Recently I've started a thread in Far East section about India-China relations. The main thesis was, both nations has a lot of common struggles and cultural roots which makes any confrontation between two powers extremely superficial. However I've seen that even the topic's main theme was that both countries were economically exhausted in the last two centuries because both nations were colonized and lost their national sovereignty, the thread derailed and lot's of issues among Chinese and Indian society were discussed. Albeit hostile, it was a good read and I was able to see the main issues in the discussion regarding the relations of two Asian Giants.
The question in the header assumes one thing, India is not yet a nation. First of all, I want to start with proving that India is not finished it's nation building process. In order to understand if a country is a nation one needs to look for the common cultural trairts among the population. The most important common cultural trait in a nation is language. In the borders of a country, there should be a common form of communication in order to be able to identify this group of people as a nation. If we consider the language profile in India, there are 21 major languages which are spoken by at least 1 million natives. Hindi -the supposed unifying language of the entire country- is only spoken by 422 million people which accounts for 41% of the population. Meaning there are no majority in India(Source: List of languages by number of native speakers in India - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia And the worst part ist not all languages in India belong to the same language family, meaning that assimilating people under Hindi language will be a lot more harder. (Source : Languages of India - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia That might be the actual reason of English being spoken in a daily life in certain places. English might be a form of commonication among people from different ethnicities in India. This was discussed heavily in the previous discussion. (Source : The Problem With The English Language In India
Without a common language, what does India rely on for keeping the entire population togather? That's the main problem here. It's still not clear (For the ones who are more interested in the topic can read the section of the book.). That's a problem that Indian ruling elite and intelligentsia has not yet solved. What's the current situation now? Religion is the main form of unifying source among ethnicities of India. If people are classified based on religion; Jainism, Buddhism and Hinduism becomes the main form of the unifying religions, whereas Islam, Christianity and Sikhism becomes the minorities. However that can't go on forever. It's the premodern form of citizenry. Ottoman Empire formed a similar form of ruling, a.k.a Millet System, which ended up pretty bad in modern era. Lot's of different ethnicities (even including the ones belong to majority religion like Arabs) revolted against Ottoman Empire and the whole empire eventually collapsed.
There are already lot's of seperation movements in India (like Kashmir, and Khalistan) and the amount of them will sadly increase as the urbanization and political participation increases. Turkey experienced a very similar situation with Kurds. When Kurds were predominanlty living in rural areas there were not much of a problem except for some feudal Kurdish landlords who wants the old privileges given in Ottoman era back, revolting against the state in 20's and 30's. However when Kurds started to urbanize, started to go to schools and become literate, they have started to notice that they have civil rights as minorities. Abdullah Öcalan -the founder of terrorist organization PKK-, was a drop out political science student at Ankara University which is among one of the most prestigious universities in social sciences in Turkey.
This actually works in two ways; as minorities go to cities they start to feel the preassure of being a minority more. Because when they were in rural areas, their encounter with the state or the people who are in majority group are very low and everybody lives in peace in it's own territory. However when urbanization start and the boundries that seperate ethnicities starts to become blur, then the strain in the societal fabric starts. And with the increasing rate of literacy, minority learns/invents ways of overcoming that strain as ways of protests and civil rights movements or it evolves into much more tragic and inhumane acts like terrorism.
As of 2013 only 32% of the population in India are urbanized (Source : Urban population (% of total) | Data | Table Literacy rate is around 75% (Source : Literacy in India - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia) and literacy rate among minorities are even lower (Source : http://sikhinstitute.org/oct_2012/5-divjot.pdf). This is a timebomb that India is currently sitting on and no one seems to know how this problem will be solved. Will India evolve into a multinational state? Will India become a civilization state, or will Hindi identity be able to assimilate remaining 59% percent of the population? (Source : Nation-Building in India: Issues, Challenges and Prospects - Events - Department of Political Science
So how can a very multicultural group of people were able to form India in the first place in 1940's, when modernism was very valid and multiculturalism weren't even invented like today? There was an antagonist, the UK, who managed to unify every ethnic group in Indian subcontinent against itself except for Muslims. UK promised a seperate country to Muslims in order to prevent them from joining to revolts and it was a successful strategy. Divide and conquer. But they ultimately failed anyway. After that India had a predominantly rural population with very very low literacy rates and a single party dictatorship which did not solve but "frozen" the entire problem.
Since 1990's India changed from dominant party to multi-party system, there is a rapid economic development and rapid urbanization and a rapid increase in literacy rate. So who will play the antagonist role to unify the whole ethnic groups of India until the problem is solved? Can Pakistan do that? Actually it was tried but as more and more India tries to seed hatret against Pakistanis, the more and more muslim minority (175 million population) starts to feel marginalized which is a more seperatist act rather than integrative. There should be an antagonist whom people should be able to hate without a societal seperation.
Of course the current ruling elite, Modi government, picked China. They aim for a mini cold war between China and India in order to unify the ethnicities against a common antagonist. Very same thing that happened naturally in 1940's. This time it's happening with some social engineering efforts since China doesn't seem to consider India as an adversary.
