It is for the best that only three of Tagore's works are known to the nationalists today | Photo credit: Cherishsantosh/Wikimedia Commons
Many more people like to refer to India’s greatest poet by the moniker Gurudev than by the name that his parents had given him at birth, the name that appears on his Nobel medallion. Politicians and industry barons, intellectuals as much as mafia dons, dyed-in-the-wool liberals no less than right-of-right creationists: they all love to pay obeisance to their Gurudev in equal measure.
At the first hint of an opportunity, people trot out one of the three pieces of Rabindranath Tagore’s work that everyone seems to be familiar with – Jadi tor dak shune keu na ase tobe ekla cholo re (“If no one heeds your call, you must walk alone”) being the universal favourite. Even though some of the more patriotic specimens of our political class have been known to fumble when asked to recite the national anthem, nobody fails to roundly condemn a laggard who rises late to the same anthem when it plays out in a movie theatre’s sound system. And, recently, even one of our most intrepid mainstream journalists felt encouraged to pen verses patterned on ‘Where the mind is without fear’
Tagore is everybody’s favourite for several reasons. First, we are a nation of guru-bhakts, congenitally programmed to idolise every Baba and every Ma (guruwad being sex-blind), and of course every godman with a double-barrelled honorific adorning his name. To be fair to the poet, he does indeed fit the bill rather well – what with his fine, flowing beard, his aquiline nose and high forehead, his long and colourful robes, and of course the ashram that he, so faithful to our hallowed tradition, set up and nurtured.
Then again, ‘Gurudev’ is so convenient. He is always there, like the Himalayas or the Vedas or the six seasons of Bengal, and so nobody needs to take the trouble to study or explore his work again, for don’t we already know what there is to know about, say, the vedas? (So, those three nuggets from the Gurudev’s cannon will do very well for us, thank you.)
Most importantly, however, the virtues of a Gurudev lie in the sanitised, aseptic image of such an exalted being. He is above everything mundane or worldly. Ordinary human emotions and passions, anxieties and predilections are entirely alien to him. And he always symbolises stability and continuity. Change is anathema to his character. Also, no question troubles him, because he, the true sage, already knows every answer.
But does he? Was Tagore immune to all questions and doubts, or is the image of the Gurudev a convenient, and also clever, construct, but only a construct, no more? Was the poet a status quoist in the hoary ‘Indian’ tradition?
Beyond the perceived ‘Gurudev’
The other day, an old and very dear friend, with very cultivated tastes in literature and art, happened to ask me an innocuous question: is it true that Tagore had composed ‘Jana gana mana’ by way of salutation to a visiting British prince when India was still several decades away from her independence? When I said, in jest, that this is what many people believe, his next question was equally innocuous: why then do we happen to celebrate the same verses as our national anthem?
A little prodding revealed that my (non-Bengali-speaking) friend had recently been made aware of Tagore’s critique of nationalism, and probably found it extraordinary that a person with such subversive views about good old nationalism could be accorded the honour of crafting ‘Mother India’s’ national anthem. I should add that my friend’s political/social sympathies have long been broadly aligned with the Sangh Parivar’s. But – and this is more significant than anything else – he represents the most perceptive strand of saffron thinking.
Some other friends, this time from Kolkata, tell me how in recent months, there have been social media storms over Tagore’s ‘anti-national’ leanings. Apparently, patriotic Bengali literati are up in arms against the ‘deification’ of Tagore, proposing that Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay, who has gifted ‘Vande Mataram’ to India, be adopted as nationalist India’s guardian angel instead. It is safe to assume that these social media warriors are content with the precious nuggets of wisdom that (what one TV personality memorably calls) ‘The WhatsApp University’ so generously dispenses. Imagine what consternation the following lines would have created otherwise:
The Nation, with all its paraphernalia of power and prosperity, its flags and pious hymns, its blasphemous prayers in the churches, and the literary mock thunders of its patriotic bragging, cannot hide the fact that the Nation is the greatest evil for the Nation….Its one wish is to trade on the feebleness of the rest of the world, like some insects that are bred in the paralysed flesh of victims…