It gives me immense pleasure in presenting the
Gandhi Peace Prize Award for the year 2013 to Shri Chandi Prasad Bhatt, a
life-long Gandhian and devoted and far-sighted modern environmentalist of our
time.
The Gandhi Peace Prize was initiated in 1995,
the 125th year of Gandhiji’s birth. The award is an expression of our belief
that the ideals that Gandhiji espoused are part of our collective living
heritage. This heritage is deeply imbued with the idea of being ‘one people.’
It is a celebration of our diversity, our plural culture, our many languages, religions
and different modes of life. This was the idea that moved those who strove for
India’s freedom. Our deep and abiding commitment to democracy stems from this
idea. We continue to be guided by these ideals; we remain committed to them not
because it is our past, but because it is also our future.
Gandhiji said ‘My Life is My Message”. Smt.
Indira Gandhi in her foreword to the 90th Volume of the monumental compilation
of Gandhiji’s writings The Collected Works of Mahatma Gandhi, explained the
significance of these words. She wrote – (quote) “He was one of those who spoke
as he thought and acted as he spoke, one of those few on whom no shadow fell
between word and deed. His words were deeds, and they built a movement and a
nation and changed the lives of countless individuals.” (unquote) What is this
shadow that Indira Ji spoke of? It is the shadow of untruth and falsehood. Only
a person who saw Truth as God could speak of Life itself as a message.
The recipients of this award in the past
include President Julius Nyerere, President Nelson Madela, Vaclav Havel,
Archbishop Desmond Tutu and Baba Amte among many others. Ramakrishna Mission
and Bhartiya Vidya Bhavan are two organisations that have also been conferred
this honour. Each of these individuals and organisations have through their
life and work taken forward the Gandhian ideals of human freedom, compassion
for fellow beings and the capacity to be resolutely non-violent and caring in
the face of terrible injustice. Their work exemplifies the universality of the
non-violent action as a mode of attaining a just and equitable society.
We have gathered today to confer the Gandhi
Peace Prize upon Shri Chandi Prasad Bhatt, whose life has also been his
message. Shri Bhatt’s work embodies a unique love, a love that has long since
become universal. It is a love of Nature and Nature as encompassing entire
creation.
Shri Bhatt was born into a family of farmers
and priests to the Rudranath Temple in Gopeshwar, Uttarakhand. Being a hill
man, he knew the hardships of his fellow villagers in the backdrop of scarcity
of employment, healthcare, lack of infrastructure and education. As a true
Gandhian and member of the Sarvodaya movement, he realized the need of the
time. The aspirations of the people inspired him organize the Dashauli Gram
Swarajya Sangh in 1964. He dedicated himself through the Sangh to improve the
lives of villagers, providing employment near their homes in forest-based
industries, and fighting against wrong policies through Gandhian non-violent satyagraha.
The Chipko movement started by Shri Bhatt in 1973 followed the same method,
that is, of peaceful and non-violent Satyagraha for the redressel of the
legitimate rights of the hill people to collect wood and fodder and saving them
from natural calamities owing to large scale deforestation.
The Chipko movement was and continues to be a
movement of deep love. Love as enacted in the act of hugging trees. This action
meant embracing Nature in all its diversity, bounty and munificence. The
movement holds in its embrace not only the trees of Shri Bhatt’s beloved
Gharwal but all creation across the world. It highlights the unique
responsibility of protecting creation that has been placed on human beings. It
is a movement of love against pulverising greed. And it is in this sense, Shri
Bhatt’s work draws upon the life and thought of Mahatma Gandhi.
Gandhiji, like Poet Tagore had an abiding
concern with Nature and the unique placement of human consciousness in this
vast and bafflingly intricate relationship. While the Poet sang of its glory
and bowed his head on all our behalf. Gandhiji placed Love at the heart of his
understanding of human –nature relationship.
