Test 07
Test 07
Test 07
Model Answers
Test 7
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Q1. Explain the legacy of British rule on Indian political system and the reasons for its
continuity.
Indian political system has its roots in its past, like other Indian political systems. India
remained under the rule of the British for two hundred years. This long period of the English
domination influenced the Indian political system greatly. India chose to be a democracy and
adopted the Parliamentary model when liberated from the foreign yoke.
With its independence, India adopted various legacies from the British political system. W.H.
Morris Jones divides these legacies of Indian political system into four categories namely-
• Government
• Movement
• Mediating Institutions
• Problems and Process.
These legacies can be discussed as follows-
• Government
It was the British government which strengthened the notion of Government in India. During
the British period, the rule of government reached every nook and corner of the country. As
Morris Jones writes, there was only a Headman and a Patwari in every village, who in these
capacities represented the British government. The government activities were more
numerous in the urban areas than in the rural areas. The increase in the government activity
increased the role of the government in the day-to-day life of the people. This sense of having
a government was surely the legacy of the British.
At the village level, government was synonymous with tax or Revenue Collector. Though the
present government of India is not the same as its predecessor was, yet it has some of its
features. When the new constitution was being prepared, it played an important part, for
instance, in the rejection of proportional representation, in the insertion of emergency
provisions, and qualifications attached to the Fundamental Rights. There was much need of
the Government because the whole process had to work around it. The Indian political system
also inherited certain features of government like Dyarchy, Centralized Bureaucracy and
Federal system of Government.
• Federal System
The constitution of India is of Federal character but with a number of unitary features. But the
word ‘federal’ has nowhere been used in the constitution. The Government of India Act of
1935 pointed directly in the direction of federalism. For the first time it failed in the federal
structure. No doubt, the Act of 1935 failed to establish any real kind of Provincial Autonomy,
thereby making the concept of federalism eyewash. But it paved the way for the future
emergence of the federalism.
It is also noteworthy that in the present constitution, there are various provisions which give
the Central Government more powers such as-
• Dyarchy
The Montford Reforms of 1919 was mainly responsible for dyarchy. According to these
Reforms, responsible governments were to be introduced in the Provinces. The subjects of
administration were to be divided into two categories viz., Central and Provincial. The Central
subjects were those which were to be kept under the control of Central Government
exclusively. The Provincial subjects were sub-divided into Transferred and Residuary subjects.
The Reserved subjects were to be administered by the Governor and his Executive Council
without any responsibility to Legislature. Though in the present Indian Constitution, the
provisions of dual government are not found in the similar position yet some provisions
resemble them. The federal structure is thus an important part of the legacy of government.
• Centralized Bureaucracy
The centralized bureaucracy, as of today, is a British legacy. British government created a large
bureaucracy to run the government with districts as the units of administration. The
bureaucrats were given special powers during the regime of the British government for various
reasons. They had to tackle with any type of situation which might have emerged from
disobedience movements. Clearly the one reason for the wide powers of the civil servants was
alien nature of the government. Most of the members of the Indian Civil Service were very
much loyal to the British government and the government had also blind-faith in them.
Therefore, it depended upon them to run the administration.
The administration was hierarchical, from the Governor General of India to Tehsildars at the
village level. This hierarchy included various officials such as Governor or Lieutenant-Governor
as the head of the State, Commissioner, Collectors, Tehsildars and village Headmen. The
members of Indian Civil Service were not only appointed as District Collectors, but were also
appointed in the Governor-General's Executive Council. The members of the Indian Civil Service
were recruited by a competitive examination, earlier only in England under the Civil Service
Commissioners.
Q2. Gandhian strategy of the anti-imperialist struggle was not codified in a blue-print or a
manifesto. Comment.
Gandhian strategy was based on his understanding of the British rule and also his experiences
in South Africa.
The Gandhian strategy is the combination of truth, sacrifice, non- violence, selfless service and
cooperation. Gandhi said that "There is no god higher than truth." According to Gandhi's
thoughts, non- violence is ultimate solution of every kind of problem in the world. Gandhi used
non violence in India's freedom struggle as main weapon and India became independent from
British rule. The Gandhian phase of Indian national movement (1917-1947) radically altered
the nature of the freedom struggle; at the theoretical level, Gandhi creatively redefined the
nature of the movement.
