By Swapan Dasgupta
It has been a great fortnight for xenophobes and the
champions of ‘Fortress India’. First there was the much-discussed Time magazine
dubbing Prime Minister Manmohan Singh an ‘underachiever’, a description that
produced bouts of hysterical over-reaction from the Congress Party. Then there
was the bitter complaint by the Prime Minister of Singapore over the uncertain
business environment in India—an observation that was greeted in embarrassed
silence since the small city state can hardly be accused on nurturing a
sinister political agenda. And finally there was President Barack Obama’s
interview to the Press Trust of India over the obstacles in the path of foreign
direct investment in India. Although what President Obama said was nothing that
hadn’t been said inside the country by Indians, it led to a bipartisan
assertion of Indian sovereignty. ‘We will do what suits us’ was the refrain of
a political class that falls back on flag waving when expedient.
Amid this mood of prickliness that has engulfed a
part of Lutyens’ Delhi ever since ratings agencies such as Standard &
Poor’s began expressing doubts over the efficacy of the India story, it is
heartening that there is some good news for the beleaguered nationalists.
Ironically, it has come from a part of the world that does not figure very high
in the Indian perception of the world. In its report Beyond the Lost Decade released earlier this week, a taskforce of
the Australia India Institute of the University of Melbourne has spelt out
concrete steps that both New Delhi and Canberra can take to make the bilateral
relationship more meaningful.
The specific recommendations set out in this
extremely lucid and erudite report—reading it was a pleasure—on issues such as
business, immigration and the inner workings of the under-staffed Ministry of
External Affairs will, hopefully, receive the necessary attention in both
countries. However, what fascinated me were some of the intriguing observations
made by the report (a joint effort of three Indians and three Australians) on
the role of cricket in shaping perceptions of Australia in India.
It would hardly be an exaggeration to suggest that
if Australia figures in India’s popular imagination, it is due to cricket. For
most Indians, Australia is the land of Sir Donald Bradman, Richie Benaud, Steve
Waugh, Shane Warne and even the much misunderstood Greg Chappell. Melbourne
figures in the consciousness of Indian decision-makers not because of some brawls
involving dodgy students but because of the Boxing Day test at the legendary Melbourne
Cricket Ground. For Australians too and more so after the centre of the cricket
economy shifted from London to Mumbai in the mid-1990s, the few times India
figures on the radar are because of cricket.
In a revealing analysis of the Sydney Morning Herald between Sptember 2010 and August 2011, the
report discovered that out of the 405 published stories on an India-related
theme, 170 were on cricket—followed by (quite reassuringly) 100 stories on
business. There were also 36 news items on geopolitics and only 9 on Indian
politics. This is hardly surprising. A poll in parts of the erstwhile Soviet
Union would have revealed that India is invariably equated with Raj Kapoor.
Such are the vagaries of what is now glorified as ‘soft power’.
The Australia India Institute has recognised the
importance of cricket in conferring on Australia “a name recognition that is
astonishing in a country and a subcontinent most of whose 1.2 billion people
are remarkably self-absorbed, with only a fleeting interest in the rest of the
planet…(That its) top cricketers were Australia’s most identifiable faces in
India was acknowledged as an opportunity in this narrow context.” At the same
time, the report argues that the disproportionate importance attached to
cricket has reinforced stereotypes of an Australia that has changed
dramatically since the ‘white Australia’ policy was abandoned in 1973.
The reason given is curious: “As it happens,
(India’s) window to Australia is the one Australian national institution that
is the least multicultural and most prone to promoting an older, even outdated
idea of the country: its cricket team. With few exceptions, Australian cricket
remains largely an Anglo-Celtic preserve. When Indians superimpose the idea of
the cricket team on the rest of Australia, they obviously see a very different
country and society from the one that Australians themselves see, live and
experience.” Consequently, the argument goes, “there is an instinctive
uncertainty among the Indian establishment as to where Australia fits in Asia.”
If the objective behind this indictment of a
traditional and time-tested relationship was to argue for a cricket-plus
approach, it would be understandable. However, the problem with positing a
theory rooted in contemporary academic fashion is that it ignores the fact that
Indians, and least of all the Indian establishment, isn’t innately
uncomfortable whites, as long as their whiteness isn’t complicated by cultural
condescension. India, for example, has the best of relations with South Africa,
another cricketing nation where the game is still set in the social mould of
the apartheid years. Will that relationship be significantly enhanced if there
were more blacks and Asians representing the South Africa Test side? Are
Indians prone to viewing a Shane Warne or a Jacques Kallis with suspicion at
the IPL matches because they are white?
Take the United Kingdom, with which India has had an
enduring but historically over-burdened relationship. Why is it that Indian
visitors to London—and their numbers keep multiplying each year—still prefer a
visit to Buckingham Palace to a wander down Brick Lane? Why does the England of
Agatha Christie, P.G. Wodehouse and Downton Abbey continue to fascinate
English-speaking Indians? That England is old, class-ridden, exclusionary and
on the retreat. But has the notion of Cool Britannia that the post-Thatcher
generation has promoted so assiduously made the prospect of the ‘enhanced
partnership’ more appealing? Or, are the two countries not assessing bilateral
relationships through the prism of self-interest?
Even a casual visitor to Melbourne and Sydney will
realise that the stereotype of white Australia does not hold any longer. However,
does the prevailing multiculturalism of Australia by itself enhance its
attractiveness to India? The answer is mixed. Rigid social attitudes,
especially those accompanied by a wariness of the foreigner, are a deterrent to
good relations, both business and diplomatic. However, a diverse society by
itself is of no incremental benefit. India is an open society which is socially
conservative and, often, closed. But this has little bearing on its worth as a
strategic or commercial partner.
There are many compelling reasons why Australia and
India need to discover each other purposefully. Cricket and the English
language are worthwhile foundations for the mutual exploration process to
proceed. But in the long run, there are larger questions. Does India seek a
worthwhile role in the Indian Ocean and is it willing to invest in it? How does
Australia balance its business relationship with China with the yearning for a
strategic relationship with India? How much is Indian business willing to
invest in the natural resources of Australia? Can India provide a market for
Australia’s farm and dairy sector? These are issues on which the future of
Australia-India relations will hinge.
Telegraph, July 20, 2012
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