So what do you think about this? Let's discuss.
@TaiShang , @LeveragedBuyout , @Nihonjin1051 , @Chinese-Dragon , @+4vsgorillas-Apebane your inputs would be awesome. I'm really curios of what you guys think.
The question in the header assumes one thing, India is not yet a nation. First of all, I want to start with proving that India is not finished it's nation building process. In order to understand if a country is a nation one needs to look for the common cultural trairts among the population. The most important common cultural trait in a nation is language. In the borders of a country, there should be a common form of communication in order to be able to identify this group of people as a nation. If we consider the language profile in India, there are 21 major languages which are spoken by at least 1 million natives. Hindi -the supposed unifying language of the entire country- is only spoken by 422 million people which accounts for 41% of the population. Meaning there are no majority in India(Source: List of languages by number of native speakers in India - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia And the worst part ist not all languages in India belong to the same language family, meaning that assimilating people under Hindi language will be a lot more harder. (Source : Languages of India - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia That might be the actual reason of English being spoken in a daily life in certain places. English might be a form of commonication among people from different ethnicities in India. This was discussed heavily in the previous discussion. (Source : The Problem With The English Language In India
Without a common language, what does India rely on for keeping the entire population togather? That's the main problem here. It's still not clear (For the ones who are more interested in the topic can read the section of the book.). That's a problem that Indian ruling elite and intelligentsia has not yet solved. What's the current situation now? Religion is the main form of unifying source among ethnicities of India. If people are classified based on religion; Jainism, Buddhism and Hinduism becomes the main form of the unifying religions, whereas Islam, Christianity and Sikhism becomes the minorities. However that can't go on forever. It's the premodern form of citizenry. Ottoman Empire formed a similar form of ruling, a.k.a Millet System, which ended up pretty bad in modern era. Lot's of different ethnicities (even including the ones belong to majority religion like Arabs) revolted against Ottoman Empire and the whole empire eventually collapsed.
There are already lot's of seperation movements in India (like Kashmir, and Khalistan) and the amount of them will sadly increase as the urbanization and political participation increases. Turkey experienced a very similar situation with Kurds. When Kurds were predominanlty living in rural areas there were not much of a problem except for some feudal Kurdish landlords who wants the old privileges given in Ottoman era back, revolting against the state in 20's and 30's. However when Kurds started to urbanize, started to go to schools and become literate, they have started to notice that they have civil rights as minorities. Abdullah Öcalan -the founder of terrorist organization PKK-, was a drop out political science student at Ankara University which is among one of the most prestigious universities in social sciences in Turkey.
This actually works in two ways; as minorities go to cities they start to feel the preassure of being a minority more. Because when they were in rural areas, their encounter with the state or the people who are in majority group are very low and everybody lives in peace in it's own territory. However when urbanization start and the boundries that seperate ethnicities starts to become blur, then the strain in the societal fabric starts. And with the increasing rate of literacy, minority learns/invents ways of overcoming that strain as ways of protests and civil rights movements or it evolves into much more tragic and inhumane acts like terrorism.
As of 2013 only 32% of the population in India are urbanized (Source : Urban population (% of total) | Data | Table Literacy rate is around 75% (Source : Literacy in India - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia) and literacy rate among minorities are even lower (Source : http://sikhinstitute.org/oct_2012/5-divjot.pdf). This is a timebomb that India is currently sitting on and no one seems to know how this problem will be solved. Will India evolve into a multinational state? Will India become a civilization state, or will Hindi identity be able to assimilate remaining 59% percent of the population? (Source : Nation-Building in India: Issues, Challenges and Prospects - Events - Department of Political Science
So how can a very multicultural group of people were able to form India in the first place in 1940's, when modernism was very valid and multiculturalism weren't even invented like today? There was an antagonist, the UK, who managed to unify every ethnic group in Indian subcontinent against itself except for Muslims. UK promised a seperate country to Muslims in order to prevent them from joining to revolts and it was a successful strategy. Divide and conquer. But they ultimately failed anyway. After that India had a predominantly rural population with very very low literacy rates and a single party dictatorship which did not solve but "frozen" the entire problem.
Since 1990's India changed from dominant party to multi-party system, there is a rapid economic development and rapid urbanization and a rapid increase in literacy rate. So who will play the antagonist role to unify the whole ethnic groups of India until the problem is solved? Can Pakistan do that? Actually it was tried but as more and more India tries to seed hatret against Pakistanis, the more and more muslim minority (175 million population) starts to feel marginalized which is a more seperatist act rather than integrative. There should be an antagonist whom people should be able to hate without a societal seperation.
Of course the current ruling elite, Modi government, picked China. They aim for a mini cold war between China and India in order to unify the ethnicities against a common antagonist. Very same thing that happened naturally in 1940's. This time it's happening with some social engineering efforts since China doesn't seem to consider India as an adversary.
So what do you think about this? Let's discuss.
@TaiShang , @LeveragedBuyout , @Nihonjin1051 , @Chinese-Dragon , @+4vsgorillas-Apebane your inputs would be awesome. I'm really curios of what you guys think.
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