In contrast with the constitutional & extremists’ nationalism, Gandhi introduced the technique
of ‘non-violent satyagraha’ as the only technique capable of meeting the nationalist aims &
aspirations. He used this technique in envisaging the ‘most spectacular mass movement’
based on the strategy of ‘struggle-Truce-struggle’.
Scholars like Francis Hutchins argue that, at the end of the day. Gandhi was a politician and a
strategist. He used non-violence to bring masses within the fold of national movement and
once masses joined freedom struggle, non – violence was no more required. Quit India
movement was the least controlled movement as it was the most spontaneous movement
owing to the fact that top leadership was arrested and it was the grass root leadership and
the common man that become the leader of the movement.
Q3. How MN Roy differed from communist international led by Lenin on the national and
colonial question.
The Second Congress or the Comintern examined a wide range of problems concerning East.
This was at a time when East was under imperialist oppression. It examined from altogether a
different point of view the socio-economic structure of colonial society, the nature of its
freedom struggle, the place of national bourgeoise and the peasantry in this struggle. The role
Comintern was going to play in helping the colonial people to free themselves from colonial
oppression was also examined.
Before the opening of the Congress, Lenin had circulated a preliminary draft of his thesis on
national and colonial question. This was for discussion among the delegates acquainted with
the problems of the East. MN Roy attended the Congress on behalf of Communist party of
Mexico. He discussed with Lenin the problems of liberation and social emancipation of the
colonial countries of the East particularly India.
During the course of discussion Roy seemed to have disagreed with Lenin on a number of
points. Lenin’s thesis on the national and colonial question primarily aimed at two things:
Q4. What were the major disagreement between Liberal and Dalits perspective on Indian
nationalism.
Introduction
Indian Nationalist Movement was a grand and prolonged struggle launched against British
imperialism. Nationalism was the main ideology and the instrument with whose help this
struggle was launched. In the context of the Indian Nationalist Movement, Indian nationalism
represented two major ideas: anti-imperialism and national unity.
Nationalist and Dalit Perspective on National Movement
Nationalist views on national movement were formed in response to the colonialist view. While
the nationalist writers accepted some of the ideas present in colonialist historiography, they
strongly reacted against colonialist denigration of India and its people. In contrast to the
instrumentalist approach of many colonialist historians, the nationalist historians adopted
an idea-centric approach. There are primarily two views among them: according to some, the
nationalist ideas have been adopted under the influence of the West, while some others argue
that they have been present since the ancient times.
On the other hand, the efforts made by leaders of nationalist movement succeeded in bringing
a section of Dalit leadership in the fold of national movement besides the participation of Dalit
masses in various popular movements against the colonial rule. But majority of Dalit
intelligentsia was critical of the lack of commitment on the part of the Congress to share power
with Dalits and expressed serious doubt about the commitment of upper caste leadership to
bring social equality. The best example of this was Ambedkar’s book he wrote in 1945, titled
‘What Congress and Gandhi had done to Untouchables’.
To Ambedkar, without ensuring equal rights of Dalits political freedom had no meaning.
Gaining political freedom from the British was not adequate to him unless the struggle for
freedom ensured the dignity of life and equal rights to all its citizens. Ambedkar said, ‘the
freedom which the governing class in India was struggling for is freedom that rules the servile
classes in India’.
Nationalist Perspective on India as Nation
Many Indian nationalists and nationalist historians did not consider India as a formed nation
in modern times. They, in line with Surendranath Banerjea, regarded India as ‘a nation-in-the-
making’. According to them, the task of the national movement was to unite Indians from
various regions and different walks of life into a single nation based on their common
grievances. R.C. Majumdar argued that ‘the conception of India as a common motherland
was still in the realm of fancy. There was no India as it is understood today. There were
Bengalis, Hindustanis, Marathas, Sikhs, etc. but no Indian, at the beginning of the
nineteenth century’. He thought that it was the movements launched by the Congress which
‘gave reality to the ideal of Indian unity’. Tara Chand also thought that creation of an Indian
nation was a recent phenomenon which emerged due to ‘the combined economic and political
change’.
However, there was another powerful trend which asserted that India had been a nation since
the earliest times. Radha Kumud Mookerji, in his Fundamental Unity of India and many other
works, most famously put forward the idea that India had been great and unified since ancient
times. According to him, there had existed a sense of geographical unity of India since early
times, and even the idea of nationalism was already present in early India. Har Bilas Sarda, in
his Hindu Superiority, declared that ‘the ancient Hindus were the greatest nation that has yet
flourished in the earth’ . Lajpat Rai asserted in his Young India that ‘fundamentally India has
been a nation for the last 2,000 years’.
