Divine right to rule till last breath
The euphoria of a new party being born is still
fresh in my mind having attended the convention of the Bharatiya
Lok Dal in Bhubaneswar in
1974. The chaotic political situation in the country today, however, is no
better 38 years later. Not a single party has a dominant all India presence
and most of the parties are devoid of any ideological anchorage. Furthermore,
the most paradoxical aspect is that no party runs in a democratic manner. For
this, we can easily blame the blemishes of human nature. But the systemic
aspects are also equally to blame.
The Sri Aurobindo Ashram Trust, Puducherry, of
course, has elevated itself from any kind of democratic functioning or
questioning. Das Gupta, by his mysterious dignified silence, has surpassed all
norms of civility and accountability. By claiming tacitly the divine right to
rule till his last breath, he is now the monarch of all he surveys. None disputes
that, but it’s difficult to rule out the questions of propriety. Hence, it
devolves upon the aspirants of life divine to put in place appropriate
modalities of good internal governance. [TNM55]
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