement in technology has made it possible to transport more and different
kinds of items across great distances, but I contend that there has not been any
fundamental change in the structuring and operations of these commodity chains
in the twentieth century, and that none is likely to occur because of the
so-called information revolution..." Immanuel Wallerstein , 1997 in
States? Sovereignty? The Dilemmas of Capitalists in an Age of Transition
Eduardo Galeano's remarks underline the political reality - not
of yesterday, but today.
"...Christopher Columbus couldn't discover America because he didn't
have a visa or even a passport.
Pedro Alvares Cabral
couldn't get off the boat in Brazil because he might have
been carrying smallpox,
measles, the flu or other plagues the country had never known.
Hernan Cortes and
Francisco Pizarro never even began the conquest of Mexico and
Peru because they didn't have green cards.
Pedro de Alvarado was turned away from
Guatemala and
Pedro de Valdivia couldn't enter Chile because they had police
records. The Mayflower pilgrims were sent back to sea from the coast of
Massachusetts, because the immigration quotas were full. These misfortunes occurred in the distant past, long before globalization did
away with borders..."
New Internationalist, February
2004
And we ignore at our peril the words of
Jeremy Seabrook -
"Globalisation permits money and goods
to move around the world unimpeded, yet criminalises the other indispensable
element of production, labour, when it seeks to move to where it can command a
decent livelihood....Globalisation is imperialism by another name; the world
market is an extension of the global imperial adventure of the nineteenth
century; and the majority of the working class are now located not in the
tenements of Berlin and Glasgow, the immigrant apartment blocks of Chicago and
New York, but in the terrible slums of Asia, the
favelas of Latin America, the
townships of Africa... it is not only as workers that people need emancipation
from the totalising dogmas of neo-liberalism, but as consumers too,
as complete human beings. There is a new
urgency to the need to formulate a richer form of liberation than that envisaged
by the revolutionaries and pioneers of labour..." New Internationalist, February 1999
Hopefully, the views of persons such as
Margaret
Wheatley will gain increasing acceptance -
"..For many years, I’ve
been interested in seeing the world differently. I’ve wanted to see beyond the
Western, mechanical view of the world and see what else might appear when the
lens was changed. I’ve learned, just as Joel Barker predicted when he
introduced us to paradigms years ago, that "problems that are impossible to
solve with one paradigm may be easily solved with a different one...
Leaders are
those who help others.."
"... We are all leaders, even
without that formal title. We are in communities,
governments, corporations, schools, universities, churches,
non-profits, NGOs, healthcare. We are very diverse, yet our
values unite us: We rely on human goodness. We depend on
diversity. We trust in life's capacity to self-organize in
sustainable, generous, and interdependent ways. We live in
many different cultures and
nations, and we
express these values in
wonderfully diverse ways.
Yet we each serve the vision of a world where people can
experience themselves as
whole, healthy, sacred, and
free. In all our different activities, we want to
liberate the creativity and caring that are common to all
people..."
How do we secure that leaders who truly serve will emerge? Dee Hock, CEO
Emeritius of Visa International was right when he said -
"We live in extraordinary times. Around the world we face
systemic and deep-seated challenges in virtually every field. At the same
time, in part because of these challenges, we are coming to see ourselves,
one another, and our home planet in new ways. We have an unprecedented
opportunity to realize age-old dreams of abundance and recreate our
institutions in the service of all humanity and life....A vital question is how to insure that those who lead are constructive, ethical, open, and honest. The answer is to follow those who behave in that manner. It comes down to both individual and collective sense of where and how people choose to be led. In a very real sense, followers lead by choosing where to be led. Where an organizational community will be led is inseparable from the shared values and beliefs of its
members..."
Dee
Hock - The Art of Chaordic Leadership
Our leaders are more representative of us than we may sometimes care to admit and Gandhi's words will help remind us that we ourselves must become the change that we
wish to see in the world.
"... As human beings, our greatness lies not so much in being able to
remake the World - that is the myth of the atomic age - as
in being able to remake ourselves. We must become the change we wish
to see in the world...”