Dalit Perspective on India as Nation
The Dalit movement dismissed the premise of the mainstream nationalist movement that
India was a nation. Ambedkar, for instance, repudiated the notion of a nation in a caste society
and challenged it saying that each caste was a nation. Phule, who was Ambedkar's preceptor,
had said that unless all the people in the Balisthan (his term for India), including the Shudras,
Ati-Shudras, Bhill, Koli etc. become educated and are able to think over and unite, they
cannot constitute a nation.
Ambedkar observed that he was of the opinion that in believing that we are a nation, we are
cherishing a great delusion. He questioned," How can people divided into several thousands
of castes be a nation?" and said that "these castes were anti-national."
Nationalist Perspective on Rise of National Movement
The nationalist historians emphasise on a variety of factors for the rise of national movement
– the generally unfriendly attitude of the colonial rulers, reactionary policies of Viceroy Lytton,
Ilbert Bill controversy, the modern education, printing press, modern literature, and finally the
partition of Bengal. The feeling of racial superiority displayed by English people in India and
the official policy of racial discrimination in certain matters humiliated the Indians and created
bitterness in their minds.
The nationalist historians also underlined the economic factors which led to a feeling of
disaffection among Indian people. Exploitation of peasantry, high land revenue, forced
cultivation of indigo and some other cash crops, drain of wealth, wasteful expenditure of
Indian revenue for maintaining a large military force to be used against the Indians or for
fighting wars which did not really concern India, and so on. The nationalist historians also
pointed to the underlying contradiction between the imperialist rule and the Indian people as
a whole. By doing this, they papered over all the class, caste, linguistic, regional and religious
contradictions which existed in Indian society in order to portray a pan-Indian anti-imperialist
front.
Dalit Perspective on Rise of National Movement
Ambedkar was concerned about oppression and exploitation faced by Dalits that any form of
struggle without referring to the abolition of internal oppression had no importance to him. To
Ambedkar, without ensuring equal rights of Dalits political freedom had no meaning. Gaining
political freedom from the British was not adequate to him unless the struggle for freedom
ensured the dignity of life and equal rights to all its citizens. Ambedkar said, ‘the freedom
which the governing class in India was struggling for is freedom that rules the servile classes
in India
It is important to note that strong advocacy of Dalit intelligentsia for giving primacy to their
socio-economic and political rights and not to anti-colonial struggle was primarily rooted in
their experiences of living in an unjust society. Their notion of nationhood was based on
abolition of existing inequalities and also having equal rights in every sphere of life.
Nationalist Perspective on Indian National Congress
C.F. Andrews and Girija Mukerji also wrote in 1938 in their The Rise and Growth of the
Congress in India that ‘The strength of the All-India movement lay in the newly educated
middle class. The national movement, thus begun by the Congress, represented both the social
aspirations of the middle classes in India and also the supreme desire for freedom and racial
justice’
Dalit Perspective on Indian National Congress
Politically Dalit leaders opposed the Indian national Congress as controlled by upper castes
and capitalist as Brahmin and Bourgeois in Ambedkar terms. They sought for an alternative
political front that would represent a kind of left dalit unity with a core base of workers and
peasants. They also insisted to lead to the empowerment of Dalits and other exploited
sections.
The nationalist historians think that the nationalist leaders were dedicated idealists inspired
by patriotism and the welfare of the country. Even while coming from the middle classes, the
nationalist leaders, in this view, possessed no personal or group or class interests and were
devoted to the cause of the nation and Indian people. They acted as selfless spokespersons of
the silent majority who could not speak on their own. They represented all classes,
communities and groups and pursued national, secular and progressive politics.
Q5. What was the ideological basis behind the rise of extremists? What has been the
fundamental difference between extremists and moderates?
The rise of extremism on the Indian political scene was not sudden. In fact it had been growing
steadily since the uprising of 1857. Though the uprising was brutally suppressed by the British,
the ideas of ‘Swadharma’ and ‘Swaraj’, which had kindled the uprising continued to linger on
as an undercurrent among the Indian people.
Ideological Basis Behind rise of Extremists
There were three groups of the Extremists-
The Maharashtra group, headed by B.G. Tilak
The Bengal group represented by B.C. Pal and Aurobindo
The Punjab group led by Lala Lajpat Rai.
