Sathya Sai Baba and development of India
Date: September
9, 2003
By: Serguei Badaev
Email:
badaev57@mtu-net.ru
Copied from:
http://www.saiguru.net/english/last_updates/
According to
press release No.263 of the UN Development Programme (UNDP) (http://www.oneworld.net/article/archive/4505/
http://in.news.yahoo.com/030708/43/25ssr.html)
India and China, two countries with the largest population in the world,
are to play a key role in achieving a global aim set by the world
community: to halve the number of people on our planet who live in
conditions of extreme poverty, i.e. less than $1 a day. According to the
recently published UNDP Report for 2003, India with its population more
than 1 billion people will reach this goal if its economic growth is
stable and keeps up the same pace as for the period 1990-2000, i.e. 4% a
year. As the Report states, Human Development Index (HDI) has increased
from 0.577 (in 2002) to 0.590 (in 2003). Among 175 countries mentioned
in the Report, India takes 127th place. The Report mentions
also that such social problems as the mother's mortality, infant
mortality and HIV/AIDS spread are not under control yet and that this
affects negatively India's HDI.
Sathya Sai Baba says:
Many people invite me often to visit
other countries. I do not like to go abroad before setting right this
country and transforming its citizens. . (18.07.1997. Sanathana Sarathi,
v.40, August 1997, р.
220).It is unclear
what does, from the SSB's point of view, setting right mean for
India and transforming mean for its citizens? Will it induce any
changes in the Human Development Index (HDI) and the place India takes
among other countries? And when can one expect SSB to visit other
countries?
Another quotation of SSB is noteworthy in
this respect:
In Mahabharatha, you have the Pandava
brothers of whom Dharmaja is the eldest. Bheema, Arjuna, Nakula and
Sahadeva are the other brothers in order of their age. Now you have
America and Russia leading in the world in technological skill and
destructive power. But Bharath (India) is like Dharmaja. Even though
Bheema and Arjuna were endowed with more strength and valour than
Dharmaja, they always bowed to him. Now Bharath is the nation upholding
Dharma. When once you develop Dharma there is no need to attack or harm
any one: hence no need to have destructive weaponry. (18.07.1997.
Sanathana Sarathi, v.40, August 1997, р.
218)
However, it seems that India has not been
going to follow this piece of advice. As well known, Indian Prime
Minister, Atal Bihari Vajpayee, is a key figure of the Indian nuclear
programme which resulted in creation of a nuclear bomb in India [1].
Increase of military expenditure in India shows that the government of
Vajpayee does not rely very much on Dharma to provide India's safety
[2].
It is rather strange that SSB calls India
(Bharat) the nation which is now upholding Dharma. If we take a narrow
meaning of Dharma as a religion, one can probably agree that Indian
people are very religious in general and India has ancient spiritual
traditions. But the whole picture is far from harmony if we take into
account the bloody fighting between Hindus and Muslims with regard to
the mosque in Ayodhya, the murders of Christian missionaries and the
growth of Hindu nationalism in the country. If we take a broad meaning
of Dharma as a universal law and ethics, we can't help but remember an
extremely high level of corruption in the Indian society [3]. Despite
the fact that India is the biggest democracy in the world, the rights of
women and religious minorities are constantly undermined there. Until
now the problem of so called untouchables has not been solved as well.
So India seems to have nothing be proud of here.
Notes
[1]
A.B. Vajpayee has long been a devotee of SSB and even defended him
publicly in writing:
www.saiguru.net/english/news/020228.htm
[2] JOHN F. BURNS, "Military Budget in
India Is Increased by 14 Percent," New York Times, June 2, 1998
NEW DELHI, India --
Declaring that there can be "no compromise on defense preparedness" in
the wake of the nuclear tests conducted by India and Pakistan, the
government of Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee announced Monday that
it has approved large budget increases for the country's armed forces,
as well as for nuclear research and missile programs.
In
their first budget, the Hindu nationalist leaders who head the country's
coalition government revealed that military outlays will go up by 14
percent, part of which will pay wage increases for India's 1.6 million
troops. The budget increase is among the largest ever made by India in
peacetime, and will push total military outlays to the equivalent of
$12.4 billion, about 19 percent of total government outlays of $64.3
billion. Indian economists estimate the total annual output of the
Indian economy at about $265 billion.
The military increases were dwarfed by increases of 68
percent for the Atomic Energy Commission, in charge of civilian and
military nuclear programs, and 62 percent for the Department of Space,
which helps develop rockets that India has used to launch space
satellites as well as military variants the Vajpayee government has said
will be equipped with nuclear warheads. Together, the outlays on nuclear
and missile research will amount to $665 million, up $262 million from
last year.
[3] One of the remarkable examples -
former Prime Minister of India, N. Rao, (also a follower of SSB) was
convicted of corruption (buying votes in parliament prior to a 1993
no-confidence vote) and was sentenced to three years in prison in
September 2000.