And, the words of an unknown author about changing the world continue to
retain their significance -
"When I was a young man, I
wanted to change the world. I found it was difficult to change the
world, so I tried to change my nation. When I found I couldn't change
the nation, I began to focus on my town. I couldn't change the town
and as an older man, I tried to change my family. Now, as an old man,
I realize the only thing I can change is myself, and suddenly I
realize that if long ago I had changed myself, I could have made an
impact on my family. My family and I could have made an impact on our
town. Their impact could have changed the nation and I could indeed
have changed the world."
Each one of us may then begin to recognise the enduring wisdom
of Charles Chaplin in the Great Dictator -
"...I'm sorry, but I don't want to be an emperor. That's not my
business. I don't want to rule or conquer anyone. I should like to help everyone - if
possible - Jew, Gentile - black men - white. We all want to help one another. Human beings
are like that. We want to live by each other's happiness - not by each other's misery. We
don't want to hate and despise one another. In this world there is room for everyone. And
the good earth is rich and can provide for everyone. The way of life can be free and
beautiful, but we have lost the way. Greed has poisoned men's souls - has barricaded the
world with hate - has goose-stepped us into misery and bloodshed. We have developed speed,
but we have shut ourselves in. Machinery that gives abundance has left us in want. Our
knowledge has made us cynical; our cleverness, hard and unkind. We think too much and feel
too little. More than machinery we need humanity. More than cleverness, we need kindness
and gentleness. Without these qualities, life will be violent and all will be
lost...." Charles Chaplin in the concluding speech in his film the Great
Dictator - quoted in
Charles Chaplin
: My Autobiography,1964 "
Today, more than 70 million Tamils, living as they do in many lands and across distant seas - live in the First,
in the Second and in the Third Worlds. And to the extent that the Tamils
are a trans-state nation, they belong to the Fourth World as well. It is true,
therefore, to say that for the Tamils, the world is already, in many ways, a 'One World'. It
is a 'One World' not because we are not Tamils, it is a
'One World' because we are Tamils. It is a One World, because as
Tamils, dispersed in many lands and across distant seas, our life experiences
have given fresh meaning to the words of the
Tamil poet
Kanniyan Poongundran in Purananuru (poem 192), written two thousand five
hundred years ago - words which continue to touch, move and inspire -
"To us all towns are one, all men our kin.
Life's good comes not from others' gift, nor ill
Man's pains and
pains' relief are
from within.
Death's no new thing; nor do our bosoms thrill
When Joyous life seems like a luscious draught.
When grieved, we patient suffer; for, we deem
This much - praised life of ours a fragile raft
Borne down the waters of some mountain stream
That o'er huge boulders roaring seeks the plain
Tho' storms with lightnings' flash from darken'd skies
Descend, the raft goes on as fates ordain.
Thus have we seen in visions of the wise ! -
We marvel not at greatness of the great;
Still less despise we men of low estate."
English Translation by
Rev. G.U.Pope
in Tamil Heroic Poems
யாதும்
ஊரே ; யாவரும் கேளிர் ; தீதும் நன்றும் பிறர்தர வாரா ; நோதலும் தணிதலும்
அவற்றோ ரன்ன ; சாதலும் புதுவது அன்றே ; வாழ்தல் இனிதுஎன மகிழ்ந்தன்றும் இலமே;
முனிவின், இன்னா தென்றலும் இலமே; ‘மின்னொடு வானம் தண்துளி தலைஇ,
ஆனாது கல்பொருது இரங்கும் மல்லற் பேர்யாற்று நீர்வழிப் படூஉம் புணைபோல,
ஆருயிர் முறைவழிப் படூஉம்’ என்பது திறவோர் காட்சியின் தெளிந்தனம் ஆகலின்,
மாட்சியின் பெரியோரை வியத்தலும் இலமே; சிறியோரை இகழ்தல் அதனினும்
இலமே.
192,
எட்டுத்தொகை நூல்களில் ஒன்றாகிய
புறநானூறு
- பாடியவர்:
கணியன் பூங்குன்றன்
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