PRIME
MINISTER'S SPEECH AT A FUNCTION TO RELEASE THREE BOOKS BY DR.
L.M. SINGHVI
The Prime Minister Shri Atal Bihari
Vajpayee released three books titled ‘Towards Global Togetherness’
, ‘Democracy and Rule of Law’ and ‘A Democratic Sojourn’ by Dr.
L.M. Singhvi, here today. Former President Shri R. Venkatraman
and Lok Sabha Speaker Shri Manohar Joshi were also present on
the occasion.
The following is the text of the
Prime Minister’s speech on the occasion :
"When Dr. Singhvi requested
me to release his three books, I readily agreed. But today I found
myself in a bit of a dilemma.
For I started wondering what aspect
of his personality, or what part of his work, can I speak on without
risking the complaint of incompleteness and inadequacy.
The more I look at Dr. Singhvi’s
work, the more I get convinced that he is not an individual; he
is a living ENCYCLOPEDIA.
A Parliamentarian, a Diplomat, a
Scholar, a Writer, an Educationist, a Constitutional and Legal
expert, and always an engaging Speaker – he is truly Many Persons
combined into one.
But the person I like the most is
he who is always gentle and smiling and hospitable. I have travelled
to many of our missions abroad, but Dr. Singhvi’s hospitality
was perhaps unbeatable.
No wonder, he can count among his
friends people from all political parties and from all ideological
persuasions and professional backgrounds. His book "A
Diplomatic Sojourn" is a pictorial proof of this.
His prime concern as a diplomat was
to project India’s image abroad in all its intrinsic and many-sided
greatness. And he achieved it in some unique ways.
For example, Dr. Singhvi, when he
was the High Commissioner, got a bust of Rabindranath Tagore installed
at the birthplace of Shakespeare, and a statue of Raja Rammohun
Roy in Bristol, where he lived and worked for many years.
Friends,
These days there is much talk about
the need for a "Dialogue among Civilisations" –
as a counter to the theory of "Clash of Civilisations".
Our good friend, Dr. Khatami, the President of Iran, has been
pursuing it with special interest, and it has now become a continuing
theme in the United Nations.
India has welcomed this thought.
But it is not a new thought or a new concern with us. Dr. Singhvi’s
many lectures in this book show with great scholarship how the
theme of "Global Togetherness" is woven into
the very fabric of Indian philosophy and culture.
The world we live in needs "Togetherness"
and "Tolerance" more than ever before.
I would add that we need not only
GLOBAL TOGETHERNESS, but also TOGETHERNESS AT HOME.
All our faiths, all our diverse traditions,
all our great thinkers have taught us the path of peace, tolerance,
co-existence and cooperation. Yet, sometimes, the reality is jarringly
different.
After every few years, something
happens in our country that makes us uncomfortable about the disconnect
between what we preach and what we practice.
Intolerance raises its head in vicious
ways. Exclusivism asserts itself at the cost of togetherness.
The very essence of religion and culture is man’s
triumph over the base and barbaric aspects in his nature and discovery
of his humanity and, later, divinity.
But why does barbarism performs its dance of death
every once in a while?
I am at a loss to understand this.
Equally beyond my comprehension is
how some human beings can be trained into terrorism -- and that
too in the name of religion -- to kill innocent human beings in
large numbers.
I think we
need a deeper study of human nature and of collective social behaviour.
I would like to call upon our intellectuals,
social scientists and religious leaders to educate the society
on how to counter intolerance and its various manifestations.
Some of the answers can be found
in Dr. Singhvi’s lectures contained in the two books released
today. In one of them he observes,
"There is a need for us
to proclaim the fundamentalism of tolerance and the fundamentalism
of togetherness."
There is a lot of debate about secularism
these days. Many divergent and sometimes conflicting points of
view are expressed. I do not wish to comment on the merits and
demerits of those viewpoints, except to say that I find Dr. Singhvi’s
approach very sound.
Let me quote a few lines from
his lecture on "Secularism and Human Rights".
"If secularism lives and
flourishes in India, it is not merely because it is the chosen
political creed of a few articulate elitist intellectuals,
but because it is a living tissue in the body of India’s plural
culture, drawing nourishment from the best of Indian thought
and example."
Another subject of deep interest
to Dr. Sanghvi – and, I must admit, to me also – is the affairs
of the Indian Diaspora. Many of his lectures are devoted to this
theme, to which our learned friend has given a catchy name! He
calls it the "Global Indogenic Movement".
Not many in our country realise that
we have over 25 million People of Indian Origin (PIOs) and NRIs
living in different parts of the world. We are proud of their
achievements. Many of them are the embodiment of the true Indian
Spirit – adventurous, challenge-seeking, success-chasing, innovative,
adaptive in any foreign environment, but always retaining an emotional
and cultural link with India.
We owe a debt of gratitude to Dr.
Singhvi for not only speaking about this theme with great knowledge
and passion, but also for his practical contribution to making
it an agenda of the Government and the nation.
For example, when our Government
decided to form a committee to go into all issues concerning the
Indian Diaspora and make useful recommendations, we did not have
to think twice about who should head that committee. Dr. Singhvi
was our instant choice.
The Singhvi committee submitted a
voluminous report in a record time, extremely rich in its information
base, excellent in its analysis, and very practical in its recommendations.
As you know, our Government has already begun to implement its
several recommendations about PIOs and NRIs.
In conclusion, what can I say on
this occasion? Just this:
May India produce more intellectuals
like Dr. Singhvi. And may Dr. Singhvi continue to write more books,
give more lectures, and handle more assignments in the service
of the Nation.
Thank you.