Gandhiji said he had no use for economics
without ethics. This simple injunction created a moral frame within which human
ingenuity has to function. The limits to human greed have to be defined by
inner imperatives and not external constraints. This inner imperative that he
called beautifully “a small, still voice” is available to all of us, if we cultivate
the capability to listen to it and follow its dictates. A capacity that Shri
Bhatt acquired and demonstrated through practice.
By placing ethics at the heart of economics,
Gandhiji gave us an idea whose significance we have just begun to understand.
This is the idea of Trusteeship, based on the idea of faith which is a unique
human capacity. All of us live by and through trust. Gandhiji asked us to be
Trustees and to have faith in the goodness of our hearts and the hearts of
others. This goodness would enable us to act as Trustees of what is ours and
not ours. To be a Trustee is to see Nature as belonging to all creation and
those who are yet to come. The idea of Trusteeship has been also seen as an
idea of re-distributive justice. Those with wealth and capability for
generating wealth use it for the benefit of others and for society at large to
whom also this wealth belongs. Shri Bhatt’s movement is one of the finest
examples of this idea of Trusteeship. Through his work, Shri Bhatt has reminded
this nation and the world as a whole that we are responsible for the future as
well.
When we act as Trustees, we act non-violently.
Ahimsa is not just a method or an instrument. It requires recognition of the
humanity of others, including the humanity of those we seek to challenge,
including the State. Ahimsa is based on the idea that others are capable of
recognising Truth and acting upon it however misguided or even oppressive they
might be. Ahimsa is not just non-injury. It is an active force that embraces the
other, eradicating the differences between I and Thou.
Poet Tagore and Gandhiji were two modern
Indians who recognised the force of such Ahimsa, which frees the unjust and the
oppressor from the need and desire to perpetuate injustice and suffering to others.
Ahimsa deepens freedom and enlarges its scope to include in its ambit, the
other. Shri Bhatt’s movement showed the way of practising Ahmisa by physically
embracing the endangered and the inanimate. Shri Bhatt has not only deepened
our understanding of responsibility but also provided an object lesson to the
world on the power of Ahimsa.
We in India must always keep in mind that we
are the Trustees of the heritage of Mahatma Gandhi. As Trustees, it is our
sacred duty to preserve, protect and disseminate this heritage, which is truly
a legacy of all humanity.
The Government of India, through the Ministry
of Culture has taken two significant and long lasting initiatives in this
regard. In September last year, the Gandhi Heritage Portal was dedicated to the
people of India and the world. This is an authentic, comprehensive, open source
digital archive of Gandhiji’s writings and the scholarly work around his
ideals. The Gandhi Heritage Portal uses technology to bring to the world
message of Gandhiji.
The Ministry of Culture also launched a five
year mission called the Gandhi Heritage Sites Mission. This Mission is mandated
with the preservation of the built heritage of Gandhiji’s life. It will create
an architectural database and provide guidelines for the protection of around
39 crore Sites associated with Gandhiji’s life in South Africa, Bangladesh,
England and of course India. I am certain these initiatives will prepare the
ground for us to renew our commitment to Gandhian ideals as we mark two significant
events in the coming years.
On 9th January 2015, we will mark 100 years
since Gandhiji’s return to India after his long and life altering Satyagraha in
South Africa. This would be an occasion for us to celebrate not only Gandhiji
but all those Pravasi Bhartiyas, persons of Indian origins who have made
significant contributions to their adopted countries as well as mother India.
In 2019, we will also mark 150th anniversary of Gandhiji’s birth, which we can
truly celebrate by ending the indignity of homes without toilets and making a
success of the Swachh Bharat Abhiyan announced by the Government to ensure
hygiene, waste management and sanitation across the country.
Shri Bhatt, in honouring you we honour all
those countless women and men who became Trustees of the Nature and who through
their embrace expanded our Swaraj. I salute you for your dedicated, tireless
and invaluable work for the conservation of the environment. I also thank you
for your immense contribution to our nation and wish you good health as well as
long years of continued service to our people.
Thank you.
Jai Hind.
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SH/AKC