• In the latter half of 19th century, the work of leaders like Ramkrishna Paramhansa,
Swami Vivekanand, Swami Dayanand Saraswati, and Vishnusastri Chiplunkar and Sri
Aurobindo instilled a sense of pride in the ancient Indian civilisation. They were
successful, to a certain extent, in promoting political radicalism and bridging the gulf
between the masses and the English educated class.
View of Aurobindo
He raised patriotism to the pedestal of mother worship. He said that, "I know my
country as my mother. I adore her. I worship her."
• Swami Dayananda’s Arya Samaj and Theosophical Society of Annie Besant gave
impetus to political radicalism. There was instinctive attachment to native culture,
religion and polity. The political radicals who derived inspiration from their traditional
cultural values were ardent nationalists who wanted to have relations with other
countries in terms of equality and self respect.
• To the Extremists, emancipation meant something much deeper and wider than
politics. To them it was a matter of invigorating and energising all departments of life.
They thought that a trial of strength between the ruler and the ruled was inevitable,
and argued for building a new India of their dreams in which the British had no
contribution to make.
• Various international events also gave impetus to the growth of extremism in India.
Revolutionary movements in Ireland, Russia, Egypt, Turkey, China and the Boer War in
South Africa made the Indian leaders aware that the British rule could only be
challenged by putting a united stand against it. The defeat of the Italian Army by the
Ethiopians in 1896, and the Russian Army by the Japanese in 1905, showed that the
Europeans were not invincible. All these instilled a sense of self-respect and self-
confidence in the Indian Nationalists.
Q6. Explain the relevance of doctrine of basic structure with respect to the strengthening
of constitutionalism in India.
The concept of constitutionalism is that of a form governed by or under a constitution that
ordains essentially limited government and rule of law. This is contrary to arbitrary
authoritarian or totalitarian rule. Constitutional government, therefore, should necessarily be
democratic government. In other words, Constitutionalism is a political philosophy in which
the functions of government of a state must be in accordance with the provisions of the
constitution meaning thereby the actions of government must reflect constitutionality.
Basic Structure Doctrine
In 1973, a 13-judge Constitution Bench ruled in Kesavananda Bharati v. State of Kerala that
Article 368 of the Constitution does not enable Parliament to amend the basic framework of
the document. The historic ruling came to be known as the “basic structure” doctrine. It is a
judicial principle that the Constitution has certain basic features that cannot be altered or
destroyed by amendments by Parliament. Over the years, various facets of the basic structure
doctrine have evolved, forming the basis for judicial review of Constitutional amendments.
Granville Austin’s Working of a Democratic Constitution said the basic structure doctrine “is
fairly said to have become the bedrock of constitutional interpretation in India”.
Q7. The preamble of Indian constitution is an exemplary of its kind, depicting the essence
of the entire constitution. Discuss
Introduction
The Constitution of USA is the first of its kind to begin with a Preamble which literally means
preface or introductory part. It depicts the summary or essence of the entire Constitution.
Preamble plays a significant role in the Constitution of India which is the longest written one
in the world. It was based on the Objective Resolutions drafted and placed by Jawaharlal
Nehru, the first Prime Minister of Independent India, which was unanimously passed and
adopted by the Constituent Assembly. It has been amended only once since its inception. Three
words; Socialist, Secular, and Integrity were added to it by the 42nd Amendment in 1976.
An Amalgamation of Ideas and Philosophies
The Preamble of Indian Constitution can be rightly described as an amalgamation of ideas and
philosophies because of its lofty composition. It reveals three ingredients of exemplary nature-
The Constitution provided a legal assurance of equality. Not only is the practice of
untouchability banned (Article 17) and equality guaranteed (Article 14), but the generational
inequalities resulting from the complex and regressive caste system are acknowledged and
addressed via the constitutional promise of affirmative action (Article 16(4)).
Part IV of the Constitution furthers the guarantee of ‘Justice- Social, Economic and Political’,
by providing judicially non-enforceable obligations, on ‘the State’ in the form of Directive
Principles of State Policy.
The Supreme Court in Minerva Mills v. Union of India ruled that the core of the commitment
to the social revolution lies in parts III and IV. For Rajeev Bhargava, “it is important to see the
Constitution as a moral document, as embodying an ethical vision.”