Searching for Bengal’s civilisational signature |
On a tiny island in the Baltic Sea, with the cool winds of the peaceful sea brushing against my face, I found myself thinking of home. Of Bengal. Of India. Of history. And of the irony of time itself. This tumultuous month — marked simultaneously by political upheaval and the birth anniversary of Rabindranath Tagore — compels reflection far deeper than electoral arithmetic. That the swearing-in ceremony of a new political order should coincide with the remembrance of the poet who warned India against the dangers of narrow nationalism is one of those ironies thathistory occasionally stages with unsettling precision. For Bengal stands at a threshold once again.
The winds of change sweeping through the state carry with them both hope and apprehension. Hope for institutional renewal, economic revival, restoration of governance, and an end to political exhaustion. Yet, also apprehension — that in the pursuit of political correction, Bengal may lose something civilisationally precious about itself. In moments of fundamental transition, societies reveal not merely what they oppose, but what they truly are.
Tagore’s writings remain profoundly relevant precisely because he distinguished between love for one’s civilisation and the temptation of exclusionary nationalism. He deeply respected Hindu philosophy, India’s spiritual traditions, and the cultural inheritance of this ancient civilisation. But he rejected the idea that India could ever be defined through the prism of a single........